New Delhi: Costa Rica likes to advertise itself as an ecological paradise, where more than 98 percent of its electricity needs are met by clean energy. But in the automotive industry, it is lagging behind with just 600 out of 1.4 million private vehicles running on electricity rather than petrol or diesel. Experts believe that… Continue reading Clean energy leader Costa Rica turns attention to electric cars
Tag: Nissan
Nissan to make fewer cars in China in months ahead as demand slows: source
TOKYO (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) will produce 30,000 fewer vehicles in the coming months in China than what it had planned, a person briefed on the matter told Reuters, as global automakers grapple with falling demand in the world’s biggest car market. Nissan cars are seen at a storage area in Guangzhou, Guangdong… Continue reading Nissan to make fewer cars in China in months ahead as demand slows: source
UPDATE 1-Nissan to make fewer cars in China in months ahead as demand slows-source
TOKYO (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) will produce 30,000 fewer vehicles in the coming months in China than what it had planned, a person briefed on the matter told Reuters, as global automakers grapple with falling demand in the world’s biggest car market. Nissan cars are seen at a storage area in Guangzhou, Guangdong… Continue reading UPDATE 1-Nissan to make fewer cars in China in months ahead as demand slows-source
PSA’s CEO on What It Will Take to Re-Enter the U.S. – Automobile
Our New York bureau chief Jamie Kitman recently sat down with the CEO of French automaker PSA Carlos Tavares to further discuss the company’s future in North America and across the globe. Note: This interview, which took place before the recent Carlos Ghosn scandal, has been edited for clarity. Automobile Magazine: Why come back to… Continue reading PSA’s CEO on What It Will Take to Re-Enter the U.S. – Automobile
Can VinFast – Vietnam’s newest carmaker – succeed? – Top Gear
David Beckham is an icon in Vietnam. We know this because VinFast, Vietnam’s newest and actually only car maker, brought Beckham on stage at the launch of its first two cars at the Paris Motor Show. Along with Miss Vietnam. And you thought the casual decorative sexism of motorshows was dead… Anyway, regardless of whether you think… Continue reading Can VinFast – Vietnam’s newest carmaker – succeed? – Top Gear
Ghosn Investigators Focus on Ties to Saudi Businessman – Wall Street Journal
TOKYO—The latest investigation by Tokyo prosecutors into Nissan Motor Co.’s Carlos Ghosn centers on his relationship with a Saudi Arabian businessman, Khaled Al Juffali, who runs part of Nissan’s Middle East business, according to people familiar with the matter. Some of the people said payments by Nissan to a Juffali company—on which prosecutors have cast… Continue reading Ghosn Investigators Focus on Ties to Saudi Businessman – Wall Street Journal
No car keys? No problem. Hyundai rolls out fingerprint technology that makes keys obsolete
Source: Hyundai
Hyundai Smart Fingerprint technology
If you're prone to losing car keys, the latest-generation Hyundai Santa Fe just going on sale in China is for you.
It offers buyers the option of using a fingerprint detector that can open the vehicle and turn on its engine, rendering car keys as necessary as a landline. Touch one of the SUV's biometric sensors and it will even adjust such things as seat position and sideview mirrors to the settings preferred by individual drivers in its database.
The oldest known locks were found in the ruins of the ancient Syrian capital of Nineveh and date back thousands and thousands of years. Today, keys are an accessory to just about everything we do, giving us access to our homes, offices, gym lockers and, of course, our cars. For motorists, however, keys could soon go the way of the crank starter, rumble seat and running board.
It's already rare to find a car that still uses a conventional metal key. They've largely been replaced by wireless key fobs on all but a handful of base models. But manufacturers are looking at a variety of alternative technologies, much like those replacing traditional keys in homes and workplaces — and, of course, to unlock smartphones, where biometric sensors let users forget those complicated and often forgettable passcodes.
Volvo's key app
“Mobility needs are evolving and so are our customers' expectation to access cars in an uncomplicated way,” said Henrik Green, vice president of product strategy and vehicle line management at Volvo Car Group.
Volvo's S90 makes even a key fob an option, the big sedan otherwise relying on the owner's smartphone to serve as a key, at least as long as the motorist has downloaded the necessary app. Approach the car and it links up to the phone by Bluetooth, unlocking its doors when the motorist touches one of the handles.
BMW, meanwhile, uses a similar approach with the newly redesigned 2019 3 Series. In this case, however, it uses near-field communications, or NFC, technology, similar to what underlies smartphone-based financial transaction services like Apple Pay. The system can be shared with as many as five different drivers.
BMW isn't ready to abandon keys, or at least key fobs, entirely. The latest version of its flagship 7 Series sedan features an oversized key fob that incorporates a reconfigurable display that allows an owner to control a wide range of vehicle functions that couldn't be incorporated into a traditional fob with hard buttons.
The push to move away from conventional car keys comes at the same time automakers are loading up vehicles with all sorts of digitally controlled technologies. Wireless fobs, smartphone apps and biometric sensors can all tell the vehicle precisely which motorist is going to be driving, adjusting such things as seats, mirrors, climate control and even which radio station to tune to.
Defective switches
Smartphone apps are particularly useful for new battery-powered vehicles, allowing a driver to check how much range is left and, if it's plugged in, to control when the vehicle begins charging. Vehicles like the Nissan Leaf and Jaguar I-Pace also allow a motorist to remotely turn on the climate control while the vehicle is plugged in so that the cabin is comfy when it's time to drive off. That also has the advantage of requiring less range-sapping energy when the vehicle is unplugged.
There are other reasons why automakers want to abandon conventional keys, as General Motors learned earlier in the decade. A poor ignition switch design made it possible to inadvertently shut off the engine on a number of models. It didn't help, of course, that GM delayed fixing the problem for close to a decade. Ultimately, 2.4 million vehicles equipped with the defective switches were recalled. And, with more than 120 deaths connected to the problem, GM paid out more than $1 billion in fines and settlements to victims and their families.
Switching to digital keys offers a number of new opportunities for carmakers, car owners and even retailers. Last April, Amazon partnered up with General Motors and Volvo on a service that can allow it to place packages in the trunk of a vehicle, rather than leaving goods on a porch where they might get stolen. The service is available to Amazon Prime customers who have GM vehicles newer than 2015 and equipped with the GM OnStar or Volvo on Call telematics services.
Cloning signals
GM's car-sharing service, Maven, also makes use of the OnStar service to allow customers to open a vehicle they are renting without having to first get the key — which the owner stores inside in a locked box.
That's not to say that digital alternatives don't have their own problems. Several recent news reports have alleged that thieves have been able to make off with Tesla vehicles by cloning signals from their key fobs — something captured on video during one robbery in the U.K. Tesla has told media outlets that it isn't the only automaker that is vulnerable to these types of hacks into passive entry systems, and says it has rolled out a number of security enhancements to assist customers in decreasing the likelihood of such security breaches.
Some cybersecurity experts warn that even when they're not in use, digital key fob codes can be cloned, and some have suggested storing the devices in metal coffee cans, much like chipped credit cards can be stored inside special sleeves designed to prevent their code from being read and cloned by hackers.
“We think it is becoming the new way of stealing cars,” Roger Morris, a vice president at the National Insurance Crime Bureau, told The Wall Street Journal, after several vehicles were stolen in Houston two years ago, with video of one theft appearing to show how the thieves used cloned keys. “The public, law enforcement and the manufacturers need to be aware.”
There's also a cost issue. A motorist who needs a spare metal key can get one for a dollar or two at most hardware stores — unless it's a more secure key with a digital chip built in. But the price for a replacement wireless key fob can run anywhere from $200 up to more than $500 for one of the smart fobs used on the BMW 7 Series.
Alternative 'keys'
Despite such concerns, expect to see the industry to continue the shift to alternative “keys,” if for no other reason than convenience. Several Jaguar models, such as the E-Pace SUV, feature “activity keys,” little more than waterproof wristbands with built-in NFC chips. Someone who is going swimming or hiking, Jaguar says, doesn't have to carry and risk losing a conventional key or fob. Instead, they lock the regular fob in the car and wear the band. When it's time to open the vehicle up again they simply touch the activity key to a reader on the back logo.
Digital alternatives actually aren't entirely new. Various Ford designs for decades have allowed motorists to access the vehicle using a keypad on the car's center pillar. The motorist still has to keep a conventional key or fob hidden inside the vehicle, however, to start the engine. And similar keypads may be needed on future vehicles to make it possible for a motorist to get into a vehicle should their smartphone run out of battery life or other new systems fail.
Biometric sensors could make the process even easier, since there's no need to carry or wear anything. There are, however, other challenges. Hyundai had to make sure its fingerprint sensor could work under all weather conditions and not be foiled if the car was dirty – something that can be expected of an SUV. The automaker claims the system can distinguish one person's fingerprint from another with an error rate of about 1 in 50,000, which is along the lines of what Apple claims for its own touch-based system.
For the moment, Hyundai will be offering the fingerprint system only in China versions of the Santa Fe. But if it works as expected and generates strong consumer demand it can be expected to start offering the technology in other markets, as well.
Source: Hyundai
Hyundai Smart Fingerprint technology
Would a Porsche Taycan Turbo confuse the Mission for sports-car brand’s electric car?
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Porsche Taycan production
The Porsche Taycan—since way back in its early 2015 Mission E Concept days—has been discussed by Porsche in two distinct ways.
On one hand it’s a Tesla rival, capable of meeting higher standards of performance than the Model S or Model 3. And on the other hand it’s at the lead of a big part of Porsche’s future, as it sees all (or nearly all) of its cars eventually becoming electric.
At the center of Porsche’s intent to one-up Tesla—outside of the Nürburgring bragging rights that might not matter to many Tesla fans—has been its 800-volt electrical architecture, and the faster 350-kw CCS-format charging that it allows without added bulk. Porsche Turbo Charging, as it’s been called along the way, allows an 80-percent charge in as little as 15 minutes, and the capability will be included in all Taycan production models.
DON’T MISS: Porsche Mission E to be called Porsche Taycan
Up until now Turbo Charging seemed like a healthy jab at Tesla and its Supercharger network, and a term that would be smart to place all over charging hardware and marketing materials while the advantage is theirs. However, it may never become a true shot at the bow.
Porsche is big on heritage and continuity, and a hint on model positioning for the production 2020 Porsche Taycan suggests that on the way to the future, the sports-car maker may not be willing to give up all of its internal-combustion past—perhaps especially its “Turbo” badge.
In correspondence from a “Porsche Global Brand Ambassador” at the automaker, The Drive’s Alex Roy was informed of initial pricing from the low $90,000 range up to over $130,000 (in line with what has previously been said). But what accompanied that was that there will be three models, Taycan, Taycan 4S, and Taycan Turbo.
Although this is a single correspondence, and the person who wrote the e-mail might have accidentally included Taycan Turbo—a “legacy automaker” stumble like the oil-change notices that were widespread for early Nissan Leaf owners—it’s crafted in a way that doesn’t leave a lot of room for that confusion.
CHECK OUT: Audi e-tron GT electric sports car is its take on Porsche Taycan
Porsche executives have said previously that the Taycan (Mission E) would borrow some pieces of existing Porsche model nomenclature. However, the term Turbo was not one we expected to see. When contacted by our colleagues at Motor Authority, Porsche Cars North America confirmed that no official pricing or information has been announced.
Porsche Mission E concept, 2015 Frankfurt Auto Show
As of earlier in the year, Porsche said that it was still working on how to present its high-power charging technology for North America. With one each at its 189 U.S. dealerships, several at each of its Experience Centers (LA and Atlanta), and a few more 350-kw CCS stations through Electrify America and EVgo, it’s likely that there will be more than 200 stations capable of charging the Taycan at its peak rate around the time the vehicle is launched.
READ MORE: Porsche already has a prototype that will charge faster than its 350-kw Taycan
Porsche currently has a number of models that are turbocharged yet don’t bear the Turbo badge, so it’s already using the badge to denote top-performance versions rather than everything that uses exhaust-fed forced induction.
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Volkswagen: Huge power bank charges electric cars
The crux of electric cars is the poorly developed charging network: Volkswagen is therefore building a mobile fast-charging station that can be set up wherever it is needed – for example on public parking spaces in the city or as a temporary charging point for major events. December 27, 2018, 12:07 pm, Andreas Donath Mobile… Continue reading Volkswagen: Huge power bank charges electric cars