Tag Archives: Chevy Spark

Official: 2014 Chevy Sonic to offer short-term limited-edition colors

By Chris Paukert

2014 Chevy Sonic - front three-quarter view - Deep Magenta Metallic paint

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When Chevrolet launched its subcompact Sonic, it made a splash with a bright paint dubbed Inferno Orange. The metallic citrus shade was a genuine retina searer, featuring prominently in the car’s early marketing efforts as its so-called ‘launch color.’ But Inferno Orange is now gone from the Sonic’s order sheets, and the rest of the car’s color palate is more traditional and – dare we say it – a bit sober.

But that’s about to change – Chevy has just announced that it will begin releasing a range of limited-edition short-term paint colors beginning with the “chromatic plum” shade seen above, Deep Magenta Metallic. The striking hue came about after witnessing the successful launch of the Chevy Spark in Techno Pink. The special paint will only be available from August through October, but Chevy hasn’t revealed if it is capping the number of vehicles it will produce in this shade.

Chevy says that Deep Magenta Metallic will be followed up by Cool Blue, a shade the company describes as “a grayish, dirty blue.” The latter will be available from November until March, and another new shade, Dragon Green, will join the Sonic’s permanent color choices sometime in the first quarter of 2014. Interestingly, the company says that a typical Chevy vehicle receives “10 to 12 color options throughout its lifecycle.” The Sonic already received a similar number of paints before Deep Magenta Metallic and it’s still relatively early in the car’s lifecycle, so clearly Chevy sees small car buyers as being receptive to a broader range of color choices.

Continue reading 2014 Chevy Sonic to offer short-term limited-edition colors

2014 Chevy Sonic to offer short-term limited-edition colors originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 22 Jul 2013 14:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Has Obama's Electric Car Revolution Failed?

By John Rosevear, The Motley Fool

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Last Friday’s news that Fisker Automotive would lay off 75% of its staff after failing to find a buyer was yet another blow to the Obama administration’s efforts to foster an electrified automotive future.

Fisker received $193 million in U.S. government money, and produced some 2,500 cars – but it never came close to turning a profit, and its short history was marked by a long series of missteps.

Electric cars haven’t exactly taken the market by storm. President Obama‘s onetime goal of having 1 million electric cars on U.S. roads by 2015 now looks like a pipe dream. Was this whole idea misguided from the start?

Fisker wasn’t even building proper electric cars
In a way, Fisker’s failure isn’t a fair test. Despite receiving millions from a Department of Energy loan program, Fisker’s car, a luxury sedan called the Karma, wasn’t even a true electric car, or BEV (for “battery electric vehicle”). Instead, it was a plug-in hybrid, a term that means a conventional gas-electric hybrid that can be plugged in to charge the batteries.

Plug-in hybrids can typically go a short distance without using any gas at all. That was a cutting-edge idea when the Karma was first shown way back in 2008. But nowadays, plug-in hybrids are pretty mainstream: Toyota‘s popular Prius comes in a plug-in version, as do the hybrid versions of Ford‘s Fusion and C-Max and a number of other cars.

Several of the mass-market automakers also offer (or plan to offer) pure electric BEVs. Nissan‘s LEAF is probably the best-known, but there are a few others. Ford offers an electric version of its Focus compact, and General Motors will roll out an electric version of its tiny Chevy Spark in a few markets later this year.

The problem with electric cars
The LEAF and those other BEVs were introduced with much fanfare over the last few years. But the LEAF has missed its sales goals, and the Focus Electric has sold just over a thousand examples in its year-plus on the market – next to none, in other words, in the grand scheme of things.

There are several problems with electric cars – a lack of recharging stations is one – but a big obstacle is that the batteries are still too expensive. By mass-market standards, that means that electric cars that have enough batteries to give a decent range are too expensive for what they are. Or put another way, why pay almost $40,000 for an electric Focus when you can get a more useable gas-powered version for half of that?

That’s something that the government hasn’t yet figured out how to fix. But the only company that seems to be succeeding with electric cars so far, Tesla Motors , has figured out how to work around it.

Does Tesla’s success show that electric cars are only for the rich?
As far as pure electric cars go, Tesla’s Model S is as …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

GM's Reuss: Next-gen Chevy Volt will be "thousands of dollars" cheaper

By Sebastian Blanco

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2013 chevrolet volt

Following the news of the massive price drop for the Nissan Leaf, hearing GM North America President Mark Reuss tell the media that GM will take out “thousands of dollars” from the next-generation Chevrolet Volt isn’t exactly a surprise. In fact, we’ve known for a long time that plug-in cars will get cheaper and cheaper as the technology evolved. It’s just nice to hear a GM bigwig sing it loudly for the press.

Speaking at the Automotive News World Congress in Detroit this week, Reuss said that the reduced costs will be the result of better battery pack design and better electric motors. This will help the next Volt, obviously, but Reuss went further and said, “We will see the day when we have an affordable electric car that offers 300 miles of range with all the comfort and utility of a conventional vehicle.”

The Volt sold a total of 23,461 units in 2012, despite taking a political shellacking during the presidential campaign (and before). Reuss said the plug-in hybrid is “going to sell even more, and the next generation will be even better.” We don’t know yet exactly what it’s going to look like, but we have heard it will be “a little more monochromatic, a little more road-hugging.”

GM‘s plug-in vehicle strategy includes not only updating the Volt but also the all-electric Chevy Spark and the just-revealed (in production form) Cadillac ELR. All told, GM is getting ready to sell 500,000 electrified vehicles by 2017, but that number includes non-plug-in vehicles like those with eAssist. If prices keep dropping the way Reuss implies, 500,000 shouldn’t be too high a hurdle.

GM’s Reuss: Next-gen Chevy Volt will be “thousands of dollars” cheaper originally appeared on Autoblog Green on Thu, 17 Jan 2013 17:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog