Friday, January 21, 2011

A driver's eye view of the Volvo C30 Electric


In this video Nils Lindell tells us what it is like to drive the Volvo C30 Electric and how it differs from a standard fossil fuel powered vehicle.

Nils and his family have a Volvo C30 Electric to use during the six months that they will be living a low carbon lifestyle as part of the One Tonne Life project.

The project explores whether through living in a new climate aware home, using Volvo C30 Electric and making climate smart lifestyle changes the family can reduce their carbon foot print from the global average of around seven tonnes per person per year to just one tonne. You can follow their progress at http://onetonnelife.com

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Volvo C30 Electric at Detroit Motor show 2011



Different voices at the Detroit Motor Show 2011 talking about the Volvo C30 Electric and car safety. Video includes crash test at Volvo Safety Centre

Volvo Dealers

Thursday, December 23, 2010

REVIEWS: 2010 Volvo XC60 T6 R-Design

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Volvo Future Engines to be Smaller, More Fuel-Efficient

Volvo recently announced it will be increasing the fuel-efficiency of its future vehicles by downsizing engine capacity.

Engine downsizing is a common way by which to decrease fuel consumption. Most manufacturers are also equipping their smaller engines with forced induction in order to maintain power outputs, a technique Volvo has been using for years. Volvo's engines with the new technology were just introduced on the new 2011 S60 and V60, only one of which we currently get here in the U.S. Volvo introduced a new 3.0-liter, turbocharged, direct-injected I-6 in the U.S.-spec S60 that puts out the same horsepower as the old 4.4-liter, Yamaha V-8.

Europeans also have more engines to choose from, including a 2.0-liter, turbocharged, direct-injected "volume" I-4 that could come to the U.S. tt's unclear whether or not Volvo's future diesel engines will make it across the Atlantic. "We are taking a deep look at whether we will introduce the diesels to the U.S.," Volvo CEO Stefan Jacoby told Autocar. "We haven't decided yet."

Read More: http://blogs.automotive.com/6734205/miscellaneous/volvo-future-engines-to-be-smaller-more-fuel-efficient/index.html

Volvo Dealers

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

2010 LA Auto Show: Volvo C30 DRIVe Electric First Drive Report

One of the great things about auto shows is the chance for journalists to drive prototype cars, especially at the Los Angeles Auto Show, known for its green-car test drives.

We got a chance to spend 20 minutes behind the wheel of the Volvo C30 DRIVe Electric car, with Volvo's Lennart Stegland in the passenger seat. He's the president and director of Volvo's special vehicles group.

Silent start and idle creep

The car we drove was fully fitted out, unlike one driven more than a year ago by Popular Mechanics editor Andrew English, which had only one of the two pieces of its battery pack installed--and a bad wheel bearing beside.

Starting the car, or booting it up, occurs in dead silence. There's no chime or tone to indicate that the vehicle is "awake" and ready to roll. Like the 2011 Nissan Leaf and 2011 Chevrolet Volt, the C30 DRIVe is fitted with simulated idle-creep, so lifting off the brake causes it to move forward.

That's a distinctly North American preference, Stegland agrees, and European drivers may prefer the car to behave as a manual-transmission car would, staying put until the accelerator is depressed.
Moving away from standstill, a whine from the electric motor increases in volume. It's barely audible at low speeds, but by 40 mph it's noticeable, though not intrusive. It signifies little more than that the car is a prototype. Chevy Volt engineers, for instance, eliminated audible motor whine entirely between pre-production prototype and salable car.

Read More: http://www.greencarreports.com/blog/1051992_2010-la-auto-show-volvo-c30-drive-electric-first-drive-report

Volvo Dealers

Monday, November 22, 2010

Volvo's Test Ground - a Torture for Cars, short version


The test facility at Hällered in Sweden is a veritable torture chamber for cars. Here, Volvo cars are made to suffer around the clock in extraordinarily tough conditions. (In just a few months cars are aged as much as during the entire anticipated lifetime of the vehicles in normal traffic.)

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Thursday, November 11, 2010

Volvo skins back plan for rival to S class

The new owner of Volvo Cars has had second thoughts about developing a large, high-priced sedan to compete with BMW's and Mercedes-Benz's most expensive sedans.

Last August, within hours of purchasing the company from Ford Motor Co., Li Shufu, founder and CEO of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group of China, said Volvo would develop a sedan to compete with the two flagship German models.

But no such sedan is planned.

“Mr. Shufu expressed a vision of where he would like Volvo to be in the future, and that vision includes a 7-Series and S-Class rival,” Volvo Cars CEO Stefan Jacoby said in an e-mail to Automotive News. “However, short- or mid-term, Volvo Cars does not have such a model in the product plan.”

In an interview after Geely's $1.5 billion purchase from Ford in August, Shufu said he wanted Volvo Cars to develop “more high-level cars that compete with the S class of Mercedes-Benz and the 7 series of BMW. … We need products to compete in that segment.”

Read more: http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20101102/OEM/101109952/1257#ixzz150t8u6SR

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