In addition, cars of the future will be loaded with
descendants of safety, communication, navigation and entertainment
devices that started showing up in high-end vehicles in the past
few years.
"There seem to be different kinds of concept
cars," says Joe Wiesenfelder, auto reviewer for Cars.com,
just back from the 2005 Detroit Auto Show.
"There are the futuristic ones that might find their way
into production some day ... They don't look like anything you'd
see on the street. Then, there's the more realistic production-intent
concept."
The production-intent concept is one that an automaker
is likely to produce in the next model year, he said, but the
automaker doesn't "want to call it the 2006 whatever"
because the company might want to tweak the car or even throw
out the design that's being previewed.
Which one is the real car of the future depends
on your point of view. The production-intent concept is one that
people very likely will be driving in the near future, Wiesenfelder
says, but the far-out concepts may see production some day or
may provide innovations that will be used even if that particular
model is never produced.
The Chrysler PT Cruiser and the Dodge Viper were
once just concept cars. "That automakers took these fanciful
designs and turned them into real production models is still remarkable,"
he says.
So what's in store?
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Saturn Aura
Click image for larger view
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On the production-intent side at the 2005 auto show
was the Saturn Aura. "It's Saturn's new midsize sedan for
2006," Wiesenfelder says, on a par with the Chevy Malibu.
On the other end of the spectrum was the Jeep Hurricane,
which can crab-walk and spin on its axis, he says.
"It looks like a giant radio-controlled dune
buggy, with giant wheels and tires, and a Hemi V8 in the front
and one in the back," he says.
"Jeep's gotten a bit of a black eye because
of the Hummer using its military background to position itself
as the ultimate off-road vehicle," Wiesenfelder says. "They're
trying to get some of the attention that Hummer took away. Well,
the Hurricane caught people's attention."
The vehicle can go sideways because each wheel can
be steered independently, a nice feature for off-roading. In fact,
this feature can be used to turn the vehicle around on its axis,
with no steering radius.
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Jeep Hurricane
Click image for larger view
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The practical application? Imagine driving up a
narrow path with a steep rock wall on one side and a sheer drop
on the other and you come to a spot where you can no longer move
forward. In other vehicles, you have to back down the path because
there's no room to turn around. The Hurricane always has room
to turn around.
However, "Jeep wouldn't build something quite
like this," Wiesenfelder says. "But there's some interesting
features in there that might be on production models some day."
Although gas-fueled power is all the rage in many
of the concept "supercars," such as the 1,000-horsepower
Sixteen that Cadillac introduced in 2003, today's hybrid cars
are just a hint of the future, says Bob Golfen, auto reviewer
at the Arizona Republic in Phoenix.
"The hybrids use a small gas engine with an
electric motor," Golfen says. These cars boast better fuel
efficiency, lower emissions and increasingly better performance.
In fact, the Toyota Prius and Honda's Insight have
been successful enough that nine new models of gas-electric hybrids
are expected this year, including a hybrid Toyota Highlander and
the Lexus RX500H (the H stands for "hybrid") SUV, as
well as a Ford Escape hybrid and a comparable Mercury model, Golfen
says.
A hybrid Honda Accord is expected to be "a
performance car," Golfen says. "It uses the electric
motor almost like a turbocharger," getting much higher horsepower
out of the engine than the 76 horsepower in the Insight, he says.
(Turbochargers increase the power of an engine without significantly
increasing its weight.)
(continued
on next page)
-- Posted: Feb. 15, 2005