By on June 13, 2008

1947-nissan-tama-electric-car-lg.jpgFirst and foremost, in terms of Nissan, four times more EV range equals 250 miles. This according to Mitsuhiko Yamashita, Nissan's executive VP of R&D. That's slightly more distance than the all-new Toyota Land Cruiser can cover with a single tank of gas. Nissan's first-generation lithium ion packs are good for just 75 miles. The second-gen batteries will arrive in that most magical of years (2010) to propel an unspecified vehicle a bit over 100 miles. Third-gen lithiums will show-up right when the Mayan calendar ends (2012), and propel a car 185 miles on a charge. As AutoblogGreen's Dom Yoney points out, it's best not to compare these (hypothetical) numbers to the Tesla Roadster's (hypothetical) numbers. Apparently there's a metric called "watt hours per kilogram" involved, but my brain is too small and lizard-like to comprehend. Nissan lithium ion battery production will begin in earnest next year at 13k units before ramping-up to a 65k units. Eventually. 

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13 Comments on “Nissan To Quadruple EV Range by 2015...”


  • avatar
    mdf

    Wh/kg is an energy density figure for the battery. In effect, is Nissan going to make the battery bigger or better?

  • avatar
    Landcrusher

    Toyota Land Rover?

    Did I miss a product announcement?

  • avatar

    Landcrusher :
    Toyota Land Rover?

    Did I miss a product announcement?

    OOPS! Shows it doesn’t pay to proofread at 6 AM. Fixed.

  • avatar
    Paul Niedermeyer

    I want that Tama. Cute.

    Keep in mind that range back than was at probably 20-30mph. At that speed, Nissan’s 76 mile EV could probably go close to 200 miles.

  • avatar
    SunnyvaleCA

    Do you think it is possible that all the manufacturers could get together and come up with standard battery configurations? That way we might be able to upgrade when newer batteries are available. And–just maybe–the country could develop a system of battery swapping … pull into the gas station and swap your battery for a fresh one in 1 minute instead of waiting 20 minutes to quick-charge.

  • avatar
    shaker

    Looking at that Tama, I can see where the Cube got some DNA…

    Sunnyvale: A darn good point about standardization, but I doubt anything but a govt. mandate would make it happen this early in Hybrid-slash-EV development.

    Of course, if the US government were behind it, the battery would probably be required to look like a giant “D” cell.

  • avatar
    Lumbergh21

    Standardization will necessarily shake out due to market forces at some point. Most recently look at the battles between laser disc and dvd, blu ray and hddvd, vhs and beta, etc. Or to go back many years, cars themselves.

  • avatar
    moawdtsi

    Bring on the nukes, windmills, solar panels and electric cars. I’ve had enough of energy insecurity in the US.

  • avatar
    bjcpdx

    That thing is so ugly, it’s cute. Sort of breadvan meets kiddie car meets bug-eye Sprite. I’ll bet it had a really low center of gravity.

  • avatar
    John Horner

    That Tama EV looks like just the thing for my local errands. Cool!

  • avatar
    John Horner

    “watt hours per kilogram”

    The amount of energy stored per unit of weight by the battery expressed in metric units.

    Would “BTUs per pound” be easier to stomach?

  • avatar
    John Horner

    I don’t have high hopes for battery pack standardization. Laptops never got there nor did cell phones.

  • avatar
    improvement_needed

    John:

    True enough about standardization for cell phones and laptops…

    though, one could argue that vehicle batter packs are [can be] different…

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