What is missed from this review, as a subscriber for 30 years to the Washington 
Post, is that in my opinion, that paper has has an anti-EV bias. It has 
published articles by Robert Bryce of the Manhatten Institute (anti-ev) and 
George Will (anti-ev). While I applaud the surprising pro EV article now that 
Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post, it is at least 10 years late


Sent from my Samsung Galaxy S®4

-------- Original message --------
From: brucedp5 <[email protected]> 
Date: 10/16/2013  3:22 AM  (GMT-05:00) 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [EVDL] EVLN: Spark, A good argument for plugging in 
 


'Spark EV 1LT is worth the investment'

https://bangordailynews.com/2013/10/12/living/chevrolet-spark-a-good-argument-for-plugging-in/
Chevrolet Spark: A good argument for plugging in
By Warren Brown  Oct. 12, 2013

[image  / Chevrolet
http://bangordailynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/WHEELS-CHEVY11.jpg
The Chevrolet Spark demonstrates that the electric car market is getting
better and better
]

I am sometimes a neighborhood recluse, seldom moving beyond the boundaries
of my Arlington community on days when writing duties tie me to my home
office.

I take meal breaks and “soul breaks” — and time for short errands, usually
traveling to local restaurants, shops and churches.

It occurs to me that I need not burn gasoline and further burden local air
quality with tailpipe emissions to do those things. I am now convinced I
don’t have to.

There are all-electric cars, reliable and affordable with sufficient drive
range per charge to allow me to go locally where I want to go without
running out of juice. I recently drove an excellent example of the genre,
the 2014 Chevrolet Spark EV 1LT, and am seriously considering its purchase.
The little car makes so much sense.

With a full charge of its 21-kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery pack, I can
travel 82 miles at speeds of up to 90 mph before I need to recharge the
battery. In terms of driving range, that is more than I need to get around
my home town and adjoining jurisdictions. In terms of speed, there is no
where I can drive locally at 90 mph without getting arrested and hauled off
to jail. Local speed limits range from 25 to 50 mph, with severe penalties
for significant violations.

Over the years, I’ve paid my share of those fines. I have no desire to pay
one cent more.

Recharging the battery pack is easy. The front-wheel-drive Spark EV comes
with a 120-volt power cord. I plug it in to my home-voltage power outlet
overnight and am ready to go the next day.

If the battery pack is near complete discharge, it will take nearly 20 hours
for a full recharge using the 120-volt charging system. Quicker recharging
is available, seven hours to full charge, using an available 240-volt
recharging system by Robert Bosch GmbH, a multinational
engineering/electronics company and the world’s largest supplier of
automotive components, headquartered near Stuttgart, Germany.

That means I will have to come up with several hundred dollars more should
my wife, Mary Anne, approve my intended purchase of the Spark EV 1LT, the
model I drove, which comes with the seemingly daunting price (for a small
car) of $27,495. I wrote “seemingly daunting” because that price can be
reduced by a $7,500 federal tax rebate.

Still, it is going to be a tough sell. It always is when it comes to getting
Mary Anne to loosen her grip on the family purse. But I have virtue and
common sense on my side.

Our house sits diagonally across the street from a major school bus stop.
Two middle schools and one high school are in our immediate neighborhood.
During the school year, mornings and late afternoons are filled with the
sounds of the comings and goings of those children. They are our future.
They, at least, deserve to breathe cleaner air.

I think I successfully can make that argument to Mary Anne, a retired
elementary-school teacher whose heart has never left the classroom. If that
does not work, I can appeal to her severely practical mind with numbers. To
wit: It costs $6.72 to operate the Spark EV 200 miles per week. A new
gasoline car of similar size traveling the same weekly distance would cost
$31.65, according to research done by economists at General Motors, the
Spark EV’s manufacturer.

I know that there are holes in that argument, such as the Spark EV’s initial
purchase price, even with the federal rebate. And we drove the Spark EV 1LT
in splendid autumn weather, not in the misery of an icy winter or the sticky
heat of the dog days of August. All of those conditions would create an
additional drain on the car’s lithium-ion battery pack.

But I remain convinced that the Spark EV 1LT is worth the investment. It
runs clean with lots of torque, a remarkable 400 pound-feet. It has decent
oomph, the equivalent of 130 horsepower. It is small and easy to park. It is
so loaded with electronics, such as Chevrolet’s My Link system, which turns
your iPhone into an integral part of the automobile, the Spark EV is a
portal to the future.

I write none of this to suggest that electric cars will dominate personal
transportation anytime soon, or to ignore the fact that some pollution
somewhere is involved in the manufacture and operation of electric vehicles.
All of us, apparently except members of the U.S. Congress, are aware that
life well lived is a matter of trade-offs.

I think the Spark EV and cars like it are worth the trade-offs.

Keep moving in this direction, GM and Chevrolet. Thumbs up!

Bottom line: The 2014 Spark EV 1LT is the perfect neighborhood automobile —
a truly reliable, civil little car.

Ride, acceleration and handling: Ride is good. Acceleration is excellent —
instant torque! Handling is weighted by the heft of that lithium-ion battery
pack.

Head-turning quotient: Terms such as “sexy” don’t come to mind. But the car
is a good candidate for “endearing” and “cute.”

Body style/layout: The 2014 Spark EV 1LT is a front-wheel-drive electric car
employing a lithium-ion battery pack and electric motor essentially based on
the same platform as the gasoline-fueled Chevrolet Spark mini-car. It has
certain underbody and other modifications to enhance aerodynamic efficiency.
It has four side doors, a rear hatch . . . and no tailpipe.

Power system: A 21-kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery pack powers an electric
motor that drives the front wheels. The transmission is automatic —
one-speed direct drive.

Capacities: There are seats for four people. Cargo capacity is 9.6 cubic
feet, enough for a week’s groceries for a family of four. Recharging time to
“full” ranges from seven to 20 hours, depending on whether you use Bosch’s
quick-charge system or regular 120-volt house current.

Mileage: The MPGe (gasoline miles-per-gallon equivalent) is 119, a pretty
good number.

Safety: Standard equipment includes a three-year subscription to GM’s OnStar
emergency communications system; four-wheel disc brakes (ventilated front,
solid rear); four-wheel anti-lock brake protection; emergency braking
assistance; electronic brake-force distribution; stability control; traction
control; stolen-vehicle tracking assistance; and 10 air bags.

Price: The base price of the 2014 Spark EV 1LT is $27,495, with a dealer’s
invoice price of $26,395. A more posh Spark EV 2LT is available at $27,820,
with a dealer’s invoice price of $26,707. A $7,500 federal tax rebate
applies to both cars, as does a $810 factory-to-dealer destination fee. East
Coast supplies are limited.
[© bangordailynews.com]




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EVLN: Earth's Fastest Buckeye EV Just Keeps Getting Quicker (videos)
+
EVLN: Tesla Co-Founder Joins BRD Motorcycles' Board


{brucedp.150m.com}



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