Electric Vehicle Performance
& Battery Cost Comparison
In
the following pages, the reader will find performance comparisons between
electric vehicles made by Ford, Chrysler, General Motors, Honda, Toyota and
Electric Fuel Propulsion Corporation (EFP) [which has licensed its
technology to Electric Auto Corporation (EAC) in 1994]. These comparisons
are based on tests by the U.S. Department of Energy and General Motors.
In 1969, the best performing electric vehicle on the road was the MARS II
Electric Car produced by EFP, equipped with Lead Cobalt Batteries, which
had a maximum driving range of 146.8 miles on a charge. In 1997, the best
performing electric vehicle on the road was the EV-1 Electric Car
produced by General Motors, equipped with Lead Acid Batteries, which had a
maximum driving range of 90.5 miles on a charge (EFP and EAC were not
producing electric vehicles at that time).
The MARS II had a much heavier body than the EV-1. The gross vehicle
weight of the MARS II was 4,160-pounds vs. the EV-1 gross weight of
3,045-pounds. This made the MARS II 52.7% heavier than the EV-1 which means
that the Lead Cobalt Batteries had to do a lot more work than the Lead Acid
Batteries in the EV-1. The MARS II traveled 62.2% farther than the EV-1
(56.3 miles farther than the EV-1 range of 90.5 miles).
In the 1970's and 1980's, improvements were made to the Lead Cobalt
Batteries. Therefore, it can be assumed that if the MARS II had been tested
in 1997, its range would have been greater than 146.8 miles. Further
improvements are being made now.
It should be noted that Honda and Toyota used Nickel Metal Hydride Batteries
(NiMH) which cost was estimated at $450 per kilowatt hour (Note 1) as
compared to $67 per kilowatt hour for the Lead Cobalt Battery (6.7 times as
much). Nickel is ten to fifteen times as costly as lead.
Assuming an efficiency of 4 miles per kilowatt hour (kWh), the 105-mile
range Honda (shown on the comparison chart) would require a 26 kWh Nickel
Metal Hydride Battery with a cost of:
$11,700 (26 kWh x
$450/kWh = $11,700).
By contrast, a 26 kWh Lead Cobalt Battery would only cost:
$1,742 (26 kWh x $ 67/kWh =
$ 1,742).
Not only does the NiMH battery suffer from excessive cost, it also has a
heat problem and cannot be safely charged at temperatures over 120°F.
Therefore, a cooling system must be built into the EV for safe NiMH
operation and fast charging is not practical. Also at high temperatures, the
NiMH battery suffers a high self-discharge rate. The Lead Cobalt Battery is
not affected by these high temperature problems.
Ford, Chrysler and General Motors are now beginning to install NiMH
Batteries in the vehicles shown on the comparison sheet (which, until
recently, have been equipped with Lead Acid Batteries). This will increase
the range of those vehicles, but at a high cost penalty due to the high cost
of the NiMH batteries. Those companies will absorb the loss as part of their
commitment to the State of California to bring a certain number of EV's to
the market before Year 2003.
The new constant speed ranges (under the U. S. Department of Energy Test
Program in Phoenix, Arizona) for EV's made by Ford, Chrysler and General
Motors, with estimated cost of Nickel Metal Hydride Batteries, are as
follows: (assuming 4 miles per kilowatt hour)
|
Ford Ranger -- 115 miles with
NiMH Batteries: |
(28.75 kWh x $450/kWh = $12,937) |
|
Chrysler EPIC -- 90 miles with
NiMH Batteries: |
(22.5 kWh x $450/kWh = $10,125) |
|
GM S-10 -- 130.6 miles with NiMH
Batteries: |
(32.65 kWh x $450/kWh =
$14,692) |
|
|
THE COST OF LEAD
COBALT BATTERIES FOR THE ABOVE VEHICLES WOULD BE, RESPECTIVELY: |
|
$1,962 for Ranger; |
$1,508 for EPIC |
$2,188 for S-10 |
Note Pilot scale price estimated to be $450 to $550 per kWh for
Nickel Metal Hydride; and production scale price estimated to be $250 to
$350. Reference: Report by the California Air Resources Board,
"A
Report of the Battery Technical Advisory Panel, December 11, 1995).
NB** The Attached
Report is about a 500kb
.PDF file.
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