Saturday 31 January 2015

Iran joins the Electric Car crowd with a prototype

 
Renault resumed shipments of car parts to its Iranian joint-venture, Renault Pars, as Western sanctions against the Persian Gulf country eased somewhat. The low-volume trade enables the continued production of the Tondar model, an Iranian version of Renault's low-cost Logan car, according to Reuters.

But Logan car parts, sourced from Renault's Romanian plant, may not have been the only model sent to Iran if you closely compare the newly revealed electric car at Tehran's Qazvin Islamic Azad University, pictured above. In nearly all respects, it closely resembles Renault's Twizy urban electric runabout.

Iran's Mehr News Agency reports the car took one year to complete, conveniently coinciding with the easing of economic sanctions. It is 2 meters long and 120 cm wide, measurements that are virtually identical to the Twizy. The MNA stories adds that some 450 parts in the car were fabricated by university researchers, suggesting that what Renault may have supplied were mainly engineering drawings for the vehicle. The most pronounced visible differences between the Iranian vehicle and the French Twizy appear to be largely cosmetic.

The most noticeable difference between the French UEV (urban electric vehicle) and the Iranian clone is their driving ranges. The 6.1kWh battery pack in the Twizy has a rated range of 100 km (62 mi.), while the Azad University vehicle claims double that. Recharge time is said to be 3 hours.

Given Tehran's serious air pollution problems and traffic congestion, a Twizy-like electric vehicle would make sense...

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