Jetcar
Jetcar Zukunftsfahrzeug GmbH
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legal form | GmbH |
founding | 2000 |
Seat | Neuruppin , Germany |
management | Christian Wenger-Rosenau (Managing Director) |
Branch | Automobile manufacturer |
Website | www.jetcar.de |
Jetcar is a German automobile manufacturer and automobile brand . The company operates as Jetcar Zukunftsfahrzeug GmbH and is based in the Neuruppin district of Nietwerder.
history
In 1998 the brothers Christian Wenger-Rosenau and Michael Wenger started developing a light, streamlined car with low fuel consumption. The target by a narrow face because of successively arranged seats, a lightweight steel frame and was achieved GRP - body . The Jetcar 1 was powered by a small-volume diesel engine . This vehicle has also been tested with electric and fuel cell drives. In this phase, Jetcar also developed an even more economical model, the Jetcar 1.5 . Due to the German approval regulations (including the ban on plastic front glazing), these developments could not be approved in Germany.
From 2001 to 2002 a further development of the Jetcar 1.5 to the Jetcar 2.5 was made. This was presented at the IAA 2003 .
In the video for the title I will love you (2007) by Nena , a jet car appears as the car of the future.
In February 2010 the company presented its newly developed Jetcar Elektro .
In 2010 the Jetcar Elektro took part in the first e-miglia , an open rally for electric vehicles over 560 km from Munich to Rovereto . In 2011, the Jetcar team took second place in the following event in the passenger car class. The JetCar managed the return trip of 915 km with an energy consumption of 10.72 kWh per 100 km from the socket, i.e. including the loss of charger and traction battery . In relation to the energy content, this corresponds to diesel consumption of only 1.1 liters per 100 km.
The purchase price is from 48,000 euros including VAT. The manufacturer states that all Jetcar models are made by hand.
Technical specifications
Jetcar 2.5 | Jetcar electric | |
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Length: | 4.08 m | |
Width: | 1.50 m | |
Height: | 1.31 m | |
Wheelbase: | 2.60 m | |
Engine: | 3 cylinder diesel (with turbocharger ) | Permanent magnet synchronous motor |
Displacement: | 799 cc | - |
Max. Power: | 30 kW (41 hp) | 60 kW (82 PS) |
Max. Torque: | 100 Nm (1800–2800 rpm) | |
Seating arrangement: | 2 seats in a row | |
Drive: | Rear | |
Transmission: | 6-speed, electronically operated | 2-speed, electronically operated |
Empty weight (without driver): | approx. 730 kg | approx. 1150 kg including battery |
Top speed: | 160 km / h | 160 km / h, electronically limited |
Trunk volume: | 180 liters | 150 liters |
Average consumption per 100 km: | 2.5 liters | ~ 14 kWh |
Range: | 1,000 km | 200-250 km |
CO 2 emissions: | 66 g / km | 0 |
Tank volume / battery capacity | 26 liters | 31 kWh (lithium-ion (lithium iron phosphate), 312 V, 100 Ah) |
Web links
- Jetcar website
- Jetcar: The high-speed electric car , video contribution SPON, September 14, 2011, accessed May 21, 2012.
Individual evidence
- ↑ A world first, the Jetcar: prototype glider pilot . The mirror . September 15, 2003. Retrieved May 29, 2011.
- ↑ Marion Kaufmann: Pssst! Pop star NENA is shooting a video in a field near Hakenberg - but nobody should know , MAZ from 23 August 2006.
- ↑ a b Jetcar: Jetcar Elektro sales brochure (PDF; 8.8 MB), accessed August 16, 2012.
- ↑ e-miglia, day 4 and final of the 2011 competition on YouTube , accessed on December 17, 2018.
- ↑ JetCar, 2011: A journey through pictures across the Alps and Germany with Jetcar Elektro , accessed May 21, 2012.
- ↑ Price list from January 2018 , accessed on January 20, 2018.
- ↑ Jetcar: TÜV report on fuel consumption , ZIP file, accessed August 16, 2012