CH Zambia: Barker Performance Products

Off-road electric Land Rovers, stadium seating and grill-mounted bars from our Zambian transport specialists

CH Zambia: Barker Performance Products

For our first Cool Hunting Edition travel experience we brought 24 friends and readers on safari in Zambia. Over the course of eight days CH Zambia guests experienced the wonders and wildlife of Africa with a few surprises from our brand partners. More stories and videos here. Started in…

Continue Reading…


The Future in Motion

Audi designer Jae Min on the design process behind the A3 e-tron

The Future in Motion

As Audi gears up for the release of their first-ever electric vehicle, 10 designers and Audi personnel have been enlisted for the A3 e-tron’s e-pilot program. In a new video from the German automaker, 16-year veteran automotive designer Jae Min reflects on the design process and lifestyle experience of…

Continue Reading…


2012 Fisker Karma Road Test

The new plug-in hybrid integrates recycled materials with high design and performance to reach a class of its own

fisker-karma-5.jpg

Those looking to spend $100,000 on a car have many options—excellent performance, coddling comfort, strong styling and luxury hybrids. The Fisker Karma EVer appeals to those who seek all of those, but are willing to meet somewhere in the middle. It isn’t the fastest or best performing in that price range, the most luxurious, or the hybrid with the best mileage. It is, however, a hugely impressive and attractive car from a new and interesting manufacturer that delivers enough of each of those components to make it a unique and obvious choice for many potential buyers. This new company seeks to increase the use of recycled materials and to decrease impact, wherever possible. Partners and suppliers are selected for their responsible business practices, and even its dealers need to get on the program—showrooms must be renovated, not built from scratch.

Building a car is an incredibly complex process that takes some of the world’s best design and engineering talent years, leveraging well-established systems and manufacturing techniques, years to create. Starting a new automobile company from scratch outside of the very small-scale, niche market is something that is very rarely endeavored given the complexity and enormous cost involved.

fisker-karma-1.jpg

Southern California-based Fisker was created in 2007 by two auto industry vets and longtime associates—Henrik Fisker (who led design of the Z8 at BMW, was president and CEO of BMW’s DesignworksUSA, creative director at Ford’s London design center, chief of design at Aston Martin, and director of Ford’s Global Advanced Design Studio) and Bernhard Koehler (who similarly held senior positions at BMW as well as its DesignworksUSA division, Ford’s London design center, and was director of operations and business at Ford’s Global Advanced Design Studio). In 2008 they debuted the Fisker Karma concept, the world’s first luxury plug-in hybrid car, inspired by technology created for the U.S. military.

Four years later, delivery of the production Karma has begun, and its first customers—European royals and Hollywood celebrities among them—can be spotted driving one of the most attention-getting cars on the road today. I had the opportunity to test the Karma in Los Angeles, meet many of the company’s executives, and experience the car firsthand.

fisker-karma-6.jpg

The Fisker Karma EVer (Electric Vehicle with extended range) is a $100,000, four-door, four-seat, luxury plug-in hybrid with a very strong presence. It can travel up to 50 miles on a full charge of its 180 kW, 20 KWh lithium-iron phosphate battery pack, meaning that most people commuting to work will never need the turbocharged 2.0 liter, four cylinder, 260-hp gas-powered engine (sourced from GM). If needed, the engine powers the generator, which in turn powers the two rear-mounted electric motors that drive the rear wheels, and the car can travel around 250 additional miles. This “series hybrid” design is unique to the Karma.

The motors generate around 400hp and 981 lb-ft of torque (the Ferrari 458 Italia, by comparison, generates around 400 lb-ft, and the Tesla Roadster Sport around 225 lb-ft). Electric engines are able to access all of that torque on demand, and that means the Karma is perky (though not fast), despite its 5,500-lb heft (as much as many large SUVs). The batteries, solar panel roof, engine, motors and generator create a heavy payload, one that some people believe impedes its performance and desirability. While true, those buyers are not the ones entranced by the Karma’s styling, 22″ Batmobile-like Circuit Blade wheels and Goodyear Eagle F1 Supercar tires.

fisker-karma-7.jpg

The inside of the car makes as much of a statement. Available in three interior trim packages, the base EcoStandard, the EcoSport and the EcoLux (which is what I drove). Each features only reclaimed wood from fallen trees from forest fires, and even from the bottom of Lake Michigan, where 300-year-old wood is retrieved from yesteryear’s lumber mill scrap. Though limited in its use, the wood takes center stage in the cabin. The simple and natural finish—you won’t find any glossy lacquer here—is unique, subtle and luxurious.

The EcoStandard features artificial leather, and the EcoSport Low Carbon Leather—Farm Animal Welfare-certified hides which are organically tanned with ecologically harvested bark extract by seventh-generation Scottish leather firm Bridge of Weir. The perfection you’d find in a Bentley’s leather trim is traded for the natural beauty of the cow’s hide. Around 85% of the hide is used (substantially more than usual), imperfections and all. Interior colorways are fresh and innovative, too. The firm’s plant supplies its own steam-generated power and processes its waste water.

The EcoLux features a totally animal-free automobile interior along with an “EcoSuede” made entirely of recycled materials. All packages include soy-based foam in the seats and carpet made with recycled materials. Though the rear seats provide enough room for adults, they aren’t very comfortable to sit in for long periods of time.

All packages share the same electronics, and here too Fisker has innovated with a 10″ haptic touch screen to control all aspects of the car’s entertainment and operational systems. In fact the Karma has only four buttons—one for the locks, one for the glove box, one for the hazard lights and one for power. The dash’s lack of switches and buttons is not just a nod to electronics—Fisker intentionally sought to eliminate the loop involved in manufacturing, shipping, maintaining and ultimately disposing of landfill-destined plastic and wire components. The “Command Center” system, designed with Visteon, is user-friendly and well executed, though may take some getting used to by those who are less comfortable or familiar with digital interfaces. My phone paired quickly and easily, and the Bluetooth system supports audio. Key functions are easily accessed without painful menu layers, and it serves as a display when the car is in reverse. The car’s sound system is acceptable but far from industry-leading. The car features low-voltage LED lighting wherever possible, further reducing demand on the car’s electrical system.

Some of the power for the car’s systems is created by its “retro-geometric”-patterned 120-watt solar roof panel (the largest and most powerful in any automobile), which both extends battery range and makes a clear design statement. Parked in the sun? The Karma leverages that electric power to ventilate the car’s interior. Fisker estimates that around 200 miles of zero-emissions driving are created from the car’s roof, making it “the only car with a sunroof for the 21st century.”

fisker-karma-2.jpg

The Karma performed as well in LA traffic as the twisting canyon roads of Malibu, providing a respectfully sticky ride that doesn’t disappoint, especially for a a sedan of its size. Those big wheels feature Brembo monobloc caliper brakes, which easily bring the car to a quick standstill, and the regenerative braking system takes that energy and directs it to help power a generator where it can be reused.

The Karma fully charges in about 14 hours with a standard 100v plug, or around 6 hours with a 220v plug.

Designed and engineered in Anaheim, CA, the Karma is built by Valmet, the respectable Finnish producer, who until last year produced the Porsche Cayman and Boxter. Fisker has purchased an old GM plant in New Hampshire which it intends to renovate and use to build its next model, the Nina.

The Karma introduces to the sometimes predictable luxury auto market a truly innovative new option from a refreshingly young company, and certainly fulfills a need for the more thoughtful consumer with six figures to spend on an equally conscious car.

Photos by Evan Orensten


Charge

A new documentary on the world’s first zero-emissions motorcycle grand prix

charge-dvd-cover.jpg

Following the bold dreams of a handful of racing teams through the trials and tribulations of first and second zero emissions grand prix motorcycle races held on the Isle of Man is Charge, a recently released documentary by Mark Neale. Adding to the tremendous weight of the historical first race is the fact that the Isle of Man TT also happens to be the toughest and most unforgiving race track in the world which has claimed the lives of over 200 racers.

While Charge was seemingly produced on a shoestring, it’s rich in content. The uniquely intriguing stories of the teams involved and contrasting design and development processes of both heavily budgeted student run and corporate backed teams offer an insightful look into the young and still developing world of electric motorcycle racing.

Central to electric motorcycle engineering—and film—is Cedric Lynch, who may just be the most eccentric personality in racing. After dropping out of school at age 12 this self-taught, barefoot, electrical pioneer went on to invent the Lynch motor. Now used in majority of the competitors’ bikes the renamed and updated Agni motor can propel a bike upwards of 130mph while running at 93% efficiency, as compared to an average 30% on standard petrol burning motorcycles.

Charge-image-5.jpg

Through the two races in 2009 and 2010 the viewer is taken through the design and production of some of the first and finest electric grand prix capable motorcycles in the world. And after a few unfortunate tragedies we witness the first time ever an American-built and ridden machine has won a professional TT, helping turn the previously apprehensive locals onto the quieter side of the daredevil sport. Charge grabs your attention and keeps it for its entire 90min run time.

Charge-image-4.jpg

To see the trailer and pick up a copy for yourself directly through Charge’s online store where it goes for $20, although unfortunately only available in the United States and Canada only for the moment.


Brammo Electric Motorcycles

New electric motorcycle engineering rivals gas bikes

Brammo-SMRI-image-3.jpg brammo-smri_ex.jpg

With a mission of making an electric bike as affordable and fun as gas-powered motorcycles, electric vehicle experts Brammo, Inc. recently partnered with Italy’s S.M.R.E. Engineering to produce four new models with a revolutionary six-speed drivetrain. The new rides, announced today, are a result of Brammo’s design and S.M.R.E.’s Integrated Electric Transmission technology, an innovation licensed exclusively to Brammo.

A mechatronic propulsion unit, IET mimics the feel of a more traditional internal combustion engine with a specially-designed electric motor, clutch and gear shift. The system provides the motorcycle with plenty of power to accelerate quickly and maintain high speeds. (Check out the sound in the video above.) Say goodbye to the scooter-like experiences of standard single ratio electric motorcycle engines; IET provides power and performance that up until now was impossible with electrics.

Brammo-SMRI-image2.jpg

Engage and Encite, the first of the four available with the IET-improved performance and range, will be publicly unveiled (images here show prototypes) before the MiniMotoSX race in Las Vegas this Friday, 6 May 2011. The complete IET line-up (Engage MX, SMR, SMS, and Encite MMX PRO) will also have Brammo’s swappable battery packs.

Brammo-SMRI-image-5.jpg

CEO and Founder of Brammo, Inc. Craig Bramscher explains “Combining the SMRE Integrated Electric Transmission system with the Brammo Power™ Batteries and Battery Management System keeps Brammo at the forefront of Powersports drivetrain technology.”

Brammo anticipates to sell the new bikes at $10,000 to $12,000 depending on the model, and they’ll be available through dealers in North America, Europe, and Asia.

Also on Cool Hunting: Brammo Enertia