BMW " Project i " : a mobility solution for megacities (official!)

Some new details emerged ... Source: Reuters

....

Friedrich Eichiner will head the project at management board level.

Ulrich Kranz, who helped develop the Mini, will lead a development team that will grow from less than 50 now to less than 100.

Responsible for corporate and brand development, Eichiner refrained from concentrating on one particular concept other than to say it would position itself as a premium vehicle with annual sales of at least 100,000 units.

"It could be a two-wheel concept, too," he said.

The BMW executive added that apart from the technological issues of rolling out an upscale concept that would address future environmental issues such as congestion charges and no-go zones, the vehicle must also solve the key problem of safety.

He said BMW's C1 -- a scooter built for only three years through the end of 2002 by Italy's Bertone that featured a type of driver's cage that let the driver strap himself in with a safety belt -- could be a model for the project.

"That was a very future-oriented vehicle and we will certainly have a closer look at this again," he said.

This year BMW will answer the most basic questions, such as the vehicle's size, whether it might be battery- or engine-driven, or the number of wheels.

"We're just beginning to understand the needs of the customers," Eichiner said.


He said that once a design was finished and a production model was in place, BMW would be open to cooperating with rivals in developing components such as its engine or battery.


He said a close partnership like Toyota's with PSA (to build the minicars Aygo, 107 and C1) would not happen.


"That's not what we are thinking," he said, citing BMW's desire to pioneer a completely new form of mobility that could give it a competitive advantage.




:t-cheers:
 
in the new auto revue(mag) there is an interview with stefan prierer(ceo of KTM) - he more or less has the same opinion on the future of automobile
he also takes the C1 as example of a good idea, but a bad realisation
they also see them self as a brand that could create something between scooters and microcars

really exiting future - don't we all love the greenhouse effect :usa7uh:
 
Will BMW re-invent the Isetta?

BMW CEO, Norbert Reithofer, has recently announced that the Bavarian auto maker is about to develop an all new small city car designed for use in big cities like New York, Tokyo, Rio or other overpopulated areas where big cars are a nuisance. The decision was influenced by new CAFE emission standards which take effect in 2012. Consequenty, BMW will be classified as a "large vehicle manufactuer," and subject to higher efficiency standards.

Since this new city car will be considerably smaller than BMW’s current smallest model, the 1-Series, the old Isetta legend from the 50s comes to mind. The little city hopper is not expected to adapt the unusual front end access door from the original Isetta, but an electric engine will get power from a lithium-ion battery which is expected to provide sufficient power assuming development of the technology progresses at a presumed rate. Similar to the Smart model, it will offer room for two passengers plus luggage, and it can be expected that BMW will create an all new brand name and model line for this car.

Since nobody knows how the new little car will look like once it comes on the market, these two speculative computer renderings are an artist’s impression of what it could be like.
 
Re: Will BMW re-invent the Isetta?

Looks like a goat. :D Btw are these headlights from the Alfa 8C ?
 
No . Huckfeldt nailed the direction , Just as the MINI was a modern reinterpretation of the original Mini. I-Auto or ISetta will be the equivalent of the original except safety laws prevent us from integrating the original entry point in the new car.

I wish people would stop copy and pasting these headlines of recycled news presented as fact when it is well and truly fiction.
 
There already is a mobility solution for megacities. They call it mass transit. Battery technology is still too far away from replacing combustion engines, and the only real solution to wean the world off oil is more reliance on mass transit, especially subways, trains and monorail/tram
 
Yes but people want individuality...This Project i is for the future. New solutions for a new world, because environment and population issues will raise different needs that the carmakers will have to understand. Otherwise they will miss the market of the future and possibly be replaced by more reactive companies.

Flying cars are not that far away, and solutions like the Segway are imo an indication of what the carmakers should be interested in. The future of the car is not necessarily fitted with 4 wheels, a boot at the back and a motor at the front. And the future of the mobility is not necessarily in mass-transit.
 
Battery technology is still too far away from replacing combustion engines

Electric engines are actually the biggest candidate to give petrol a run for it's money. All the other alternative resources like hydrogen and such are far not even close to become mass market since they require a big an expensive infrastructure of refueling stations.

G-Wiz and Tesla have hit the market and the response has been very posetive.
 
^^ I agree.

And Renault has presented an interesting project (accused to be copied from a French engineer's project though): you come to a station with your empty batteries, and change them for a new set...So no need to wait till they're charged!!

Furthermore, battery technology is improving big time these days, with Li-Ion adapted for cars by Daimler, and some independant companies announcing groundbreaking innovations. One said it was able to make a battery have a ten times bigger capacity with current size and weight...Ten times!
 
Furthermore, battery technology is improving big time these days, with Li-Ion adapted for cars by Daimler, and some independant companies announcing groundbreaking innovations. One said it was able to make a battery have a ten times bigger capacity with current size and weight...Ten times!

True, battery technology is advancing, GP Power for example has a charger that will fully recharge AA batteries in just 7 minutes!! Highly impressive to say the least.

Now when MB and BMW are at the front line of electric cars they are bound to have taken off in 5-10 with many other manufacturers like VW, Toyota and Honda following the trend. I'm actually very happy about this.

What I do hope is that at least a few of the players form an alliance offering hyper fast recharging stations at the dealerships so that people can pop by and let their battery get recharged, perhaps not in 7 minutes but eventually technology will get there.

Fisker did something brilliants with the Karma concept car, it has solar panels on the roof which would be perfect for an all electric car because recharging is so car the most tricky obstacle.

But in a whole I'm very happy about this "Project i".


:t-cheers:
 
Designer Frank Stephenson(X5,500,MiTo,Mini) has left alfa romeo! he would be the perfect guy to work on the isetta project (or at least get him pack for mini design team) :eusa_pray
 
Here are my issues with batteries in cars:

1) Safety - It doesn't appear to me that car specific batteries have been tested enough in variety of weather conditions to say they're actually safe. It's great they're extremely environmentally friendly and emit next to nothing, but if I'm going to invest in electric transportation I at least want to know my car won't turn into the equivalent of a roasted HP laptop when it's sat outside in a 100+ degree California summer.

2) Longevity + replacement cost - No oil or belt changes is great, but like every other battery it will eventually expire and I have yet to see anything that details how long we can expect these expensive to produce battery packs to last?? And did I mention "expensive to produce"??? I can only imagine how much a replacement battery pack would cost to replace. I'm not sure about this.
 
Designer Frank Stephenson(X5,500,MiTo,Mini) has left alfa romeo! he would be the perfect guy to work on the isetta project (or at least get him pack for mini design team) :eusa_pray

Frank Stephenson didn't penned E53 X5 - Chris Chapman did. But Mr. Stephenson was a design project manager for E53 X5 project though. :t-cheers:
 

BMW

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, abbreviated as BMW is a German multinational manufacturer of luxury vehicles and motorcycles headquartered in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. The company was founded in 1916 as a manufacturer of aircraft engines, which it produced from 1917 to 1918 and again from 1933 to 1945.
Official website: BMW (Global), BMW (USA)

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