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Period: to
The timespan of the Electric Car
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The First Electric Car
Scene Description: The first electric car ever made was made by Scottish inventor Robert Anderson. It was very undeveloped, and the first one used non-rechargeable batteries as its power, as rechargeable batteries were yet to be invented. The vehicle was lacking in practicality, so it wasn’t very successful, but it was very influential, for it presented the idea of powering a car by electricity instead of gasoline. -
The First Electric Car Citations
Lampton, C. (n.d.). Who Created the First Electric Car?
HowStuffWorks. Retrieved October 1, 2012, from
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/who-created-the-first-electric-
car.htm -
The First Rechargeable Electric Car
Scene Description: The first rechargeable electric car made was made by a Scottish immigrant named William Morrison. It ran on 24 rechargeable batteries, and could drive up to just 14 miles per hour, which was not bad for the time period. It was much more successful than Anderson’s electric car, but it had to be charged every 50 miles, so it wasn’t very practical.APA Citation:Lampton, C. (n.d.). Who Created the First Electric Car? HowStuffWorks. Retrieved October 1, 2012, from http://auto.how -
The First Hybrid
Ferdinand Porsche, the founder of Porsche, constructed the world’s first hybrid car in 1898. It was constructed with the traditional internal combustion engine, but that engine was only a backup to the engine that ran on batteries. This was a very important discovery that lead to the electric car that is known today. It lead to the technology that was used to make cars like the Chevrolet Volt. -
The First Hybrid Citations
Neiger, C. (n.d.). Who designed and built the first hybrid car?
HowStuffWorks. Retrieved October 2, 2012, from
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-efficiency/hybrid-
technology/first-hybrid-car.htm -
The GM EV1
Scene Description: The GM EV1 was the first mass produced electric car. The car had 139 horsepower. That was a respectable horsepower for a gasoline-powered car for that time period. For an electric car, that was great! Unfortunately, the battery did not last long, and it took a long time to charge. Although the car may have lacked in practicality, the EV1 was a very influential car and set the stage for the entrance for the modern electric car. -
The GM EV1 Citations
Wan, Mark. "GM EV1." General Motors EV1. 1997. Accessed
October 3, 2012.
http://www.autozine.org/Graveyard/html/GM/EV1.html. -
The Toyota Prius Citations
APA Citation:Timeline: History of the Electric Car. (n.d.). PBS.
Retrieved October 2, 2012, from
http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/223/electric-car-timeline.html
Nice, K., & Layton, J. (n.d.). How Hybrid Cars Work.
HowStuffWorks. Retrieved October 5, 2012, from
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/hybrid-car6.htm -
The Toyota Prius
The Toyota Prius, first released in 1997, was the first mass produced hybrid car. It was released in Japan in 1997 and internationally in 2000. It took the hybrid in a different direction, for the gasoline engine was not a backup. The car would switch from the electric engine to the gasoline engine and back at different speeds to increase efficiency at those certain speeds. It was the first modern hybrid, and greatly influenced the make of modern electric cars and also hybrids. -
The Modern Electric Car-The Mercedes SLS Electric Drive
The Mercedes SLS Electric Drive is clearly as modern as it get. It is the most powerful electric car in the world, measuring a whopping 740 horsepower. To put that in perspective, that is just slightly slower than a NASCAR car, which would get about 750 or higher! It is also efficient, getting 155 miles before running out of charge. It also can be charged in a short time period of 3 hours with its 22 kW charger. -
The Modern Electric Car-The Mercedes SLS Electric Drive (continued)
Its battery is made up of 864 individual batteries, a long way from the 24 batteries in Morrison’s car. The electric car has clearly come a long way. -
The Modern Electric Car-The Mercedes SLS Electric Drive Citations
Edelstein, S. (2012, September 28). Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG
Electric Drive: Mercedes-AMGâ™s most powerful car runs on
batteries. Digital Trends. Retrieved October 3, 2012, from
http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/mercedes-benz-sls-amg
-electric-drive/%20
What makes NASCAR engines different from street car engines?
(n.d.). HowStuffWorks. Retrieved October 3, 2012, from
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/question588.htm