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GM: Volt reaches 2 million miles, 1.3 million of them gas-free

Discussion in 'Chevrolet Volt' started by jeffreykb, Jul 10, 2011.

  1. jeffreykb

    jeffreykb Junior Member

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    GM: Volt reaches 2 million miles, 1.3 million of them gas-free — Autoblog Green

    The article:

    For anyone who thinks that the 2011 Chevy Volt is primarily a gas-powered car with a little EV up front, General Motors has a message: in over two million miles of driving, Volt owners are traveling 66% of the time on electricity alone. That's over 1.3 million EV miles hummed out by the plug-in hybrid with a bowtie, all of them both gas and range-anxiety free.

    CNN may have declared the Volt obsolete based on its own none-too-sophisticated appraisal of the Volt vs. the upcoming plug-in Prius, but that's a lot of electric miles from GM's vehicle. That two thirds of all Volt miles are electric is a good indication that the 35-mile range of the Volt's batteries covers a lot of day-to-day drives. With the shorter range of Toyota's plug-in, it may be hard for the Prius to approach the Volt's percentage of miles on electrons.

    Naturally, we wish the remaining third of Volt owners miles were traveled a bit more efficiently from the gas engine, but 1.3 million electric miles is one giant leap in the right direction.

    :cheer2:
     
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  2. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    Now imagine what could be done had they made the car affordable. The amount of fuel saved would be much higher in a more affordable gasoline hybrid due to the larger number of vehicles sold.
     
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  3. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    While true that they could have done better, I certainly won't dismiss 'good' because it isn't 'perfect'.
    If it is easy for others to make better cars, then GM will once again loose market share.
    I applaud them for creating a car that uses that little amount of fuel. And hope it spurs competition with other auto makers to improve on the Volt.
     
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  4. jeffreykb

    jeffreykb Junior Member

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    I could not agree more...however, also imagine if the car had never been built. People that can afford a 40K+ vehicle (and willing to spend $40K+ on a vehicle; minus the tax credit) want a plugin too. I also would guess that the Volt is the most expensive vehicle ever purchased by some of the owners.

    I cheer the Volt early adopters that are making plugin vehicles a success. :cheer2:

    JB

    P.S. While on the subject of abstract thinking, one can also imagine if the Prius had never been built.
     
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  5. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    With the rate at which Cruze is selling, Volt faces quite a challenge within GM's own product line. The price difference is way too much.
    .
     
  6. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    IIRC petrol economy is 37 mpg, so ..

    (2/.7)37 = 105 MPG, or on average about half the petrol consumption of a Prius. Toyota sells about 40,000 Prius a month worldwide; when GM is selling 20,000 Volts a month it will be having similar impact in reducing oil consumption, but will pollute more in terms of CO2, NOx, Sox and CO.

    Currently GM sells about 500 Volts a month.

    <<<<< yawn >>>>
     
  7. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    Yet a Prius + PHEV Conversion kit costs less and is more efficient all the way round... Once the official PHEV comes out, game over.
     
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  8. jeffreykb

    jeffreykb Junior Member

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    I did not take notice of the Prius until 2004 (after 4-5 years of production) because it made me sleepy also. LOL! Will the Volt be a success too? It is unknown with the limited availability, large MRSP and so many naysayers. I hope that the Volt continues to help promote plugin vehicles, and the tech needed to make them more affordable.
     
  9. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    I hope so too. Not just because so much tax payer money was spent on it but because the Volt is a cool car and is an alternative type of plug in hybrid. I may bad mouth them sometimes but it is directed at the company more than the vehicle. GM is just a terrible company.
     
  10. jeffreykb

    jeffreykb Junior Member

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    I cannot wait to see the sales volume for the Prius PHEV. However, it will not be too exciting if Toyota limits availability like GM has done with the Volt. It may take a few years...while it appears that Nissan continues to throw caution to the wind by ramping up Leaf production.
     
  11. Corwyn

    Corwyn Energy Curmudgeon

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    Not at all clear. 2 million miles on 2500 Volts for an average of 3 months (?), is around 9 miles per day. A 13 mile EV range Prius plug-in might well do the same. More data needed, please.
     
  12. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    The Volts are averaging 100 MPG. I expect Prius PHV to average 70 - 80 MPG. Few people are going to pay $5k more to go from 80 to 100 MPG. It would be equivalent to paying $5k to go from a 25 mpg car to a 26.67 mpg car*. Didn't GM already try that with the Malibu hybrid ? :D



    -------
    Volt 0.01 gallons per mile
    Prius phv 0.0125 gallons per mile
    Savings: 0.0025 gallons per mile

    25 mpg = .04 gallons per mile
    25 mpg car improved by the Prius-Volt-delta: .04 - 0.0025 = 0.0375 GPM = 26.67 mpg
     
  13. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    They may use very little gasoline but they sure used a lot of electricity. Don't you consider electricity as fuel?

    Notice the lack of data on how many kWh of electricity they used. Primary fuel (electrons) was ignored but the secondary fuel (gas) was mentioned. There is no information about emission. How many ton of CO2 was saved. Did Greenhouse gas emission actually increased?

    We need those information to assess the greeness. Without them, it simply sound like a political statement (ability to run on domestic vs. foreign fuel).
     
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  14. giora

    giora Senior Member

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    We are talking averages here, so according to this thread Greenhouse gas emission actually increased (by about 14%) as compared to those miles if were driven by Gen3 Prius!
    Based on US average grid GHG emission of 630 gCO2eq/kWh including fuels upstream emission.
     
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  15. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Wow, I forgot about that thread. Thanks for linking to that discussion. If I may post the graph that SageBush converted to picture format...

    [​IMG]
     
  16. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    The promotion of Volt conveniently leaves out vital information.

    Emissions (greenhouse & smog) along with electricity used are a big deal.
    .
     
  17. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    Measured at the wall, how many miles does the Volt get per kWh when running electric? I presume some Volt owner has a kill-a-watt meter.

    (Both my Xebra and my Tesla get about 3 miles per kWh. The Tesla is much heavier and uses some energy to cool the batteries, but its motor is more efficient, so the two about balance each other out.)

    The Volt has the advantage of being both a low-range EV and a gas car usable for road trips. But its usefulness as an EV is severely limited by its low range. The Leaf goes 2 1/2 times as far and the Tesla goes 6 times as far. And for road trips, the Volt fails on every measure compared to the Prius, which is larger, uses less gas, and pollutes much less. It remains to be seen if production numbers on the Volt will ever compare with production numbers for either the Prius or the Leaf. Nissan has committed to large scale production of the Leaf by building the plant in Smyrna. For the Volt, we only have GM's word of future production plans, and GM's word is worth less than a wooden nickel.
     
  18. giora

    giora Senior Member

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    USB - thanks for posting the picture. Increase compared to Prius is even more, 14% and not 9% (corrected already). I was in a hurry when posting so estimated by the look on the graph. Now, going back to the formulae it is 252 g/mile for the 66% EV Volt versus 222 g/mile for the Prius.
     
  19. evnow

    evnow Active Member

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    Just as Toyota conveniently leaves out vital information - like how many people were killed trying to "secure" the oil it needs.
     
  20. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    hey - that's usually my line ;) . It'd be interesting to see the data on the percentage of Volt owners who have grid tied PV solar systems at home. It may be a high per centage by the mear fact that (like the Leaf) since the Volt costs more than most people can afford ... and solar costs more than most can afford ... ya never know.
    It's re-assuring that there are still folks that can afford that high (as others mentioned) a price during our economic crisis times.

    And if the lion's share ARE using renewables to recharge ... then the data REALLY is good news. The 1.3 million miles made me realize, "HEY ... since the Leaf is outselling Volts about 3 to 1 ... calculate out the number of months in production ... average the low volume 1st months with the thousands sold over the last months ... multiply by an average 1,000 pure EV miles a month ...

    Wow !! Leafs have likely put out somewhere between 9 million - 10 milion gas free miles! But of course I wouldn't want to take away from the Volt's shining spotlight here ... so, yes- good job GM.
    ;)
     
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