FILE PHOTO: A Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) sign is seen at its U.S. headquarters in Auburn Hills, Michigan, U.S. May 25, 2018. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo MILAN (Reuters) – Italian carmaker Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV is in talks to form ties with Renault SA, a person familiar with the matter said on Saturday. It was too… Continue reading Fiat Chrysler in talks over ties with Renault: source
Tag: Nissan
Mitsubishi Secretly Working On New Lancer Evolution-Style SUV With Nissan’s Help
What this Mitsubishi-Nissan collaboration means is that the alliance will create a highly competitive parts bin out of which they will build their respective next-generation EVs.
Dealers unhappy about return on investment in EV training
Dealers are unhappy about the return on investment they are making in equipment training for EV and plug in vehicles. That’s one of the key findings of the second NFDA Electric Vehicle Dealer Attitude Survey. When asked about their satisfaction with return on investment in equipment training for EV and plug-in vehicles, retailers gave the… Continue reading Dealers unhappy about return on investment in EV training
Ghosn tried to set up foundation to run Nissan-Renault
Structure would have allowed ex-chairman to set own pay without need for disclosure Go to Source
Mitsubishi Electric SUV In The Works
In the near-future Mitsubishi could introduce a next-generation Outlander PHEV, Eclipse Cross PHEV and ASX BEV Mitsubishi is gearing up for a reorganization of its crossover/SUV lineup and greater differentiation between the three models – Outlander, Eclipse Cross and ASX (aka RVR or Outlander Sport) from 2020. For example, the length difference between the models… Continue reading Mitsubishi Electric SUV In The Works
Nissan board nominees not broaching merger issue: member
YOKOHAMA (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co is not considering the possibility of a merger with top shareholder Renault at the moment, and none of the nominees to the Japanese automaker’s board are pressing to make it an issue now, an external director said on Thursday. FILE PHOTO: A Nissan logo is pictured during the media… Continue reading Nissan board nominees not broaching merger issue: member
Mitsubishi rolls out SUV and EV strategy for 2020
Mitsubishi rolls out SUV and EV strategy for 2020
Critical hearing for Carlos Ghosn ahead of trial
Six months after his arrest, Carlos Ghosn will find, for the first time, this Thursday morning, the prosecutors and his three judges for a formal preliminary hearing to prepare for his future trial. A crucial step in the long legal process that awaits the former boss of Nissan and Renault. “It is possible that these… Continue reading Critical hearing for Carlos Ghosn ahead of trial
Status quo at Renault-Nissan must be changed: French finance minister
FILE PHOTO: French Economy and Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire delivers a speech during a high-level forum on debt at the Finance ministry in Paris, France, May 7, 2019. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo PARIS (Reuters) – The current status quo regarding the alliance between French carmaker Renault and its Japanese partner Nissan cannot continue and must… Continue reading Status quo at Renault-Nissan must be changed: French finance minister
Series hybrids were the next big thing 100 years ago: Are they any more likely today?
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1916 Owen Magnetic Tourer – Bonhams Tupelo Automobile Museum Auction (2019)
The 1916 Owen Magnetic Tourer that crossed the Bonhams auction block last month was more than a beautiful snapshot from an obscure moment in American automotive history.
As one of the technological wonders of its time, the Magnetic Tourer didn’t have any mechanical connection between its big 374-cubic-inch (6.1-liter) inline-6 engine and the drive wheels. And it could store energy through regenerative braking, or use its battery power to drive the vehicle for short distances.
It was by today’s definition a series hybrid. The engine has no physical link to the wheels; it drives a generator, supplying electricity that powers a motor system, with a battery acting as a buffer.
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Series hybrids have a long history, but outside of non-automotive applications like locomotives and submarines it’s mostly a history rooted in concept cars and research-and-development projects. No automaker has gone big with series hybrids in the way that Toyota has with its series-parallel systems in the Prius and many other vehicles, which can mechanically drive the wheels with both the engine and electric motor simultaneously.
Nissan Note e-Power hybrid
Nissan continues to say it has a lineup of series hybrids on the way—badged e-Power in upcoming vehicles—although that system hasn’t arrived yet in more robust form for the U.S. Although a few other vehicles like the Karma Revero (originally Fisker Karma) use a true series-hybrid system, the ones that have seen wider production, like the Chevrolet Volt (Voltec) and the Honda Accord Hybrid (i-MMD) have used a combination of series and parallel modes.
As pointed out by Hemmings, the Magnetic Tourer used a version of the so-called “electric transmission” that had been developed by Justus B. Entz as early as 1902, with a neatly packaged drive unit employing two identical motor-generators, plus a 24-volt electrical system.
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The car had no clutch, but with a system of controllers providing five forward speed settings for the propulsion system via and a steering-column speed selector (and we suspect, with the throttle), the driver could choose the speed—and even use regenerative braking, which spared the mechanical rear brakes. There’s no clutch, and as with many vehicles from its time it may have taken some patience to drive it smoothly (and safely).
Some who have experienced the Owen have described it as locomotive-like—which isn’t all that surprising given how the technology is popularly used.
1916 Owen Magnetic Tourer – Bonhams Tupelo Automobile Museum Auction (2019)
This particular Owen Magnetic Tourer was part of the collection of the late Frank Spain and the former Tupelo Automobile Museum. At the Bonhams April 27 auction, selling the contents of the museum for charity, the Magnetic Tourer sold for $128,800, including the sale premium.
The car up for sale, one of about 800 examples built in 1916, had just 2,500 miles and was described as “in nice older restoration condition…with a high degree of originality.”
READ MORE: Will electric cars eliminate conventional hybrids from the market?
“Although they were popular with celebrities, they were ultimately a market failure and the company failed in 1921,” summed Bonhams.
Hybrids like the Magnetic Tourer could have become a larger part of the market during that time as they merged two technologies consumers were already familiar with. By 1916 gasoline had become widely accepted as the solution for getting the quantum leap in mobility—the personal automobile—to the masses, but that was a relatively recent development. In 1900, 38 percent were battery-electric.
Two things doomed the system then. It was abandoned at the time for being too heavy and expensive, at a cost of more than $3,000 in 1916 money—the equivalent of $70,000+ today.
2018 Toyota Prius
Today, the thing that has driven most automakers to series-parallel hybrids rather than pure series hybrids is a common scenario in U.S. driving: high-speed freeway driving. In such environments, multiple engineering teams over multiple decades have concluded that a mechanical connection to the engine offers better efficiency.
Nevertheless, this car and its technology can be cause for taking stock of what happened then and why certain technology is favored today. And today the current may be changing, with many automakers accepting electric cars as the future and, perhaps (like Nissan), seeing series hybrids as a cost-effective incremental technology.
Would electric cars have caught on earlier had this Owen been more popular and affordable? Would hybrids have taken a different preferred form in modern vehicles? Or would transmissions have existed in the same way? Some obscure models from the past, like this one, may yet help frame the future.