Plug-in Hybrid Catches Fire
The batteries weren’t at fault. Plug-ins are still a good idea.
Earlier this month, a plug-in hybrid caught
on fire. In May, another one
had suffered a “meltdown” of the battery pack. In both cases, no one
was hurt. But some advocates of the technology are worried that, because of the
incidents, plug-ins will get a bad name, and potential buyers will steer clear.
They shouldn’t be worried.
Plug-in hybrids are like ordinary hybrids, but they have
bigger battery packs that can be recharged by plugging them in. That gives cars
extended electric range compared with conventional hybrids, which cuts down on
gas consumption.
This story is only available to subscribers.
Don’t settle for half the story.
Get paywall-free access to technology news for the here and now.
Subscribe now
Already a subscriber?
Sign in
You’ve read all your free stories.
MIT Technology Review provides an
intelligent and independent filter for the
flood of information about technology.
Subscribe now
Already a subscriber?
Sign in
Plug-ins are all the rage these days with politicians and
automakers, in whose minds they have apparently supplanted hydrogen fuel-cell
vehicles as the cars of the future. It seems unlikely that the recent incidents
will do much to change this. Both cars were aftermarket conversions of
conventional hybrids. Cars designed from the ground up as plug-in hybrids
aren’t available yet. So the incidents throw into question the skill of those
who did the conversions; the incidents don’t suggest that plug-in hybrids are, in
principle, a bad idea.
There might have been more cause for concern if the fire
were the result of the battery cells. One of the conversions reportedly used
battery cells from a
company enlisted to supply batteries for plug-in hybrids from GM. It
wouldn’t look good if the batteries that GM intends to use started going up in
flames.
But apparently, the batteries weren’t the problem in either
case. The fire and meltdown seem to have been caused by the electronics used in
the conversions. One hopes that offerings from major auto companies will be
better put together.
Right now, GM engineers are rushing to develop the GM Volt,
a type of plug-in hybrid that’s supposed to be available by the end of 2010. If
those start bursting into flames after they roll off the assembly line, that
would indeed be bad news for the future of plug-in hybrids.