Friday, August 9, 2013

Forget charging stations: Electric automaker Tesla plans to test battery swapping technology

Tesla Motors has announced plans to test battery swapping technology for its electric cars. The maker of the Model S electric sedan will test a system that removes empty electric car batteries and replaces them with full ones in much less time than it takes to recharge the car.
Tesla reports that it receives more than 20,000 orders per year worldwide for its Model S sedan.
Worried about waiting for that electric car to finish charging? Tesla Motors, maker of the Model S electric sedan, may be ready to make range anxiety a thing of the past. The automaker announced Thursday plans it had to test technology that could swap drained batteries for full ones.
Tesla chief executive and founder Elon Musk used popular the messaging service Twitter to put out word that a "live pack swap demo" was taking place at the company's design studio in the Southern California city of Hawthorne.
Video from the event was to be posted on the Tesla website about 0430 GMT on Friday, according to Musk.
Making it fast and easy to restore full power to electric car batteries is seen as a big step in winning over drivers hooked on the convenience of refueling vehicles that run on gasoline.
Tesla last month said that Musk would invest $100 million in the surging electric car maker, and that it would repay a loan from the US Department of Energy ahead of schedule.
The California maker of high-priced electric vehicles said it would launch a new stock offering of some 2.7 million shares along with $450 million in convertible notes to raise fresh capital.
Musk was to purchase $45 million in common shares and another $55 million in a private share placement, the company said.
Tesla said it expected to raise some $830 million and use the proceeds to prepay a loan from the US Department of Energy.
The moves came amid a stunning surge in the value of Tesla, which has just a tiny share of the US car market but turned a profit for the first time in the past quarter.
Tesla shares were up slightly Tuesday to Wednesday to $102.83.
The shares have more than doubled this year after struggling through 2012 on production delays and questions about whether it could turn a profit.
On May 8, the California-based firm announced $11 million in net income for the first quarter as revenues rose 83 percent from the prior quarter to $562 million.
Tesla cited strong global demand for its $62,000-$87,000 Model S, saying it is receiving orders at a rate of more than 20,000 per year worldwide, adding that it seen "significant upside potential in Europe and Asia."
Although Tesla has been on the upswing, the road has grown bumpier for the electric car market.
AFP/Relaxnews

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