Yeah, unlike any other marketing program. What do you think the "agenda" was?
It could have been. It was definitely an impact upon those that GM
allowed to lease. They loved them.
They got bad press not for what they tried to do but for what they did do, and then covered up. Such as making a great EV, with new batteries that were twice as good being right around the corner, and
THEY KNEW IT.
Yes, lead and cadmium batteries are bad, but they were going to replace them with NiMH batteries from Ovonics, & all they had to do was SAY THAT. Ovshinky had already had good demonstration. See
HERE.
Thousands of people wanted them, GM only allowed a fraction of those that applied for leases to actually drive them. You know that. But it's just propaganda, huh?
Check research figures. How much money is spent on most vehicles, when you combine R&D & Marketing?
Besides, GM made the EV1 to comply with California Emissions regs. I doubt that even they thought it would work so well, especially with the NiMH batteries that were less than two years away.
GM: Sell Us Your EV1 Cars!
Large NiMH batteries are perfect for EVs, and were developed and patented by
Ovonics Battery. However, in 1994, General Motors acquired a controlling interest in Ovonics's battery development and manufacturing, including patents controlling the manufacturing of large nickel metal hydride (NiMH) batteries. In 2001, Texaco purchased GM's share in GM Ovonics. A few months later, Chevron acquired Texaco. In 2003, Texaco Ovonics Battery Systems was restructutred into Cobasys, a 50/50 joint venture between Chevron and Energy Conversion Devices (ECD) Ovonics. Now they will only sell large NiMH batteries in enormous quantities, quantities that would only fulfill orders for an entire car model's annual production.
GM could have been on the cutting edge of EV production and development, but
NO, they caved to Big Oil. Who would have thunk it? Yeah, industry only exists to make money for their stockholders and execs. That's the way to think. Why spend $1BIL when you're going to be selling ev's world-wide? Doesn't make any sense at all... :wink2:
It wouldn't have mattered since the NiMH batteries were ready to install. No more Cadmium, no Lead batteries. NiMH batteries have longer life, hold more charge, and are easy to recycle. But, then the EV1 wouldn't make as much as the Hummer, so let's dump it. GM doesn't need to be socially responsible, or ethical, huh?
What data? I'm posting the only valid info.
Why don't you tell us, you seem so excited about it.
That's because the company is passing the cost onto the consumer, unlike internal combustion models. I thought you claimed to know how this all worked.
When a new design for a viable large hi-cap battery comes out, it gets bought up by Big Oil. Why is that?
The question is "Why did not more people
GET TO lease them?"
Who knows? Who cares? With Industry greasing palms all over the place, from medications to toys, why didn't Detroit use its influence to get the EV rolling? That's a question that we all know the answer to. They made more money off of the Hummer, with it's low MPG and many replaceable parts. But, you already know all this.
It's all about the Benjamins...
Or.... they (GM) could produce and market an actual EV line, such as the new EV1 and S10 EV (cough) with the new& improved large NiMH batteries that were such a threat that GM bought the battery manufacturer before too many found out about them. Thumb their nose at Big Oil, produce a reasonable EV line, sell the hell out of them and earn the respect and loyalty of the American Consumer again. I have a great marketing slogan. "Screw it to Terrorism: Buy an EV!" With the new batteries out there, the only vehicles that would need hybrid tech would be work trucks and the like and those could easily be bio-diesel or ethanol. I doubt that our domestic trucking fleet could be totally EV, so get Volvo or PB or KW to start making Bio-Diesel tractors.
Yeah, I'm looking forward to the conversations. Heh.
I'd share more with you... but I don't want to.