Consider the electric car resurrected. By the end of the year there will be at least three (possibly four) EVs arriving in dealer showrooms. We aren’t talking Prius-type
Chevrolet Volt
Specs
Price:
$41,000 ($33,500 after the federal EV tax credit)
Range:
40 miles (battery only)
Unlimited (gas assist)
Outlet compatibility:
110, 220 (preferred)
Horsepower:
150
0-60:
8-9 seconds
Where you can get it:
California, Connecticut, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Texas, and Washington, DC, through 2011; nationwide in 2012
Being able to drive only 100 miles seems just plain un-American—at least to GM. The auto giant’s solution: Wedge in a gas engine as well.
That’s not to say the Volt isn’t an EV. All 150 horses are produced by electricity. The twist is that when the battery runs out of juice after 40 miles or so, the onboard 1.4-liter gas engine—GM calls it a “range extender”—kicks in. But it doesn’t drive the wheels; it drives a generator that sends electricity directly to the motor. The system means you can, say, drive the Volt cross-country. GM won’t comment on miles per gallon, but it’s safe to say you’ll best your neighbor’s Prius (and if you drive 40 miles or less on a single charge—which will easily cover many commutes—you won’t use any gas at all).
Like all the cars here, acceleration is snappy. The Volt offers the torque of a V6 when you first hit the accelerator, then performs like a typical compact once you’re up to cruising speed. The handling is nimble, thanks to the 400-pound liquid-cooled battery running down the middle of the car—all that mass down low boosts stability.
The interior is shockingly nice, especially if you’re used to often-lackluster Chevys. There’s a wealth of standard features like navigation, along with two color LCDs that provide oodles of info, from speed and charge level to real-time data on driving efficiency.
The biggest downside: price. At $41,000, the Volt is one of the priciest cars in Chevrolet’s fleet. Luckily, GM understands this and will lease the car starting at $350 a month. More than, say, a Honda Accord, but not by a ton.
Wired: As much range as any car. Good torque. Terrific interior. Three words: crystal red metallic. Tired $41,000 for a Chevy? Still uses gas (sigh), which may disqualify it from EV tax credits in some states (like California).
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Authors: Chuck Squatriglia