Tom Magliozzi has a problem. The wacky cohost of NPR's Car Talk needs to replace his beloved 1952 MG roadster. But in today's car market, where should he turn? Is new technology about to transform the way we drive? Tom and his brother Ray hit the road in this program for a lighthearted but shrewd take on America's four-wheeled future.
John Lithgow narrates as Tom and Ray mix their trademark slapstick with serious nuts-and-bolts analysis of what it will take to make our autos more energy-efficient. With a quarter of all the oil ever consumed guzzled up in the last decade and oil supplies being drawn down faster every day, the brothers' screwball automotive odyssey doubles as a serious environmental wake-up call. (Hear energy expert David Greene's take on this pressing subject in Beyond Technology.)
Tom and Ray explore everything from the glitzy, high-octane North American International Auto Show in Detroit to the earnest do-it-yourselfers of the AltWheels Festival in Boston, where the brothers squeeze, clown-car style, into a tiny three-wheeler that, even at 100 miles per gallon, isn't quite ready for the rush-hour commute—it can't go in reverse.
A distinguished group of engineers doubles as Tom and Ray's straight men, including Lee Lynd of Mascoma Corporation, who is working to bioengineer microbes that can produce ethanol from plant wastes, and Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute, who is developing an ultralight, full-size "green" car that is efficient and almost indestructible (see Model of Efficiency).
Also appearing are Andy Frank of the University of California at Davis, whose lab has developed a plug-in hybrid vehicle that "fills up" from an ordinary electrical outlet, and Martin Eberhard, founder of Tesla Motors, who wants to prove that battery-powered cars can be fast, stylish, and take you 250 miles on one charge.
Even representatives of the giant automakers make an appearance, despite their penchant for producing 500-horsepower, gas-guzzling road machines that even a couple of car nuts like Tom and Ray find excessive—as the brothers emphatically point out to a cornered Detroit executive. A decade ago, Toyota paved the way to more efficient vehicles with its Prius. But will our current romance with hybrids lead to a breakup between Americans and their big, high-powered automobiles?
Which new technology will take off as the standard for the car of the future? With Tom and Ray, we learn that hydrogen fuel cells are the touchstone of zero emissions, since all the waste they produce is water vapor. But they require a new infrastructure for tanking up with hydrogen gas, which, as Tom and Ray note with a nod to the notorious Hindenburg zeppelin accident, is highly flammable.
Care to tank up on niblets? An ethanol-gasoline blend is already available at many filling stations, but doubts persist about whether ethanol represents much of an energy savings. Energy-dense lithium-ion batteries, like the ones that power computer laptops, could one day replace the gas tank altogether—but, as Ray points out, a pesky few of those batteries have spontaneously burst into flame. (See some inspired but undeveloped ideas of the past in History's Innovative Autos.)
Tom and Ray again turn an expert, comic eye on the promise and pitfalls of tomorrow's auto technology, and their quest inspires cautious optimism that novel green vehicles are about to get roadworthy. But do any of these future cars tempt Tom to give up his '52 MG? Tune in to see how the car guys answer this puzzler.
4 Comments
charliemsays...Fantastic video.
Imagine the possibilities if the concepts of the ultra-light weight car, the electric engine, the regenerative breaks, the solar cells on the roofs of cars, were all married together.
Why are we not on the path to acheiving this ?
You would think we would be agressivly pursuing this, but unfortunatley its all kept hidden in universities labs.
Memoraresays...ARG! WE'RE ALREADY THERE!!! and have been since 2006
(but in the intarwebz age nobody keeps track of things for more than 3 months)
Click here now:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Roadster
and then search "Tesla Roadster" on VideoSift for actual test drive reviews.
- Acceleration time: 0–60 mph (0–97 km/h) in 3.9 seconds. Some prototypes and initial production 2008 Roadsters were limited to 5.7 second 0–60 mph acceleration.[7]
- Top speed: electronically limited at 125 mph (201 km/h)
- Range: 221 miles (356 km) on the EPA combined cycle
The car WORKS NOW and is AVAILABLE NOW,
not in some distant corporate controlled hydrogen fantasyland future,
the only drawback is the price tag, they've aimed the initial runs at the high end market to generate buzz.
Now that gas is +$4/gal they need to do another round of marketing blitz and lower the cost to average suburbanite and working class folks.
eric3579says...*dead
siftbotsays...This video has been declared non-functional; embed code must be fixed within 2 days or it will be sent to the dead pool - declared dead by eric3579.
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