Wow. The Loremo is a concept diesel vehicle that gets 150 MPG. I'll be a road tester if they need one! From MSN Auto. Discuss diesel cars in our diesel vehicles forum.
Loremo: The 'Low Resistance Mobile'
At 150-miles-per-gallon, the Loremo wants to show how far a diesel can go.
The
idea is deceptively simple. Forget about fancy batteries, regenerative
braking, and alternative fuels. Instead, make a car that's elegant in
its minimalism and efficiency. The Loremo's German designers revisited
the basics — engine efficiency, low weight, and minimal drag — to
create a car that offers fuel-efficiency in the neighborhood of 130 to
150 miles per gallon. The Loremo is likely to dazzle drivers not with
its acceleration, but with its ability to drive from New York to L.A.
with only three stops at the pump.
Loremo stands for low resistance mobile,
and its engineers have stuck obsessively to this idea. By building the
car around a 2-cylinder turbodiesel engine, and cutting back on weight,
drag, and other excess fat such as side-opening doors, the Loremo puffs
out a mere 50 grams of carbon dioxide per kilometer. This is about 40
grams less per kilometer than the tiny diesel smart. According to its creators, this will make the Loremo the most efficient production car ever sold.
If
the Loremo showed up as a concept on an auto show pedestal, it would
certainly garner some attention. But the Loremo is not a car for
dreamers; not only will it enter mass production next year, it will
sport a base price attainable by mortal motorists: 15,000 euros (about
U.S. $22,000).
After
its 2009 release in Europe, the Loremo will be redesigned to reach the
North American market the following year. A $30,000, 3-cylinder GT
model will also become available, offering better acceleration (0-60 in
roughly 10 seconds, vs. 16 for the base model). Both hybrid and fully
electric versions are also in the works.
Driving Simplicity
While
the Loremo goes back to basics to come up with triple-digit fuel
economy, it took some outside-the-box thinking to get there. The most
striking difference is the way passengers enter, with the car's front
end yawning forward — hood, windshield, and steering column included.
Upon settling in, the front end closes, swinging the dashboard,
touch-screen display, and steering wheel back into position. The driver
is then surrounded by a minimalist design aesthetic not unlike the
ultra-efficient Aptera, but with a bit more Germanic twist.
Read:
Aptera: The Wingless Bird
Opening
the trunk hatch reveals two rear-facing "youth" seats, both of which
are removable to free up storage space. Seating in front is also snug,
with the driver and front passenger nearly shoulder to shoulder.
If
it sounds like the Loremo boasts all the disadvantages of a sports car
(tight squeeze, low headroom, awkward entry) sans the adrenaline rush,
its winning traits may be undeniable efficiency and modest cost. And
validation could be on the horizon. The Loremo was one of the first
cars entered in the Automotive X PRIZE, a high-profile contest offering
a purse of $10 million or more for a vehicle that can prove
100-mile-per-gallon performance as well as economic viability. Luckily
for the Loremo, it's not a drag race.
Read:
Automotive X PRIZE: $10 million for a 100-mpg car
Gerhard
Heilmaier, CEO of the Munich-based Loremo AG, says that a car's weight
is the key factor in making it green, no matter what the fuel: "Cars
need to be downsized. Why do we need two tons of steel to bring a
180-pound human from one place to another? That must change."
Running
the Loremo on biodiesel (a vegetable-based diesel substitute) is an
attractive option, but Heilmaier insists that efficiency comes before
all else. "The first step must be to reduce the amount of energy you
need. The second step is to choose which energy it is. Even electric
vehicles are not zero emission. Think of where the electricity is
coming from."
The Diesel Returns
While
American carmakers have greened their vehicles mostly with
hybrid-electric drives and ethanol fuel, Europe has been refining the
rugged diesel engine and accentuating its high fuel-efficiency to cut
greenhouse gasses and stanch oil consumption. Now it seems that
American interest in diesel cars and SUVs is on the rise, with
companies such as Audi, Mercedes-Benz, Volkswagen, BMW, and even Honda
(the hybrid runner-up) bringing their diesel offerings to U.S. drivers.
"The European diesels are really very civilized," says David Cole,
chairman of the Center for Automotive Research, "and they have
excellent engines."
At this year's North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Audi chairman Rupert Stadler unveiled the R8 V12 diesel
sports car, telling his American audience that Audi is now "challenging
the final piece of conventional wisdom" about diesel-powered cars. BMW
also took the opportunity to foreshadow the arrival of more diesel cars
and SUVs.
As gas prices rise and fuel economy laws stiffen,
Americans continue to jump into hybrids with green stars in their eyes
(in 2007, the Prius outsold the Ford Explorer).
But even if the Loremo isn't exactly what American drivers are looking
for, this staggeringly efficient car could serve as a powerful symbol
of how far the diesel engine can go, and help break through some of
that smoggy "conventional wisdom."
Jacob Gordon is a freelance writer, a blogger for TreeHugger.com, and producer of TreeHugger Radio. He can be reached at jacob@treehugger.com.
Original MSN article here.
Posted
Jul 22 2008, 09:42 AM
by
natescape