https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/steering-out-of-floods-in-an-electric-car
Steering out of floods - in an electric car
Nov 3, 2018  Tan Hui Yee Indochina Bureau Chief

[images  
(slide show  flash)
1/2 The FOMM One is a Japanese-designed, Thai-produced electric car that
floats on water, allowing its driver to navigate towards dry ground during
floods

2/2 The FOMM One car floating in a 1.2m deep pool of water.PHOTO: KANNIKAR
PETCHKAEW

https://www.straitstimes.com/sites/default/files/articles/2018/11/03/asfomm0311.jpg
The FOMM One - which stands for First One Mile Mobility - is a watertight
battery-powered vehicle designed to help owners survive floods and transport
them to the nearest dry ground. ST PHOTO: TAN HUI YEE
]

BANGKOK - The tiny pink car crawled down a ramp before an expectant crowd,
then slid silently into the makeshift swimming pool.

But its floorboard stayed dry. And its engine kept running, as the driver
calmly steered his bobbing vessel around a corner.

Buyers of a new electric car who test-drove the vehicle in Bangkok on Friday
(Nov 2) got up close with this amphibious feature.

Called the FOMM One, the watertight battery-powered vehicle is designed to
help owners survive floods and transport them to the nearest dry ground.
FOMM stands for First One Mile Mobility.

Japanese national Hideo Tsurumaki invented it to help people survive watery
disasters like tsunamis, which has claimed thousands of lives in Japan and
around Asia.

Eventually, he headed to Thailand to set up a factory.

"Asean is a fast-growing area and Thailand is home to many Japanese (auto)
manufacturers," he told The Straits Times.

Mr Tsurumaki is now the chief executive of FOMM (Asia), a Thai-Japanese
joint venture which will be producing the first such vehicles for sale from
its factory in Thailand's central Chonburi province starting from February.

Thailand is home to the largest auto sector in Asean and has been offering
tax breaks to spur the production of electric vehicles.

FOMM Asia, as one such beneficiary, is exempted from paying corporate tax
for five years.

The car's 1.3m-wide frame seats a driver and front-seat passenger
comfortably, though there is little legroom for passengers who brave its
back seat.

Drivers grip a butterfly-shaped steering wheel and hand levers act as
accelerators.

There is precious little space in this car, which retails at 664,000 baht
(S$27,800). But FOMM Asia also plans to offer buyers roof racks, leather
seats and even wireless mobile phone chargers.

From Thursday (Nov 1) to Sunday, the company is turning a driving track in
Bangkok into an obstacle course for test drives. There, experts will push
the car near its limit of 80kmh and churn up gravel around tight corners.

But its most unique property is its waterborne capability, an attractive
feature in low-lying Bangkok which encounters flash floods so regularly that
one-time governor Sukhumbhand Paribatra once jested that those who want to
be truly safe from flooding should go live on a hill.

More tragically, a 41-year-old woman drowned in September when her pickup
truck stalled in a flooded underpass.

Turbine-like front wheels in the FOMM One control the car's direction in
water. The motors that power each front wheel are fully sealed and this
prevents the car from stalling.

"(The water level) can be as high as 3m, or 5m, no problem, it can 'swim' in
the water," FOMM (Asia)'s general manager Tananan Kanjanakuha told ST. Even
when fully loaded with four people, the car starts to float as soon as water
levels rise to 70cm, he says.

But the car is not something you would want to take for leisure cruises down
the river. At its fastest, it can move at just 2kmh in water.

In moderate floods, the car will keep its owner safe and dry - as the sodden
pedestrians wade past it through the water.
[© straitstimes.com]
...
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=FOMM
search evdl archive on  FOMM


+
https://autoweek.com/article/car-news/saltwater-carbecue-hundreds-cars-including-brand-new-maseratis-burn-italian-port
Saltwater carbecue: Hundreds of cars, including brand-new Maseratis, burn at
Italian port following flood
Nov 2, 2018  Seawater plus batteries equals bad, bad news  
Would the fire have been more or less intense if these had been electric
cars? It's tough to say -- are exploding batteries better or worse than
burning gasoline? ...
https://youtu.be/zsRugLjvYv4




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