Toyota buys Subaru...
#1
Toyota buys Subaru...
Well, not really. Today they announced they will buy 8.7% of FHI, which owns subaru. Toyota rally car? maybe.
http://www.insideindianabusiness.com...m.asp?id=15366
http://www.insideindianabusiness.com...m.asp?id=15366
#2
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Tease! :p
#8
Originally Posted by ZoomZoomH
yes, take out some subaru ugly, and insert some toyota boredom, wonderful :o
#9
NoahZoom Cop'n'Training
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Originally Posted by BlueEyes
Or, Subaru injecting some excitment into toyota boredom :D
Because a card board box on 4 wheels is really exciting!!!!!11!one :o
#10
I wonder if this has anything to do with the new battery Subaru's parent company recently developed. The one that can charge to 90% within only 5 minutes. If Toyota is seriously going to mass produce hybrids, a 5-minute charging battery would give them a great selling point over other hybrids. Once charging stations start showing up at gas stations, you could realistically quit using gasoline altogether (but you still have a generator onboard, for places that only sell gas). And once charging stations are everywhere, you just dump the gas engine and sell cars that are cheaper, quieter, and more reliable.
edit:
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003339.html
124 miles on a 5-minute battery charge? If it's for real, hydrogen cars (and gas and diesel, eventually) will merely be a footnote in the history books, like steam-powered cars of 100 years ago.
edit:
Fuji Heavy Industries, the maker of Subaru brand vehicles, announced that it will release the R1e electric minicar by 2010, and that the vehicle will begin roadtests in Japan this year.
Based on the R1 minicar, the R1e uses a lithium-ion battery can be recharged to 90% of capacity in five minutes. The current prototype can be driven 120 kilometers (75 miles) without recharging, but the distance is expected to be expanded to 200 kilometers (124 miles). Fuji Heavy plans to start testing the R1e on public roads this year. The company also unveiled a new capacitor with quadruple the energy density of earlier models. (GCC)
Based on the R1 minicar, the R1e uses a lithium-ion battery can be recharged to 90% of capacity in five minutes. The current prototype can be driven 120 kilometers (75 miles) without recharging, but the distance is expected to be expanded to 200 kilometers (124 miles). Fuji Heavy plans to start testing the R1e on public roads this year. The company also unveiled a new capacitor with quadruple the energy density of earlier models. (GCC)
124 miles on a 5-minute battery charge? If it's for real, hydrogen cars (and gas and diesel, eventually) will merely be a footnote in the history books, like steam-powered cars of 100 years ago.
Last edited by BaronVonBigmeat; 10-06-2005 at 09:37 AM.
#11
Kaiten Kenbu Rokuren
Originally Posted by BaronVonBigmeat
I wonder if this has anything to do with the new battery Subaru's parent company recently developed. The one that can charge to 90% within only 5 minutes. If Toyota is seriously going to mass produce hybrids, a 5-minute charging battery would give them a great selling point over other hybrids. Once charging stations start showing up at gas stations, you could realistically quit using gasoline altogether (but you still have a generator onboard, for places that only sell gas). And once charging stations are everywhere, you just dump the gas engine and sell cars that are cheaper, quieter, and more reliable.
edit:
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003339.html
124 miles on a 5-minute battery charge? If it's for real, hydrogen cars (and gas and diesel, eventually) will merely be a footnote in the history books, like steam-powered cars of 100 years ago.
edit:
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003339.html
124 miles on a 5-minute battery charge? If it's for real, hydrogen cars (and gas and diesel, eventually) will merely be a footnote in the history books, like steam-powered cars of 100 years ago.
That's pretty amazing. I still think the other forms of energy will dominate though, only because the gas companies will make more money that way...at least the way I see it. I can't see them charging all that much for electricity, you know? It'll be interesting to see future development though, if they can double the amount of miles on that 5 minute charge... :D
#12
Originally Posted by BaronVonBigmeat
124 miles on a 5-minute battery charge? If it's for real, hydrogen cars (and gas and diesel, eventually) will merely be a footnote in the history books, like steam-powered cars of 100 years ago.
#13
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You must also consider the cost of replacement batteries. When you figure that in, the overall cost is more expensive than gas/diesel. Then there's the idea that it's actually cleaner to run electric vehicles when in reality the polution is the same or in some cases worse.
#14
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You guys need to realize that Toyota didn't buy the stake in Subaru from Subaru. They bought them from GM. Frankly I'd much rather see colaboration between Toyota and Subaru than GM and Subaru. Seems that Subaru feels the same way since they regularly fought colaboration with GM.
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