https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1127040_electric-car-frunks-bonus-space-or-wasted-opportunity
Electric-car frunks: Bonus space or wasted opportunity?
February 9, 2020  Bengt Halvorson

[images  
https://images.hgmsites.net/lrg/2021-ford-mustang-mach-e-frunk-with-food_100735242_l.jpg
2021 Ford Mustang Mach-E frunk with food

https://images.hgmsites.net/hug/2021-ford-mustang-mach-e-frunk-as-cooler_100735244_h.jpg

https://images.hgmsites.net/hug/nissan-ariya-concept--ces-2020_100731033_h.jpg
Nissan Ariya Concept - CES 2020
]

One of the real eye-openers with electric vehicles can be how much more space 
there is to work with. 

Without the hulking internal combustion engine, the big multi-speed, 
multi-clutch transmission under the hood, exhaust system, the fuel tank and 
fuel pumps, and all the ancillary pieces, an EV can feel far more spacious on 
the inside than an otherwise similarly sized gasoline vehicle. 

Some automakers, like Tesla, have—in lieu of radically revisiting the 
proportions given to vehicles—decided to funnel all the extra space under the 
hood into something useful: the front trunk, or frunk. 

Ford put out a release this past week that the frunk of the Mustang Mach-E 
electric SUV, which goes on sale later this year, is designed to be a cooler, 
with an integral drain. 

It could be quite the party trick for football tailgating. “Just fill the front 
trunk with ice and beverages and cruise right up to your tailgate,” explains 
Ford, in a release. “When you’re done, open the drain cap at the bottom of the 
front trunk and let gravity do the rest.”

Or, it suggests, you can put other savory/greasy foods—like 1,000 hot wings—in 
the compartment and simply hose it off with the help of the drain. 

It’s hard to deny the effectiveness of the tailgate-party trick, but not 
everyone is convinced they’re actually good use of space—or that they represent 
designing for the potential of EVs. Nissan VP of global design Alfonso Albaisa, 
in an interview with Green Car Reports last month, said that he sees frunks as 
amounting to a wasted opportunity. 

“The HVAC [heating and air conditioning], all the guts that used to live in the 
cabin, we shoved them in the engine bay, which has no engine,” said Alfonso 
Albaisa, regarding its upcoming electric crossover, closely previewed by the 
Nissan Ariya Concept first shown in the U.S. last month at CES. “Actually if 
you open the hood on Ariya, it’s full of stuff; that’s what’s given us this 
completely open cabin.”

“What happens with a frunk is it forces you to have some conventional things; 
you need a center console...because all the HVAC and everything has to come 
back into the cabin,” he explained. “It’s a natural evolution of the automobile 
and we should leverage it completely.”

“Even though my competitors have really highly wonderful cars, you open the 
door and there’s not much evidence that it’s an EV,” Albaisa added. “You open 
Ariya and you say, okay there’s something different, where is everything?”

Just, where are the shrimp? ...
[© greencarreports.com]


+
https://teslamotorsclub.com/tmc/threads/the-tiny-cybertruk-is-called-nude-elon-couldnt-use-that-name.183975/
The tiny cybertruk is called "nude". Elon couldn't use that name.
February 2, 2020  Can you imagine how much trouble Elon would have been in if 
he called one of his cars "Nude" like this electric car? ...
https://static.designboom.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/united-nude-lo-res-car-designboom-02.jpg




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