http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1091583_nissan-leaf-likely-to-offer-larger-battery-for-longer-range
Nissan Leaf Likely To Offer Larger Battery For Longer Range
By John Voelcker  Apr 21, 2014

[images  
http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/2014-nissan-leaf_100451860_l.jpg
2014 Nissan Leaf

http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/2014-nissan-leaf_100451861_l.jpg
Nissan Leaf using CHAdeMO fast-charger

http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/nissan-leaf-using-chademo-fast-charger_100457004_l.jpg
]

Every electric-car owner wants more range; it's practically an immutable
law.

Now Nissan executive Andy Palmer has come close to confirming that a
longer-range Nissan Leaf is in the cards, though likely not until 2016 or
even 2017.

In an interview at last week's New York Auto Show with Palmer, who is
Nissan's product chief, he said offering multiple battery-pack options with
different ranges in the Leaf was being debated internally.

In general, auto executives rarely discuss future powertrain offerings
unless the technology being described is already on the way.

And it's notable that Nissan surveyed Leaf owners early this year, asking
them how much more they would pay for a Leaf with a 150-mile range.

Multiple packs

Palmer noted that the Leaf electric car would be on a standard Nissan model
cycle of updates every five or six years.

But he said the timing of updates was somewhat complicated by the
significant updates made to the Leaf for 2013--just two years into its
run--when production for the U.S. market shifted from Japan to Tennessee.

He called the idea of a longer-range Leaf was the subject of "intense
internal debate," with some parties feeling that the 2014 Leaf's rated range
of 84 miles was enough for the vast majority of users--and others feeling
that more U.S. buyers could be captured with a range in the triple digits.

In the end, Palmer suggested, there could be "two or even three"
battery-pack options offered in future Leaf models--"varying by market"
where the demand was strongest.

In the last several weeks, there's been much discussion of whether and when
a Nissan Leaf with a longer-range battery option would hit the market.

Not for 2015?

Specs for the Canadian version of the 2015 Nissan Leaf leaked last week--the
only changes are to paint colors--so 2016 would likely be the earliest model
year in which a higher-range pack could be offered.

Boosting pack size from the current 24 kilowatt-hours to perhaps 36 kWh
would boost range to something in the range of 120 to 130 miles, depending
on the added weight of the additional capacity.

A 42-kWh pack, mentioned casually by one Nissan North America executive in
another venue, might bring range as high as 150 miles, at least on the EPA
test cycle.

And that kind of range would neatly split the difference between the bulk of
plug-in electric cars now on sale--with ranges of 60 to 100 miles--and the
base Tesla Model S, with a 208-mile rated range.

If Nissan could offer such a car for $35,000 or less--that is, half the base
price of the 208-mile Tesla--it would likely reassure a number of potential
buyers who simply don't feel that the real-world range delivered by an
84-mile rating is good enough at high speeds, in cold weather, or after
inevitable capacity loss.

Success for Nissan

The Leaf has done well for the company, Palmer said, with 85 percent of its
buyers new to the Nissan brand (known as "conquests") and 80 percent of them
retained within the brand for their next vehicle.

It is already the best-selling electric car in history, with 110,000 sold
globally since December 2011.

And Nissan has aggressive goals for raising its sales--and adding more
models.

In the market at large, lithium-ion cell prices are low due to overcapacity
at the moment, with "intense price competition" among all cell makers.

But Palmer suggested that Nissan is seeing cost reductions greater than the
7-percent annual figure often proposed as the historic norm for small-format
consumer cells over the past 20 years.

And that should lead to some exciting electric-car developments in next few
years.
[© Green Car Reports]



http://www.plugincars.com/it-works-tesla-ev-buyers-should-get-battery-pack-size-options-129678.html
It Works for Tesla: EV Buyers Should Have Battery Pack Size Options
April 21, 2014 ... Nissan’s Fred Diaz, a senior vice president with a
specialty in after-sales, was asked about plans for beefing up the packs. “I
can’t say anything about longer-range [Leaf] because we can’t talk about [a]
future product,” he said. C’mon guys, get off the one-size-fits-all
mentality. Study those Tesla sales reports and give consumers two or more
pack choices.




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EVLN: Electric BajaBoard dares you to ride (video)
EVLN: 8s EV drag racer pushes ~1000BHP into 2-stock Netgain motors
EVLN: Phoenix Motorcars' Electric Shuttle Bus
EVLN: Pennsylvania Turnpike EVSE now available
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EVLN: Who was the naked guy dancing through an open Tesla-S sun-roof?


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