The Air Car is the brainchild of Guy
Negre, a French inventor and former Formula One engineer. In February,
Negre’s company, Motor Development International (MDI), announced a deal
to manufacture the technology with Tata Motors, India’s largest
commercial automaker and a major player worldwide. “It’s an innovative
technology, it’s an environment-friendly technology, and a scalable
technology, ” says Tata spokesperson Debasis Ray. “It can be used in
cars, in commercial vehicles, and in power generation. ”
Though
Negre first unveiled the technology in the early 1990s, interest has
only recently grown. In addition to the Tata deal, which could put
thousands of the cars on the road in India by the end of the decade,
Negre has signed deals to bring the design to twelve other countries,
including South Africa, Israel, and Germany. But experts say the car may
never make it to US streets.
The Air Car works similarly to electric cars, but
rather than storing electrical energy in a huge, heavy battery, the
vehicle converts energy into air pressure and stores it in a tank.
According to MDI’s Miguel Celades, Negre’s engine uses compressed air
stored at a pressure of 300 bars to pump the pistons, providing a range
of around 60 miles per tank at highway speeds. An onboard air compressor
can be plugged into a regular outlet at home to recharge the tank in
about four hours, or an industrial compressor capable of 3,500 psi
(likes those found in scuba shops) can fill it up in a few minutes for
around two dollars. Celades says optional gasoline or biofuel hybrid
models will heat the pressurized air, increasing the volume available
for the pistons and allowing the car to drive for nearly 500 miles
between air refills and about 160 miles per gallon of fuel burned.
Early media reports speculated that Tata could have
an Air Car on the market by the end of 2008, but Ray says it’s likely to
be a couple of years before the technology is available. Until the
Indian models hit the streets, the best way to see an Air Car in action
is to cross the pond and check out Negre’s prototypes in France- a trip
entrepreneur J. P. Maeder says is worthwhile. “It’s not a fantasy, ” he
says of the car. “It can make a real impact in how personal
transportation will develop from here. ”
In 2003, Maeder formed ZevCat, a Califonia company
that aims to bring the Air Car to America. So far, however, he says his
plans have stalled for financial reasons: Without enough money to build
and crash test prototypes, he can’t demonstrate the technology for
investors who might be willing to fund more prototypes.
The car might garner more attention in the US if it
makes it to market in India or elsewhere before other burgeoning
technologies like plug-in hybrids or fuel-cell electric cars. If that
were to happen, compressed air could become the “next big thing” for
green-minded drivers, says Larry Rinek, an auto analyst with the
international market-research firm Frost and Sullivan. But Rinek
questions whether the car will have mass appeal. Another unknown is
whether the vehicle could pass crash tests.
“This is an R and D novelty; it’s a curiosity that is
nowhere near ready for primetime, ” says Rinek. “It’s unknown and
untrusted, particularly here in North America” where, he says, adoption
of new technology moves “very slowly. ”
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