1st commerically available EV developed and assembled in Turkey
“Is this some kind of joke or scam?” muttered one reporter ...

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-306214-first-turkish-electric-car-enters-market-just-dont-call-it-a-corolla.html
[image] First Turkish electric car enters market, just don't call it a
Corolla
By NOAH BLASER, ISTANBUL  5 Feb 2013

[image  / IHA, Erhan Yilmaz
http://cdncms.todayszaman.com/todayszaman/2013/02/05/electrocar.jpg
Officials from Derindere Motor pose with a demo model of the first
commerically available electric car developed and assembled in Turkey
]

Coming to life with more of a whisper than a vroom, Turkey's “first electric
car” made its debut to the press on Tuesday, with a trio of grinning
executives driving the sedan through a sprawling Istanbul conference hall.

At first, members of the press tried to follow, unsure of whether the car
would circle back or if the executives, already tired of answering
questions, had decided to make a run for it. Eventually the car plodded
back, though the confusion over the car was just beginning.

Billed by Derindere Motor Cars (DMA) as Turkey's first commercially
available electric vehicle, the car showcased on Tuesday -- and now in
select dealerships across Turkey -- has been in development by the Toyota
subsidiary for six years, and, according to DMA Board Chairman Önder Yol, is
“a serious step forward for green technologies and Turkey's automotive
industry.”

Well, for those parts that were designed or made in Turkey, anyway. The
lightweight HVH 250 engine is supplied by US-based Remy International, and
is already used in a number of other plug-in electrics and hybrids,
including some of Mercedes' green sedans. The lithium ion batteries come
from Japan and were repurposed from Toyota's other hybrid lines. The car,
built on the body of Toyota's Corolla sedan, even lacks its own name,
carrying the Corolla logo instead.

That raises the more important question: What exactly is revolutionary about
this electric car? “The control system has been completely designed from
scratch, and it is controlled by a single, efficient brain,” said chairman
Yol when asked what DMA is bringing to the table. It sounded like evasion to
some journalists. “Is this some kind of joke or scam?” muttered one
reporter.

To be fair, DMA's nameless car does have good things going for it. The
battery has a range of 280 kilometers (175 miles) of city driving, and can
be recharged with a simple adaptor system that fits into a standard
electrical outlet. It costs just TL 6 ($4) to power up the battery, say
company officials. Not bad in a country where gas is at a Europe-wide high
of TL 5 a liter (over $10 a gallon). Charging the battery takes around eight
hours.

But those advantages are met by the traditional disadvantage of electric
vehicles: purchase price. At TL 120,000 ($68,000), buying DMA's car requires
a jaw dropping sum for average Turkish consumers. Buyers have been slow to
purchase hybrids and loathe to take on electric cars in Europe and the US,
despite tax breaks and higher eco-consciousness. In Turkey, per capita
income is a fifth of that in the US, and no subsidies help coax buyers into
new technologies. And when Turks spend on cars, they tend towards luxury,
not save-the-planet schemes, says Berkan Bayram, an editor of auto magazine
Electric and Hybrid Cars. “They want something fast and German,” he says,
conjuring up images of BMWs tearing past edelweiss meadows and hair-pin
turns in some Alpine valley. The Remy engine is no lawnmower, he says, but
the price makes it difficult to sell.

DMA is also betting against the strategy of global car giants, including its
parent company Toyota ...

DMA Chairman Yol thinks otherwise. “I don't believe in the future of hybrid;
honestly, it makes things more complicated,” he says. “Battery technology
can change with the right investment, and you will see batteries in three to
four years which can support a 1,000 kilometer range,” he said.

Perhaps by then DMA will have a name for its creation. The company says it
hopes to sell 1,2000 electric cars in 2013.
[© 2007 Feza Gazetecilik]




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