Sunday, 7 September 2014

August Electric-Car Sales, 2015 Toyota Camry Hybrid Price, Electric ...

August Electric-<b>Car</b> Sales, 2015 Toyota Camry Hybrid <b>Price</b>, Electric <b>...</b>


August Electric-<b>Car</b> Sales, 2015 Toyota Camry Hybrid <b>Price</b>, Electric <b>...</b>

Posted: 03 Sep 2014 08:30 AM PDT

2014 Chevrolet Volt

2014 Chevrolet Volt

Enlarge Photo

Today's news is all about the money. We report on plug-in electric car sales for August, pricing for the 2015 Toyota Camry Hybrid, and a price cut on Brammo electric motorcycles. All this and more on Green Car Reports.

If you ever wanted a Brammo electric motorcycle, now may be a good time to buy. Prices on some models are being cut by $5,000 to $7,000.

The face-lifted 2015 Toyota Camry Hybrid starts at $26,790, with unchanged fuel-economy ratings.

China adds even more electric-car incentives, but mostly for local brands.

The 2015 Buick Envision compact crossover is unveiled in China. It will arrive in the U.S. next year as a 2016 model.

See which plug-in electric cars proved most popular with buyers last month with our August sales report.

A new battle in the war between Tesla Motors and car-dealer associations is being fought in Georgia.

Finally, Bob Lutz's V-8-powered Fisker Karma gets a new name as VL Automotive merges with WM GreenTech.

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Saturday, 6 September 2014

Brammo Electric Motorcycle Prices Cut By $5,000 To $7,000

Brammo Electric Motorcycle <b>Prices</b> Cut By $5,000 To $7,000


Brammo Electric Motorcycle <b>Prices</b> Cut By $5,000 To $7,000

Posted: 03 Sep 2014 04:00 AM PDT

Brammo Empulse R electric motorcycle

Brammo Empulse R electric motorcycle

Enlarge Photo

If you have ever wanted a Brammo electric motorcycle, this may be a good time to consider buying one.

Brammo is now offering an End-Of-Summer Promotion that gives significant discounts to move more of their electric bikes out of inventory and onto the roads.

The price of a 2014 Empulse has fallen 29 percent, from $17,000 to $12,000, and the higher-performance 2014 Empulse R dropped from $19,000 to $14,000, a 26-percent cut.

DON'T MISS: 2014 Electric Motorcycles: Buyer's Guide

Last year's 2013 Empulse is down a whopping 41 percent, from $17,000 to $10,000, with a 37-percent cut for the 2013 Empulse R: $19,000 to $12,000. Only minor improvements differentiate the 2013 and 2014 models: upgraded tires and 10 pounds less weight.

Brammo Empulse R electric motorcycle

Brammo Empulse R electric motorcycle

Enlarge Photo

Even the underpowered Brammo Enertia Plus got a significant price cut, from $11,000 to $7,000 (36 percent).

With a top speed of "60+ mph", the Enertia Plus is designed to be a run-around bike for in-town errands and little more--but it could be an inexpensive introduction to the allure of electric drive on two wheels.

ALSO SEE: Electric Motorcycle Road Trip: What I Learned, What You Need To Know

Still, a sale this big for a company this young is bound to raise some eyebrows, and questions. Why is Brammo selling all their bikes at a loss?

According to a source close to the company, it all comes down to Brammo's impending initial public offering (IPO). The company plans to go public in 2015, intending to raise quite a bit of money.

But it can't do that if it hasn't sold many bikes, so Brammo is willing to take a loss on the bikes it now has in stock to expand its customer base

The company's founder, CEO, and namesake Craig Bramscher has also let it be known that he is interested in making an electric sports car, since he doesn't fit into a Lamborghini or Ferrari. Funds of an IPO would be used to continue to develop the company's electric motorcycles, but also perhaps to develop an electric sports car.

MORE: Energica Ego: Test Ride Of New Electric Superbike

Not everyone is happy about the sale--including recent buyers who are now concerned about the falling resale value of their vehicle.

At this point, it remains mostly early adopters who ride these bikes, and most owners know the best way to get their money back the purchase of an electric motorcycle is simply to ride it.

So if you may be in the market for the only electric vehicle that uses gears, go get your motorcycle license and check out the full range of options--newly less expensive Brammo models included.

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Friday, 5 September 2014

The car service price war continues: Challenging Uber, Gett tests ...

The <b>car</b> service <b>price</b> war continues: Challenging Uber, Gett tests <b>...</b>


The <b>car</b> service <b>price</b> war continues: Challenging Uber, Gett tests <b>...</b>

Posted: 04 Sep 2014 05:50 AM PDT

On-demand car service Gett, now calling itself "Uber's #1 competitor," today announced that every ride it gives in Manhattan will cost a flat rate of $10 for the rest of the year.

Oft described as a "race to the bottom," transportation startups Uber and Lyft have continuously cut prices across their most popular cities. Uber, for example, now claims it's cheaper than a city cab in New York. A few years ago, that was not the case.

This race to the bottom follows the storage war, in which big players like Google have driven the price of personal online file storage down to (nearly) zero.

Gett, which announced a $25 million funding round earlier this month, says its promotion will offer rides anywhere on the island — even "from Harlem to Wall Street" — for $10 automatically. It "doesn't matter if you're stuck in traffic for 2 hours," the company said in an official release. Unlike Uber, however, tips are not included.

When asked about the impact this will have on the long-brewing car service price war, a Gett spokesperson told VentureBeat that "we want to always have the lowest prices possible, but not at the expense of our drivers, who we care about and consider our partners." The company also said that "driver's pay will not be affected" by the price cut.

The company doesn't currently have plans to launch the experiment in other cities, the spokesperson told us. But even if Gett's test is momentary, it may leave an impact on Uber and Lyft, if Gett proves its car service is just as addictive for consumers.

Uber Technologies Inc is known as Everyone's Private Driver. Uber operates an on-demand car service used all over the world. With the touch of a button from your phone, you can experience your own private driver. Sign-up quickly, g... read more »

Lyft is a friendly, safe, and affordable transportation option. Just tap a button and in minutes you'll be riding in the front seat with a new friend. Our Lyft community drivers have been background checked and personality screened t... read more »

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Electric-<b>Car</b> Charging Station <b>Prices</b> Fall: 30 Amps For $500 <b>...</b>

Posted: 02 Sep 2014 05:30 AM PDT

Schneider EVlink 30 Amp Generation 2.5 240-Volt Level 2 charging station for plug-in electric cars

Schneider EVlink 30 Amp Generation 2.5 240-Volt Level 2 charging station for plug-in electric cars

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When plug-in electric cars came on the market less than four years ago, the first 240-Volt home charging stations carried four-figure price tags.

Now a handful of models cost less than $500--and a fairly high-amperage model is being offered by Home Depot this month for $499 after a special offer.

The Schneider Electric EVlink 30-Amp Level 2 charging station is offered at $599, but there's a special discount code ("EVLINKSUMMER") that cuts the price by a further $100.

DON'T MISS: 2014 BMW i3 REx 38-HP Range Extender Vs. 14,000-Foot Mountain: Who Wins?

The amperage rating is an important, and sometimes overlooked, specification in any 240-Volt Level 2 charging station for electric cars.

The highest-rated stations come with a 40-Amp rating, but 30 Amps is widely accepted as adequate for overnight charging. A few expensive home stations, on the other hand, are rated at just 10 or 15 Amps.

2013 Nissan Leaf

2013 Nissan Leaf

Enlarge Photo

The speed of charging depends on both how fast the current can be delivered (the amperage of the charging station) and the power rating of the car's built-in charger: generally 3.3, 3.6, or 7.2 kilowatts for any new plug-in car other than a Tesla.

(These ratings refer to conventional charging in 240-Volt home alternating current, not direct-current quick charging, which can generally recharge a battery up to 80 percent of its capacity in half an hour or less.)

ALSO SEE: In CA, Renters Can Now Install Electric-Car Charging Stations

The Schneider station offers the interesting feature of customizable skins (to complement your garage decor, presumably).

There are, however, two caveats to keep in mind if you're seriously considering the $500 EVlink 30-Amp from Schneider:

  • It is only meant for indoor use, so while it's fine for inside your garage, it shouldn't be mounted on the outside of a house or in an open car port; and
  • Its cord is only 18 feet long, meaning that the car being charged may have to be positioned to put the charge port closer to the station than in others with cords of 25 feet or more.

MORE: 2014 Cadillac ELR Electric Coupe: Free Home Charging Station Included

Home Depot will ship the charging station to your house, or deliver it to a nearby store for you to pick up.

The $100 discount offer ends September 30, is good only for one unit per order, and while supplies last.

NOTE: High Gear Media does not endorse any particular charging stations; this product is covered as a service to present and future electric-car owners only.

[hat tip: George Betak]

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Wednesday, 3 September 2014

2015 Land Rover Discovery Sport Review, Ratings, Specs, Prices ...

2015 Land Rover Discovery Sport Review, Ratings, Specs, <b>Prices</b> <b>...</b>


2015 Land Rover Discovery Sport Review, Ratings, Specs, <b>Prices</b> <b>...</b>

Posted: 02 Sep 2014 04:01 PM PDT

Not everything Land Rover touches turns to aluminum. The latest Range Rover and Range Rover Sport? Well, yes, those have gone completely in with the lightweight metal structure--but not the dashing Evoque compact crossover.

And not the replacement for the Land Rover LR2, which should draw its last breath for the current model year. Its replacement will be the 2015 Land Rover Discovery Sport, which serves as a coming-out for a new company styling theme, and a new naming structure. 

The Discovery Sport owes some of its underpinnings to the steel-bodied Evoque, which itself evolved from the LR2. But it's been stretched and pulled into a longer, wider form. It wears some aluminum body panels, but not down to its core. It's still a compact SUV, but now it's one good for seating seven passengers when its rearmost fold-away seats are counted.

The Evoque's turbocharged four-cylinder and its new nine-speed automatic also make the transition into the Discovery Sport, and all-wheel drive is standard, and fitting, given the new name.

Styling

Land Rover says this new theme--which it previewed earlier this year on the auto-show circuit--will eventually play out over a lineup of "Discovery"-branded SUVs. That no doubt includes a replacement for the LR4, at some point in the medium term.

The Discovery Sport absorbs neatly the three-plus inches it adds in length versus the LR2, and couldn't be more visually distant from the Evoque. The thin strips of honeycombed grille, clamshell hood, integral skid plates, and the keyed headlights connect it with the Range Rover lineup. The way the roofline pulls over the rear pillars is an interesting link to athletic gear, ending in a stubby tailgate spoiler as it does. It looks almost like a ballcap worn backwards. The sideview is kept very clean save for the intersection of a deep shoulder line and the rear door cutline, and the slim rear glass sits over round-lit taillamps. The emphasis isn't on being so upright anymore.

The cabin of the Discovery Sport plays the ute's new mainstream role absolutely straight. The dash cap is nearly flat once it passed over the binnacle of gauges. The center console intersects it in a perfect pair of chrome uprights. The HVAC controls are the same LCD-capped knobs that work so well in the Jaguar F-Type. Finally, the console's been reduced to a single control--the electric-car-like rotary controller that rises to the shifting occasion from its piano-black surround like a Canadian's most surreal hockey dream ever.

Performance

Like the Range Rover Evoque, the Discovery Sport will depend on the kindness of turbocharging for its power. The initial powertrain combination for the Discovery Sport will be a 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder with direct injection for efficiency, balance shafts for smoothness, and a paddle-shifted nine-speed automatic companion for gas mileage.

The nine-speed will launch in second gear for smoothness, or first gear when acceleration demands it. It's capable of skipping gears for more efficient shifting.

Output in the Sport will be rated at 240 horsepower and 250 pound-feet of torque, the latter developing low (1,750 rpm). There's no mention in initial press information of the Evoque's higher-output, 285-hp version of the same turbo four.

In its stock configuration, with a Haldex all-wheel-drive system that varies torque delivery between the front and rear wheels, the Discovery Sport will be capable of a 0-60 mph time of 7.8 seconds, and a top speed of 124 mph.

No gas mileage estimates have been offered, but for comparison, the nine-speed Evoque is rated by the EPA at 21/30 mpg, or 24 mpg combined.

Land Rover claims the Sport will meet its standards off-road with the Haldex system, standard skid plates, and ground clearance of 8.3 inches. It also promises the ability to climb a 45-degree grade. The maximum approach angle of 25 degrees goes up if the front bumper is removed--a planned feature, not an incident waiting to happen, Land Rover says.

The familiar Terrain Response controls are grafted on to the drivetrain in the Sport. Through four modes--default, Grass/Gravel/Snow, Mud and Ruts, and Sand--drivers can vary wheelspin allowance, throttle quickness, and stability control intervention to suit driving off pavement. Working in concert are Hill Descent Control, stability, and traction control.

The Discovery Sport's body checks in at just below 4,000 pounds, with a steel unibody and aluminum hood, roof, tailgate, and front fenders. It's suspended by a strut setup in front (with hydraulic rebound stops for noise damping), and a multi-link setup in the rear. Both systems are mounted to subframes for better isolation.

The Sport's electric power steering has a variable ratio that's set up for more deliberate response on center. The brakes are discs all around, with 12.8-inch rotors in front and 11.8-inchers in back.

Comfort and utility

Compared with the outgoing LR2, the new Discovery Sport is about three inches longer in wheelbase and overall length, which factors into its new third-row seat option. The LR2 sat on a 104.7-inch wheelbase, at 177.1 inches long overall; the Sport is 180.7 inches long, and rides on a 107.9-inch wheelbase. The gamble is that premium buyers want a smaller alternative to the seven-seat LR4.

Land Rover says it spent lots of time with families to work out its solutions for what it calls its "5+2" seating configuration, for child-seat fitment, and for the placement of features like charging ports and drink holders. It's designed two different consoles, one with a storage section covered by a roller cover, the other with a sliding armrest and removable cupholders that can be ditched in favor of a 2-liter bottle. We sense a beverage trump card in the making.

As for the passenger seating, the Discovery Sport upsizes what the LR2 had to offer. The second row seats are elevated like those before, but the Sport's second row now slides on a 6.3-inch track. It still splits and folds, and the seatbacks also recline for longer trips.

The third-row seat is purposely downplayed as a "plus two" in what we've read so far. We'll have to try out the smaller seats at the upcoming Paris auto show or on a first drive, but Land Rover purposefully describes them as fitted for "occasional usage". The third-row seat will be an option.

Safety and features

Upconverting the LR2 into the Discovery Sport presents the perfect opportunity to switch out its safety regimen, and to add a slew of new tech features.

On the safety front, the Sport acquires the emergency braking and forward-collision systems that are an integral part of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) Top Safety Pick+ standards still evolving for 2015. In the Discovery Sport, the system will allow complete stops when obstacles are detected at speeds below 32 mph, and can mitigate impacts at speeds below 50 mph.

The Sport also will offer lane-departure warning systems, parking assist with perpendicular parking, trailer-sway control, and automatic headlamps.

Other new technology includes Land Rover's new InControl connectivity kit, which adapts some Apple and Android mobile apps to the Discovery Sport's operating system--its eight-inch touchscreen interface. Those apps include favorites like iHeartRadio and Parkopedia.

All Sports will come with the touchscreen interface, and with a 10-speaker audio system with terrestrial and satellite radio, Bluetooth audio streaming, and USB and auxiliary ports. The system can pair with two devices--one to talk, one to stream entertainment. The Sport will have up to four power points and as many as six USB ports.

Leather upholstery is standard, along with dual-zone climate control and power features. Major options will include navigation, a contrast-color roof, a panoramic roof, alloy wheels, underbody protection, side steps, a towing package, and a black-trim package.

The Discovery Sport goes on sale in early 2015, along today's Land Rover LR4, which is expected to undergo a redesign--and to revert to its former Discovery nameplate--sometime in 2017.