back to article GM declares Ampera e-car 'production ready'

General Motors will show off what it calls the "production ready" Vauxhall Ampera at the Geneva Motor Show this week - even though the e-car won't actually go on sale here for another ten months. GM will price the Ampera at a whopping £33,995, though Brits will get £5000 of that paid by the government. And buyers won't have to …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Can they actually learn to use a tunnel?

    FFS, can they actually run this through a tunnel for once?

    An example of how far can you go starting from the same ugly vectra roots - the new SAAB.

    I am willing to bet a case of beer that it has a lower drag coefficient than this "enviromentally friendly vehicle". This is outright silly because GM definitely has way more resources than a minor sports car manufacturer which has taken over a bankrupt ex-GM subsidiary.

  2. Steve X
    Thumb Down

    Brits will get £5000 of that paid by the government?

    Means "Brits will get £5000 of that paid by other British taxpayers", i.e. this is what the VAT hike pays for.

    When will people realize that governments have no money of their own. All they can ever do is redistribute our money. Personally I'd prefer to keep my money & redistribute it as I want.

    1. BristolBachelor Gold badge
      Coat

      Steve X

      That's fine Steve, but I do hope you realise how much of your cash you'll have to redistribute to buy land and tarmac it to drive your car :)

      I read somewhere that a recent motorway re-surfacing cost £1M per lane per mile, and that was with the land already owned and with the foundations already in place!

      1. Steve X

        Tarmac

        Meh! Who needs tarmac? :)

        Seriously, though, that's not quite the same thing. There's a world of difference between paying a basic level of tax to fund infrastructure that we could never realistically manage individually, and subsiding individual purchases as a way to influence behaviour.

        Of course it used to be simpler, in the days where anyone owning a car paid a Road Fund licence, which paid for the roads. Once it became clear that total income from road users was 10x the money actually spend on the roads that model became untenable, though...

  3. John Smith 19 Gold badge
    Happy

    The subsidy *might* be worthwhile

    If in encourages the market *enough* to encourage the construction of a widespread charging network.

    If the batteries were made (or even re-cycled. AFAIK UK batteries are sent to France at present) in UK factories.

    It depends what the *long* term goal of this policy is.

    Otherwise they might as well re-introduce the car scrappage scheme.

  4. DrXym

    Ugly looking car

    I'm glad to see electric / hybrid vehicles becoming more mainstream. What I don't like is how ugly many of them are.

    This Ampera really looks like it fell from the top of the ugly tree with a horrible grill and bizarre trim around the windows. Worst part is the chassis which looks like it is sunk about 4 inches lower than a normal vehicle, probably to hold batteries. This low slung look might be great on a smooth roads. What happens when you hit a pothole, drive through a puddle or run over some debris?

    I wish EV makers would just produce a nice but ordinary looking car. They don't need some quasi futuristic exterior, just something which could be compared against a regular vehicle and not look weird for it.

    1. Paw Bokenfohr
      Go

      Take a look at the Honda Civic Hybrid 2...

      ...http://www.thedailygreen.com/cm/thedailygreen/images/GA/Honda-Civic-Hybrid-lg.jpg

      It just looks like a nomal saloon. Partly because, I believe, it just uses the same chassis as the saloon non-hybrid Civic from Canada and America.

      1. DrXym

        Looks better

        Much better. Not sure I like the style but I wouldn't think it would look out of place vs other saloons.

        I think these Volt / Ampera cars are so low slung it completely throws out the proportions of the doors, grille, windows. That might explain the ugly black masking around the window - an attempt to make the window look bigger than it is. The grille is just weird. I wonder if the doors open closer to the ground and what hilarity would follow if you park up against a kerb.

      2. Mike S

        Actually the Volt / Ampera looks like a Honda Insight

        I saw a Volt yesterday on the road, and at first I thought it was a Honda Insight.

        Not a terrible looking car.

    2. Darryl

      It has to be ugly

      ...or "futuristic" so the people who buy them can smugly advertise how 'green' they are while driving down the road. See Toyota Prius for an example.

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Whoah!

    That car has been comprehensively spanked with the ugly stick. The front 'face' looks like it was inspired by KISS make-up.

  6. dave 81
    Grenade

    The company that killed the EV-1

    expects me to buy this piece of crap? Not if they paid me.

  7. DLSmith
    Coffee/keyboard

    Mix 'n match

    "The Ampera delivers 148 horsepower and 370Nm of torque."

    Why not 112 KW and 273 foot pounds of torque?

  8. xj25vm

    Same

    Isn't the Ampera the European version of the Chevy Volt? If so, is it that different then the Volt? If not, why is it presented like some sort of a new car, when the Volt is already in production?

    Also, regarding Ampera's range between visits to the petrol station, my lowly Citroen Xsara Picasso Diesel does between 600 and 800 miles to the tank. I am all for new technology, but please don't promote it based on its weak points - it's rather, well, pointless.

This topic is closed for new posts.