At a splashy news conference at the Detroit auto show last January, Ford Motor boasted about a slew of 40 new electric vehicles and hybrids coming by 2022, an $11 billion investment. As bolts of electricity flashed across a giant video backdrop, Ford teased one EV in particular, the Mach 1, a high-performance, battery-powered SUV… Continue reading Ford CEO James Hackett, Under Fire From Wall Street, Shows Forbes the Early Fruits of His Turnaround Plan
Tag: JLR
Should classic cars be converted to electric power? Twitter poll results
Jaguar E-Type Zero
Green Car Reports readers sometimes leave themselves open to having extreme viewpoints.
Such were the results of last week's Twitter poll, when we asked: “Should classic cars be converted to electric power?”
We asked the question following what seemed like a rash of announcements of people doing exactly that, from established automakers to startups to garage hobbyists.
DON'T MISS: Royal couple's electric Jaguar E-type Zero coupe will go into production
Most recently and notably, Jaguar launched a program to rebuild classic Jaguar E-types into electric cars just like the one that Prince Harry and bride Meghan Markle drove to their reception after the latest royal wedding, called the E-type Zero.
Other efforts include Electra Meccanica, which plans to begin converting replica Porsche 356 Speedsters to electric power, as well as numerous—and increasingly famous—home-built electric car conversions.
Jaguar says its conversion is completely reversible.
Still, the trend led us to wonder where our readers stood on the question of altering polluting, yet historical, artifacts to clean, modern electric power.
Perhaps somewhat predictably, most of our Twitter respondents immediately went for clean, modern updates. Damn the torpedoes, 57 percent of our respondents chose “all cars should be clean,” including, apparently or maybe especially, sexy classic cars that were never designed to be clean in the first place.
Electra Meccanica eRoadster, an electric Intermeccanica Speedster replica
Only 15 percent of our respondents went along with Jaguar's notion that installing electric powertrains would be OK, as long as the modifications are fully reversible, to put the car back in original condition if a future owner should ever want to put it in a museum, for example. Jaguar went to great lengths to make sure its new 40-kwh battery and electric motor fit into the same dimensions and weigh about the same as the car's original, classic inline-6 and 4-speed automatic.
CHECK OUT: Electra Meccanica teases new-old e-Roadster
Fewer than a tenth of our respondents, 9 percent, made allowances for less valuable cars, as many individual car collectors do. Often conversions are done on original VW Beetles, which the company made by the millions. Many are rusted out or have been repaired and might not have been that valuable even in original condition.
At the other extreme, 19 percent of our respondents said classic cars should be left alone, “they're artifacts.”
As always, our Twitter polls are unscientific, because of low sample size (268 responses, this time), and because our respondents are self selected.
Still, we thought this poll was particularly interesting. Thanks for participating!
Mercedes takes on Tesla with electric SUV
German carmaker Mercedes-Benz has unveiled its first fully-electric SUV, in a bid to take on US rival Tesla. The subsidiary of Daimler says the EQC, which has two electric motors, will have a range of more than 450km. It will start rolling off production lines at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Bremen in 2019. The firm… Continue reading Mercedes takes on Tesla with electric SUV
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The Jaguar I-PACE Is Not Living Up To Its ‘Tesla Killer’ Moniker [Opinion]
The Jaguar I-PACE is many things, but a 'Tesla Killer' it is not.
There are many electric cars that have been branded as a “Tesla Killer,” but the one closest to hitting the mark (apart from the Chevy Bolt, which GM is strangely not aggressively selling to compete against the Model 3) is the Jaguar I-PACE. A crossover all-electric SUV, the I-PACE is powerful enough, and it even has a decent range of about 200 miles per charge.
But is it a Tesla Killer? Not really.
There is no doubt that the I-PACE is a great electric car. Its performance is not bad either, with a 0-60 mph time of 4.5 seconds, which is quicker than the Tesla Model X 100D. Size-wise, the I-PACE is quite a bit smaller than the Model S and X, being closer in size to the Model 3. Starting at $69,500, the Jaguar I-PACE sits right at the same price point as the entry-level Model S, the 75D, according to WIRED. That said, inasmuch as the I-PACE’s cost is justifiable considering the price of its competition, it falls a little bit when compared to a Model 3 of the same price.
The Tesla Model 3 starts at $35,000, though the base variant is not being manufactured by Tesla as of yet, according to a Top Gear report. The Model 3’s top-tier variant, the Model 3 Performance, is in the same price point as the entry-level Jaguar I-PACE, costing $64,000 before any options. For that $64,000, the Model 3 has roughly the same space as the I-PACE, but with superior speed, range, and performance.
The Model 3 Performance is designed to beat high-performance cars like the BMW M3 and the Audi RS5. Its acceleration is pretty brutal, allowing the electric vehicle to sprint from 0-60 mph in 3.5 seconds. The Tesla’s range is also 315 miles per charge, and it is supported by the company’s Supercharger network, which is growing by the day. As noticed by these specs, the Model 3 Performance before any options actually outperforms the Jaguar I-PACE, and it travels farther per charge too.
While it is easy to market a new EV as a Tesla Killer, it should be noted that the more accurate term for this new line of electric cars is a “fossil fuel car killer,” in the way that they boast specs and performance figures that surpass that of gasoline-powered vehicles. Thus, instead of trying to “kill” Tesla, a company that exclusively manufactures electric cars, it would be far better to compare the I-PACE to competing gasoline cars instead.
New mid-engined 2022 Jaguar F-Type to rival McLaren
The successor to the Jaguar F-Type will embrace hybrid technology and go mid-engined when it launches around 2022, Auto Express can exclusively reveal. And further down the line, Jag could launch a fully-electric version to rival the forthcoming Porsche Taycan. Development work on the F-Type’s successor is under way, with engineers devising a plan that… Continue reading New mid-engined 2022 Jaguar F-Type to rival McLaren
UPDATE 3-Aston Martin plans to go public as turnaround picks up speed
LONDON (Reuters) – Luxury carmaker Aston Martin plans to float on the London Stock Exchange, completing a turnaround for the once perennially loss-making company that could now be valued at up to 5 billion pounds ($6.4 billion). FILE PHOTO: A company logo is seen on the new Aston Martin Vantage car at a media event… Continue reading UPDATE 3-Aston Martin plans to go public as turnaround picks up speed
James Bond cult brand: Aston Martin reviews IPO
All articles and backgrounds 08/29/2018 James Bond cult brand Aston Martin reviews IPO DPA James Bond aka Daniel Craig gets out of an Aston Martin DB 10 British sports car maker Aston Martin wants to go public. A corresponding registration document as a condition for the Gang on the floor the automaker had submitted to… Continue reading James Bond cult brand: Aston Martin reviews IPO
VW Group hit hard by new emissions test
To gauge the impact of WLTP, an Autocar survey of car firms revealed that, while most were expecting no issues or delays due to WLTP, several have been forced to suspend production or axe models to meet the new rules. Volkswagen Group brands have been particularly affected by the change in tests. Audi, Seat, Skoda… Continue reading VW Group hit hard by new emissions test
Elon Musk will sabotage his own plans if he takes Tesla private, Tesla bull says
Tesla investor writes open letter to Elon Musk on keeping Tesla public
5 Hours Ago | 02:43
Tesla CEO Elon Musk will sabotage his own goals for the electric car maker if he takes it private, said ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood, who predicted Tesla stock could reach $4,000 per share.
“By going private [Musk] would deprive Tesla of reaching his own priorities — mobility as a service, autonomous truck platoons, utility energy storage, even air passenger drones,” Wood said Friday on CNBC's “Closing Bell.” “He's got big plans, and he needs to scale these plans. We don't think that it will happen nearly as effectively in the private markets as in the public.”
Tesla has battled widespread scrutiny, following Musk's Aug. 7 tweet that he was planning to take Tesla private and had “funding secured.” The Securities and Exchange Commission served Tesla with a subpoena last week, as it looks into whether Musk violated securities laws by claiming he had funding for the maneuver. In addition, Musk himself has been criticized for erratic behavior. He confessed in an interview with The New York Times the toll of the “excruciating” year he has had leading Tesla, particularly when crunching to meet Model 3 production goals.
Through it all, Wood, who is CEO of innovation-focused investment service ARK Invest, has remained bullish. Known for making bold calls, the money manager first revealed her $4,000 per share call in February. On Wednesday, she published a letter to Musk and Tesla's board of directors, imploring them not to take the company private. She sees the company trading anywhere from $700 to $4,000 per share within five years if it remains public.
Tesla closed the day up 0.85 percent at $322.82 per share, having gained 5.67 percent on the week.
Central to Wood's argument that Tesla could trade as high as $4,000 per share is the idea that Tesla will orient itself away from the capital-intensive vehicle manufacturing business toward software. And that's where Tesla excels, she said.
“We think he's already way ahead of the game. He's got the data, he's got the chip that's three years ahead of Nvidia's chip … He's got batteries, which are three years ahead of any other company's batteries. And he's had the vision about autonomous taxi networks from the very beginning,” Wood said on Friday.
Pierre Ferragu, head of technology infrastructure research at New Street Research, said, “Tesla will become one of the major premium car manufacturers, like Audi and Jaguar … within the next seven years,” but its success will be from a purely go-to-market perspective, as Tesla has lower costs for marketing and distribution than other automakers.
“Maybe one day mobility-as-a-service will be a thing, but today there is nothing tangible there,” he said.
New Street Research placed a 12-month price target of $530 on Tesla and sees it reaching $1,200 to $2,000 by 2025. It all hinges on production numbers.
“They have seven years to be able to produce 2.5 [million] to 3 million cars a year. As you can imagine, getting to the first couple hundred thousand is the most challenging part,” he said. “Once they are at scale of BMW, they will be significantly more profitable than” BMW.
On production, Wood was bullish, saying Tesla will “iterate and iterate until they get it right, and then, they are going to be able to scale enormously when they get it right.” But Wood's biggest hopes for the company concern software, and she worries those lofty mobility-as-a-service goals won't come to fruition if Tesla goes private.
Musk is “the kind of person you need, one with vision who ends up at times very frustrated with the short time horizon of public markets. But the public markets will reward him handsomely if he just sticks with it and starts performing with the production schedules,” she said.