Sunday, March 8, 2015

Remember ZAP? Well, The Detroit Electric SP:01 may not be as realistic as you think.


After finishing several hours of research on a variety of companies, I'm exhausted, but excited. I think I've discovered something about Detroit Electric that more people should know. Now, I might be a fool saying this, but I don't think anyone else has covered this news (I think Cleantechnica or EVobsession would have mentioned this if they knew).

First of all, does anyone remember ZAP! Motor Company? ZAP was an early electric car company, or so they marketed themselves. Really, referring to them as an electric car company gives them too much credit. ZAP was infamous for promising new, exciting technologies in the electric car space, and then never really following through[1]. ZAP was considered by many to be a massive failure, responsible for the disillusionment of many early "ecocar environentalists." Over the history of the company, they had promised over a dozen different zero-emissions vehicles, but they only ever came out with two: the ZAP scooter and the Xebra (as well as the Xebra's truck variant). The dirty secret in this that I'm going to be addressing here is that, near the end of ZAP's existence, it brought on a new member for its management board, who became one of its key figures near the end--previous Lotus CEO, Albert Lam.

Here's the thing; in 2007, Albert Lam oversaw a new joint venture with Youngman Automobile Group, a relatively small Chinese manufacturer that ZAP! had worked with before. This joint venture was created for the exclusive purpose of marketing the (planned but never released) ZAP Alias, which was meant to be a three-wheel high performance vehicle. The name of this partnership was the stunning thing. ZAP and Youngman referred to it as "Detroit Electric," a revival of an early electric car brand in the 1900s.

From here, this partnership seems to enter murky waters. After 2008, we don't really hear anything about Detroit Electric. Albert Lam had promised that ZAP would market an electric bus, a high-performance model and two family sedans under the Detroit Electric moniker, but none of these designs ever came to light. Finally, after five years, a new electric car company burst onto the scene, brandishing designs for a high-performance electric sports car based on a Lotus chassis. I am speaking, of course, of Detroit Electric (not Tesla Motors. That was 2006 or 2007, if memory serves). Are they in any way related? You'd be hard-pressed to find any sort of connection between the two. Unless... unless you were to visit Detroit Electric's website, http://detroit-electric-group.com/. If you scroll down the front page, under the part labeled "our story," there's a brief mention of who's behind the vision of the SP:01.

Albert Lam.

I can only hope that, after all these years of promising and failing, Lam keeps true to his words at 0:47 in this interview with Bloomberg.

"No one else can offer this kind of thing, because we learn from the past. We learn from mistakes of the others."



Tuesday, September 23, 2014

New Blogging Strategy

As it turns out, running a blog regularly is rather difficult. What with unexpected events popping up and an already crowded schedule, finding the time to write an entry can be daunting. Therefore, from now on, EVangelist will be running WEEKLY REPORTS and round-ups as opposed to randomly scheduled but frequent postings.

Of course, if something extremely important comes up, like Tesla announcing a new Gigafactory or an all-new electric car being revealed, EVangelist will give that top priority and scramble to cover it immediately.

~Cor 

Sunday, September 14, 2014

History has been made!

Someone's finally gone ahead and combined the best of both worlds - two of the hottest Silicon Valley topics as of right now. I am talking, of course, about the world's first completely 3-D-printed car, the Strati; it just so happens that in addition to its other cool factors (a carbon fiber body frame and an $18,000 base price among them), it's fully electric. Not only that, it has a 120 mile range, which is longer than any other sub-$50k electric car on the market. It may have its limitations (let's face it, no one would seriously consider this as an alternative option to any other car, because the Strati has a 40 mph top speed) but it's another day, another record, another talking point for electric vehicles.

Drive Electric Week

Hello, viewers! This week is National Drive Electric Week, an event set up by the Sierra Club, the Electric Auto Association, and Plug In America. This week has been set up and organized in order to attempt to educate the public about electric cars, and to allow them to get a chance to test drive one and see what they think. Dozens and dozens of separate associations and companies have been contacted, and asked to provide a greater focus on electric cars and an easier opportunity to test-drive them.

What this means for you, reader, is that now is the time (if you haven't already) to get out there and drive that electric car you've been eyeing! Maybe it was that small but spunky Chevy Spark EV, or the electric workhorse, the Nissan LEAF. Maybe it was the sleek, incredibly quick Tesla Model S. Whatever the case, treat this week as the moment to get out there and decide for yourself about electric vehicles. There could be a future for one in your driveway.

~Cor Fulgur

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Hello, World.

Greetings, potential supporters! I have started EVangelist in order to attempt to convert people to the electric cause. More precisely, to the cause of electric vehicles, hence the not-very-clever name.

In any case, as the editor-in-chief of EVangelist, I would like to proudly proclaim that yes, this blog is probably biased. So is everything you read nowadays. At least we aren't trying to hide it.