AMC Amitron r:150mi ts:50mph> Electron, Pacer ice used the body style

http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1089510_electric-car-trivia-when-was-regenerative-braking-first-used
Electric-Car Trivia: When Was Regenerative Braking First Used?
By John Voelcker  Jan 10, 2014

[image  
http://images.thecarconnection.com/med/amc-amitron-concept-car-1967_100451955_m.jpg
AMC Amitron concept car, 1967

http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/1976_amc_pacer_100024722_l.jpg
1976 AMC Pacer
]

Regenerative braking is a standard and expected part of any electrified car
now, from Honda's mild hybrids up through battery-electric vehicles like the
Tesla Model S.

It lets the car recapture energy from momentum, which would otherwise be
wasted as brake heat, by running the electric motor in reverse to recharge
the battery.

But what was the first car to employ regenerative braking?

According to a short piece in Car Design News, it was an electric concept
car called the Amitron, unveiled in 1967 by--of all things--American Motors.

Shorter than a Smart ForTwo minicar, it was sufficiently wide for three
passengers to sit side by side.

The 1,100-pound car was powered by a combination of nickel-cadmium and
lithium-nickel-fluoride batteries, the former for quick power delivery on
acceleration, the latter for maximum energy storage for sustained cruising.

Together, the combined battery gave the Amitron a sustained range of 150
miles at a speed of 50 mph.

But it was also the very first car to use regenerative braking to recapture
energy and recharge its battery on deceleration.

While the company had planned to offer the Amitron as a commuter vehicle
within five years, it never did so, despite a second concept car in 1977
called the Electron that looked very similar.

The short-but-wide layout reappeared in the 1975 Pacer compact, however.

American Motors went on to be acquired by France's Renault in 1983, which
then sold it to Chrysler in 1987, largely on the value of its Jeep brand.

Chrysler itself was bought by Daimler in 1998, then sold to a private equity
firm in 2007, before collapsing in bankruptcy two years later during the
economic recession.

With restructuring and financial aid from the U.S. government, Chrysler was
effectively given to Italy's Fiat, which is now in the process of
consolidating the two automakers.

CEO Sergio Marchionne famously carped that the Fiat 500e electric compliance
car that Chrysler is forced to sell in California by that state's
zero-emission vehicle rule costs the company $10,000 more than it makes for
each one.

But still, perhaps, back there in some dusty company archive or
little-noticed garage, the Amitron waits to reclaim its place in history?
[© Green Car Reports]



http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/In-Gear/2014/0111/What-happened-to-the-first-regenerative-braking-car
What happened to the first regenerative braking car?  January 11, 2014
 ... Amitron a sustained range of 150 miles at a speed of 50 mph ... it was
also the very first car to use regenerative braking to ... recharge its
battery on deceleration. While the company had planned to offer the Amitron
as a commuter vehicle within five years, it never did so, despite a second
concept car in 1977 called the Electron that looked very similar. The
short-but-wide layout reappeared in the 1975 Pacer compact, however ...




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