As pure-play electric cars go, Subaru’s R1e may have found the perfect formula. And it might get the chance to prove it towering before its rivals do.
The New York ability Authority will start checking two of the vehicles that summer. Results will be a litmus analysis for sales of the vehicle in the U.S.
As with the Chevrolet Volt, the R1e assumes that most Europeans and North Americans commute fewer than 40 miles a day. As such, the Subaru has a range of 50 miles. It has a top speed of 65 mph. These specs alone take it out of the golf-cart category.
The Volt will feature a gas-powered engine that recharges the batteries after 40 miles, extending the vehicle’s range indefinitely. The Subaru won’t have that ability, yet the R1e’s small size (it’s a two-seater minicar, fairly similar to the gas-powered Smart ForTwo) means that its lithium-ion batteries will be smaller than the Volt’s–and far less
Even better, the Subaru’s batteries can be “quick charged” to 80 percent capacity in 15 minutes. plus, Subaru’s got a lead on the competition in timing alone. The Volt is scheduled to debut in 2010–and GM officials are adamant that it will meet that deadline, despite nagging delays in development. The Subaru was developed in partnership with the Tokyo Electric potential Company, Inc., and a fleet of R1es have been tested around Tokyo since 2006.
So yes, it’s an urban commuter, a city car. But whether sales of the ForTwo are any indication, it might have a much broader appeal.
Sources: Subaru, AutoWeek, SmartCar
Photo: Deathlink licensed from Creative Commons
Original post by Marty Jerome

























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