https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1115896_appreciating-the-i-miev-oldest-modern-electric-car-still-in-production-after-10-years
Appreciating the i-MiEV: oldest modern electric car still in production
after 10 years
Mar 23, 2018  John Voelcker

[images  
https://images.hgmsites.net/med/2017-mitsubishi-i-miev_100552374_m.jpg
2017 Mitsubishi i-MiEV

https://images.hgmsites.net/lrg/2017-mitsubishi-i-miev_100552380_l.jpg

https://images.hgmsites.net/lrg/2016-mitsubishi-i-miev_100521476_l.jpg

https://images.hgmsites.net/med/rhd-mitsubishi-i-miev-and-tesla-roadster-electric-cars-february-2010-photo-chelsea-sexton_100647008_m.jpg
RHD Mitsubishi i-MiEV and Tesla Roadster electric cars, February 2010  /
Chelsea Sexton

https://images.hgmsites.net/lrg/mitsubishi-i-miev-electric-car-used-for-clean-across-canada-long-distance-drive-autumn-2010_100632015_l.jpg
Mitsubishi i-MiEV electric pickup truck, seen in New Zealand, 2018  /
Chelsea Sexton

https://images.hgmsites.net/med/2016-mitsubishi-i-miev_100521477_m.jpg
2016 Mitsubishi i-MiEV Quick Drive  / Doug Berger, NWAPA

https://images.hgmsites.net/med/mitsubishi-i-miev-electric-car-at-quick-charging-station_100182479_m.jpg
Mitsubishi i-MiEV electric car at quick charging station
]

Think back, if you can, to early 2008. In the real world, that's just 10
years ago, but in electric-car time, it's several millennia.

The Tesla Roadster had been announced, but hadn't yet struggled into
production.

The Nissan Leaf and Chevy Volt were still deep in development, and the plan
for a Tesla Model S hadn't been announced beyond a vague promise in Tesla's
published 2006 "Secret Master Plan."

So it was nothing short of a revelation when Mitsubishi announced it would
produce and sell a modern battery-electric hatchback, capable of seating
four adults, with a range of 60 to 80 miles from a 16-kilowatt-hour
lithium-ion battery pack.

That plan followed several years of testing prototypes of the Mitsubishi
i-MiEV, itself adapted from a Japanese minicar called the "i" first sold in
2005.

The i-MiEV went on sale in the U.S. in November 2011 and was finally
withdrawn from the North American market after the 2017 model year.

That car, remarkably, remains in production even today at the Mizushima
plant in Japan—and it can still be purchased new in that country and several
European markets.

Now the second-generation of the Nissan Leaf is available, rated at 151
miles, as well as the 238-mile Chevrolet Bolt EV. That's huge progress in 10
years, so it seems like a good time to turn back and offer some words of
appreciation to the world's first mass-priced modern electric car.

According to Mitsubishi, the company had built 46,827 i-MiEVs as of the end
of February, though a mere 2,100 were sold in the U.S.

Half of those U.S. sales came during 2013, also the Leaf's highest-selling
year to date, when competing electric cars were far more sparse than they
are today.

But for a couple of years before the i-MiEV officially went on sale,
Mitsubishi held demonstrations and loaned out test cars—in some cases,
right-hand-drive examples from Japan before re-engineering to meet U.S.
safety standards had been completed.

We had our own ride and drive in an i-MiEV in December 2008, in the streets
outside a conference in Washington, D.C.

We were able to confirm it did actually fit four adults, with plenty of
headroom and adequate legroom, even if their shoulders tended to touch.

Longtime electric-car advocate Chelsea Sexton wrote in February 2010 about
her family's week with one of those RHD i-MiEVs, which they nicknamed Mr.
Bean [
https://evchels.wordpress.com/2010/02/28/mr-bean/
].

Once the i-MiEV hit the market, a few of the very earliest of early adopters
snapped them up and embarked on a process much of the world will undergo
over the next 30 years: learning what it's like to live with an electric car
day to day.

Of course, others were more ambitious: a team of Canadians drove an i-MiEV
across the country in the "Clean Across Canada" drive in the fall of 2010.

The i-MiEV also proved popular among urban dwellers in crowded Japanese and
European cities, and Mitsubishi ultimately expanded the lineup in Japan only
to include a tiny pickup truck and delivery van as well.
Mitsubishi i-MiEV electric car used for Clean Across Canada long-distance
drive, Autumn 2010

In the U.S., one of those early adopters was our auto-writing colleague and
friend Mark Vaughn of AutoWeek—who wrote a memorable 2016 road test titled,
"I-Miev: We test the worst-selling car in America!"

That article wasn't a conventional road test, since it reflected on his own
five years with the Mitsubishi i-MiEV he bought in December 2011.

That car now has almost 53,000 miles on it. Vaughn laid out his fondness for
the little egg-shaped electric car in further comments for Green Car Reports
...

Yes, I'm the guy who bought the i-MiEV. Maybe there’s another one out there,
but not many. Before this cute little road pod was finally and mercifully
taken off the market last year, Mitsubishi sold a whopping 40 of them a
month. I don’t really understand why.

Here’s my deal: I write about cars for a living, and I’ve done so for 35
years. So I’ve driven everything ever made in the modern era of wheeled
anything, from the Bugatti Veyron to… to the i-MiEV.

I stopped being impressed by “luxury marques” and brand engineering long
ago, I have no interest in impressing the neighbors. I actually prefer
anonymity when I drive.

When I bought it, there were only two battery-electric cars on the market:
the i-MieV and the Nissan Leaf. But the Leaf was $6,000 more, which made the
Mitsubishi the obvious choice.

I charge it via electricity generated from solar panels on the roof of my
house. In theory, it could be the last thing running when the oil runs out.

I like it not just because it’s eco-friendly, but because, as a wannabe
engineer, it is the most efficient means of transportation short of light
rail or an electric skateboard (the latter which won’t hold four people).

It actually does seat four full-sized adults, has room for luggage, and the
rear seats fold down so you can put a bike back there. It's the ultimate in
efficient transportation.

After all these miles I still love it and would do it all over again.

The one thing I’m disappointed in—though I shouldn’t be, because it was to
be expected—is the reduction in range over six years. It started out with an
official 62-mile EPA range, and I could get 80 if I tried. Once I even got
100 miles.

Now it’ll do 40 or so miles. Mitsubishi told me the dealer can test it to
determine whether the range depletion is “normal.” If it’s not, I'll get a
new battery; if that decline is within the specs, tough cookies.

I believe the future is electric, not because it's cleaner—though it is—but
because it's the most efficient way to get a wheel to turn.

We couldn't have said it better ourselves.

But here's a thought: If the i-MiEV was a revelation in 2008, and a glimpse
of what might be possible to imagine 10 years later ... what will today's
electric cars look like from the vantage point of 2028?

And what kind of electric cars will be on the market by then?
[© 2018 Green Car Reports]


+
https://interestingengineering.com/nissan-will-light-up-a-japanese-town-with-used-electric-car-batteries
Nissan Will Light up a Japanese Town with Used Electric Car Batteries
March, 23rd 2018  "Even when batteries no longer serve to power cars, they
can be reborn to keep serving humans." Car makers such as Nissan have
already been investigating second-life usage for batteries for years.
However, industry experts think this market is still at its initial stages.
“We will turn the spread of the electric vehicle into an ...
https://youtu.be/yN4J4_nyIpI




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
 http://evdl.org/archive/


{brucedp.neocities.org}

--
Sent from: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to