ZAP Alias | |
Manufacturer: | ZAP Jonway |
Aka: | ZAP |
Production: | Never produced |
Class: | Sports Car |
Body Style: | 3-seater |
Engine: | 2 in-wheel motors (321.850NaN0 total) |
The ZAP Alias Roadster was a proposed plug-in electric three-wheeled sports car, from the defunct American electric car maker ZAP in Santa Rosa, California.
The project was initiated in 2007 through a collaboration between ZAP and Lotus Engineering, the UK-based automotive engineering company, who assisted with the development of the vehicle. Plans for a Kentucky production facility fell through, and in 2010 ZAP subsequently announced that Zhejiang Jonway Automobile would be contracted to manufacture the car in China. With the collapse of ZAP on or before 2017, the vehicle never went into production and the fate of the prototype(s) is unknown.
The vehicle has three wheels, two at the front, each containing an electric wheel-motor, and one at the rear. Its batteries are fitted underneath the vehicle in a reinforced composite battery box. The performance announced in 2008 was 0–60NaN in 5.7 seconds, with a top speed of 156NaN and a range of 100miles.[1] Initially planned to go into production in 2009,[2] the first Alias pre-production unit was unveiled at NADA 2009.[3]
During the 2010 North American International Auto Show (NAIAS) in Detroit, Michigan from January 11–24, 2010, the company revealed the revised specifications for the 216-volt AC induction motor-powered Alias prototype as 0–60NaN in 7.8 seconds, with a top speed of 75NaN and a range up to 100miles.[4] The vehicle was to be homologated as a motorcycle.
The Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize was a global competition of teams engaging in rigorous stage competition of clean, production-capable vehicles that exceed 100 mpg energy equivalent (MPGe).
The Alias was one of 136 vehicles from a total of 111 teams registered to enter the competition.[5] [6] It progressed through preliminary stages at Michigan International Speedway, and survived the shakedown that was completed on May 13, 2010, after which 22 teams remained.[7] Driven by Al Unser Jr., it qualified for the finals in July with eight other vehicles.[8] All battery-electric vehicles went through an efficiency and performance run held on July 27, with the vehicles making 50 laps around the 2abbr=offNaNabbr=off track without exceeding 70mph or dropping below 45mph in a chicane along the backstretch.[6] The Alias, using a BorgWarner single-speed eGearDrive gearbox transmission,[9] was eliminated in this last track event at 97miles out of 100miles due to a controller setting that activated the automatic safety system, causing it to come to a stop[6] [10] [11] and placing the team at 4th place in the event.[12]