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G-Wiz – there's nowhere to plug in Scotland's only electric car

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Published Date: 27 July 2008
THE car was tootling along nicely, on a flat but curvy stretch of A-road a few miles south of the Lanarkshire town of Biggar.
But considerate driver that he is, Adrian Loening pulled over to the side to let the string of vehicles that had gathered in a procession behind to zoom past.

We had been travelling at around 40mph – not fast enough by far for the drivers behind
– but a hill was looming ahead. "We will slow down to around 30mph," Loening said. "I don't think it's fair to hold everyone up. "

Off the procession went, accelerating up the incline, petrol and diesel burning and engines gunning. We were left with the sound of the future – silence. Loening was sat behind the wheel of a G-Wiz, the electric and blissfully quiet battery driven car now relatively common on the streets of London.

In Scotland, the engineer is believed to be the first private owner of the car that is starting an electric revolution in the UK. Plans for mass production electric vehicles acceptable to a wider public are some years away but the petite G-Wiz, of which 1,000 have been sold in the past three years in the London area, is in the vanguard of a move towards low pollution vehicles.

Loening, who lives in the village of Lamington and bought his G-Wiz second-hand from a London-based friend who was leaving for a job abroad, is proud to be a Scottish pioneer. The car is made in India by the company Reva and costs around £9,500 new.

He charges the vehicle overnight by plugging it into the mains at his cottage at a cost of around 80p. Then it is good for journeys of around 35 miles before it needs charging again. He says it has transformed the lives of himself and his wife Debbie since it arrived – on the back of a car transporter – in June.

"We use it to get to the shops at Biggar and to take our son to school," he says. "In fact, we probably now use it for around 50% of our car journeys.

"Of course it has its limitations – I have a diesel-powered Audi for longer journeys – but for local journeys it is both brilliant and fun.

"There are some who stare and you know they are thinking what on Earth is that. But when you explain what it is, everyone thinks it is a great idea."

Loening's G-Wiz is little bigger than an enclosed golf cart. It will fit a family of four at a pinch. "As long as the children have short legs," laughed Debbie.

But what it lacks in space, it gives back in running costs and environmental benefits. Loening estimates the cost of running his G-Wiz is a quarter of his conventional car and the road tax is zero. It also cuts missions of carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming from 160g per kilometre for the average vehicle, to 80g.

Last week, Prime Minister Gordon Brown signalled his government's intention to encourage the take-up of electric cars by entering talks with US car giant General Motors, owners of Vauxhall. At the Motor Show in London, GM revealed that it was considering manufacturing its new Flextreme hybrid car in the UK if the Government agreed to set up a national network of publicly available plug-in points. The only public plug-in point in Scotland is at the Braehead shopping centre, west of Glasgow, part of a national trial scheme.

It restricts Loening's range to the outskirts of Edinburgh to the north and Moffat to the south. "I could probably make it to Straiton (on the southern Edinburgh bypass) and then get the park-and-ride into the city," he says. "I wouldn't be able to get it back again unless I could find somewhere to plug it in."

The Scottish Government will be holding a consultation exercise in the autumn to look at how to encourage the use of electric vehicles in Scotland, according to a spokesman.





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  • Last Updated: 26 July 2008 8:51 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Mad Jock,

East Lothian 27/07/2008 00:20:34
This "car" is an absolute menace if run on a road like the A702. But please don't dignify it by calling it a car. It's a Quadricycle. That is so it can dodge the usual type approval and impact tests that real cars are subjected to. While fine in an urban environment, they have no impact resistance, and you'd probably be safer in a cardboard box.
While I can only applaud the driver/ owner for pulling over to let cars pass, the fact that there was a queue behind him would suggest that the vehicle is not suited for the road that he was driving on. With yet another fatality on the A9, it only goes to show what can happen when frustration sets in and people start to overtake out of desperation. If your vehicle can't even manage the posted speed limit, get off the road.
As the big car manufacturers are really gearing up for electric cars and hybrid deisels, the automotive future is obviously getting greener. Overall safety, performance, passenger capacity, range and low or zero emmisions must be taken as read for any of these cars to have a place in the marketplace. The Reva G-Wizz only fulfils one of these criteria.
2

Rabster,

London 27/07/2008 00:53:40
Agree with #1 - this car is fine for London (or other city centres) but shouldn't be allowed on roads with speed limits above 40mph.
3

The Daleks,

Longmen 27/07/2008 06:57:26
Driving around in a toy car on those roads is just asking for trouble.

As for electricity being the way forward, I doubt it. Producing enough electricity for domestic and commercial use is already a major issue around the globe, never mind finding enough to power fleets and fleets of Noddy cars.

Back to the drawing board chaps.
4

Anne,

Eaglesham 27/07/2008 07:19:02
Where do you take it for servicing - the local garage or the local electrician?
5

Unimpressed one,

27/07/2008 09:29:44
We wait with baited breath for Sir Clive Sinclair to make an announcement any day now, after all we lead the world in this 'technology'.
6

KWS,

Alloa 27/07/2008 10:40:34
So, at 80p for 35 miles as long as you have a car which is capable of over 55mpg and drive it economically then you should get a "real" car and drive in comfort, safety and without frustrating other motorists. Given some of the newer eco-versions of popular cars (A3, Polo, etc) are capable of over 70mpg I know what I'll pick. Hell, my 56-plate 1.2L Micra cost under £5k a couple of months ago and does 50mpg+.
7

,

27/07/2008 11:24:26
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 27/07/2008 14:24:20
This is where the "green taxes" should be going. R&D on electric and alternative power vehicles such as hydrogen hydrolysis and methanol from carbon dioxide (great advantage - no need to bury all that "horrible" CO2) needs to be funded and done and the objections from interested parties such as the oil companies turned into more enthusiasm.

The G-Whiz thing is a toy and not suitable for any kind of safe travel whether in town where most accidents happen or on the open roads where it is pathetically slow. EV's can be quicker than this so why focus on a muppet version?!

9

KampungHighlander,

Jakarta 27/07/2008 14:40:59
You will be seeing a lot more Electric Vehicles in the near future.

There has been tremendous advances in battery technology that is currently making its way to the market.

The new Lithium Ion Nanowire batteries have twice the storage capacity of existing Lithium Ion batteries. They can be fully charged in 10 minutes, have a duty cycle of over 9,000 charges (means that they will last longer than the car) and are safer than the existing technology. They are being used to power full size SUV's and Pickup Trucks with top speeds of 95 mph.

Electric Vehicles are an ideal compliment if you are relying on Wind Turbines to produce power. If you adopt a system that allows them to act as storage batteries for excess power during periods of low demand and then discharge that power into the grid at times of peak demand. V2G is the wave of the future.

A study in the US showed that this load balancing would be so beneficial for the profits of the Utilities that they could economicaly provide power for free to electric vehicles.

I would not buy a new Combustion Engined Vehicle, in four years to it may not have any resale value as the cost of fuel will make it prohibitively expensive to operate.
10

Roaduser,

Somewhere on the A702 27/07/2008 17:46:43
Quad bikes, tractors, mopeds, cycles, motorcycles, caravans, camper vans, horses, sheep, cows the odd pedestrian and one EV all use the A702 - I've seen them. It is a dangerous road but the danger is caused by aggressive driving not the slower vehicles. Slowing down a bit saves fuel and saves lives, sounds like a good idea to me.

When Benz introduced the horseless carriage riders sneered and said it would not catch on. For the first few years you had to have a man waking in front of you with a red flag. Times and attitude changed then and they will change again.

Sure the G-Wiz is not the perfect vehicle but you have to start somewhere and it has made heads in the multi-national car companies turn.
11

Martin Winlow,

Herts, UK 03/08/2008 18:06:03
#1 - As much a 'menace' as a bicycle, a tractor, or a horse or even a pedestrian? It's a free world and everyone has a right to use the roads in whatever way they see fit as long as it is within the law. It's only 4' 3" (1.3m) wide, BTW.

#3 - It has been estimated that every gallon of petrol/diesel uses around 12kW hours of electricity to 'make' up to the point where it goes into a vehicle fuel tank. Any eclectic vehicle - even a relatively inefficient one will go considerably further on this amount of electricity than it ever will on one gallon of fuel.

Ergo, we already have sufficient generating capacity/ distribution infrastructure to cope with almost total switch over to eclectic vehicles. This is due to the fact that electric vehicles have an efficiency of at least 3 times that of the internal combustion engine (ICE). Throw in a bit of carbon fibre and really good aerodynamics and you could do even better (see aptera.com).

#4 - What servicing? The average ICE has a thousand or more moving parts. The latest version of the G-Wiz (and any other AC powered EV) has just one - the motor armature. So, no tune-ups, no oil, no oil filter, no clutch, no air filter, no spark plugs and even the brake pad wear is hugely reduced (with sensible driving) due to the 'regenerative braking' system. Ie when you take your foot off the accelerator, the motor electronically changes to a generator and converts the energy of the moving vehicle into electricity which goes back into the battery, slowing it down. Some EVs don’t have conventional hydraulic/friction brakes at all - it's all done electronically and all that kinetic energy is recovered and stored, available again when you accelerate.

#8 - The only government spending any sort of real money on R & D for EVs is... the Chinese. I predict if things go on as they are with the fossil fuel situation that in 20 years we'll all be driving round in Chinese made EVs powered by nuclear fission generated electricit

 

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