'Bolt's small, rounded body is designed more for practicality and comfort
than for speed, looks or performance'
'Tax credits are capped at 200k vehicles per manufacturer= not all Bolt
buyers may qualify'

http://www.theverge.com/2016/9/13/12897514/chevy-bolt-238-miles-range-electric-epa
Chevy Bolt will have 238 miles of range, EPA says
September 13, 2016 ... an electric range of 238 miles according to estimates
by the EPA ... will have a base price of less than $37,500, meaning the
actual price will be less than $30,000 after a US federal tax credit of
$7,500 (receiving the full credit requires making enough money to pay $7,500
in tax, however). Several states offer additional tax credits, as well. The
actual price of the Bolt will be announced later this fall ... The 238 mile
range is an estimate of the number of miles the vehicle should be able to
travel in combined city and highway driving from a full charge. An extended
70 mph drive down the highway will drain the battery in a significantly
shorter distance, while city-only driving will likely enable a longer range
...



http://fortune.com/2016/09/13/chevy-bolt-range/
The Chevy Bolt EV Range Is Blowing Away Expectations—and Even Tesla's Model
3
SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 ... It’s a critically important number for GM, which
wants to show that it’s serious about electric cars. It’s also a public
double-dog dare of sorts to Tesla, which unveiled a 215-mile range electric
car—the Model 3—in April.

Both electric cars are aimed at the mass market. The Model 3 is expected to
be about $35,000, and the Chevy Bolt is supposed to be below $37,500 ...

However, the battle between the two automakers isn’t over yet. GM might be
beating Tesla to market with its Chevy Bolt. But Tesla has been mastering
electric vehicles for years. It’s likely that the Model 3, which isn’t
expected to be shipped until late 2017, will end up with a greater range
than 215 miles.

If Tesla does squeeze out more range from its battery, the competition will
come down to each car’s performance and built-in tech, as well as brand
recognition and geographic reach. The Tesla Model 3 has some slick design
finishes, notably the swooping rear window and its sculpted nose. It’s also
loaded with tech, including a 15-inch touchscreen and the company’s
hands-free semi-autonomous driving feature called Autopilot, which will come
standard in the car. And it accelerates from 0 to 60 in six seconds, which
should attract consumers looking for some extra zip ...



http://www.latimes.com/business/autos/la-fi-hy-bolt-ev-range-20160912-snap-story.html
enough to travel from Los Angeles to Las Vegas without stopping to recharge
-- is the best of available battery-powered cars in that price range.

As the first mid-priced, long-range electric vehicle to hit the market, the
Bolt could be the most convincing argument yet for mainstream acceptance of
an electric vehicle.

“This is the game-changer,” said Kelley Blue Book senior analyst Karl
Brauer, who has followed the electric vehicle market closely. “This is the
reason people will finally say electric vehicles are ready for prime time.”

Maybe. Analysts and car buyers have gotten excited about plug-ins before,
but consumers remain mostly resistant to the electric powertrain technology
-- attracted by the environmental benefits and carpool lane stickers but put
off by some combination of concern about range, price, location of charging
stations and uncertainty about qualifying for tax credits.

Despite the availability of more than a dozen well-reviewed plug-in electric
vehicles, annual sales of battery-powered passenger cars still account for
less than 1% of all U.S. vehicle sales.

So getting to market a year earlier than the Model 3, even with a longer
driving range, is no guarantee of success.

“Coming out of the gate with a higher number than (Tesla) is quite
positive,” Edmunds senior analyst Jessica Caldwell said. “But given the
market situation, with green cars not getting much traction, it’s still an
uphill battle.”

 ... (Tax credits are capped at 200,000 vehicles per manufacturer, meaning
that not all electric-vehicle owners will qualify.)

But that range and that price point have been tough benchmarks for
automakers to hit ... only Tesla’s Model S sedan and Model X crossover can
go more than 200 miles before recharging ...

Analysts say the Bolt EV will need more than big range and little price — in
particular, it lacks the “cool factor" that seems built into the Tesla line,
Caldwell said. Compared with the sleek and low Model 3, the Bolt's small,
rounded body is designed more for practicality and comfort than for speed,
looks or performance.

“GM is going to make a great car that will be as good or better than the
Model 3, from an engineering standpoint,” she said. “But they don’t have
that kind of cachet.”

Chevy has the advantage of speed to market. Whereas Tesla has been
notoriously bad about meeting its delivery deadlines, Chevy’s Bolt is almost
ready for prime time ...
The EPA put the recharge time for the Bolt EV at 9.3 hours on a Level 2 fast
charger ...

“This will be a straightforward, delivered-on-time, Bolt offering today what
Tesla is offering someday,” Brauer said. “Some of those Model 3 commitments
will be altered.”



http://phys.org/news/2016-09-gm-electric-chevy-miles.html
GM's electric Chevy Bolt to go 238 miles per charge
September 13, 2016 ... It takes 9.3 hours to recharge a Bolt from near empty
on a 240-Volt home charger, the company said. The Bolt also will be able to
get software fixes over the internet, Pam Fletcher, GM's executive chief
engineer for electric vehicles, said at a recent conference ...
http://cdn.phys.org/newman/csz/news/800/2016/chevroletbol.jpg
...
https://www.engadget.com/2016/09/13/the-chevy-bolt-will-have-a-238-mile-range/
The Chevy Bolt will have a 238-mile range
September 13, 2016 ... Say goodbye to range anxiety ...




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