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posted by martyb on Monday January 22 2018, @08:47AM   Printer-friendly
from the branching-out dept.

Nissan has accumulated about 13,000 orders for the 2018 Leaf in the US, Engadget reports, citing a conversation with Nissan during the 2018 Detroit Auto Show.

The 2018 Leaf entered US production in December, and deliveries are expected to begin en masse early this year. While it's also built in Japan, US-spec Leafs are built right here in the ol' US of A -- Smyrna, Tennessee, specifically.

This swell of demand means that Nissan is doing something right with the Leaf's redesign. Whereas the last Leaf was a bit too futuristic for my tastes, the new one fits right in alongside the rest of Nissan's recently refreshed rides.

Source: CNET


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 23 2018, @05:18AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 23 2018, @05:18AM (#626421)

    GM learned their lesson with the Corvair. They built a car that was "different" and product liability lawsuits came fast, by the hundreds, although the Corvair I had was a perfectly good car. While many liked the EV-1, all it would take was an accident or two and the ambulance chasers would be all over GM. Safest thing in this hostile legal climate was to get rid of most of the EV-1 cars.

    The other thing about the EV-1 is that, while it was as good as it could be with the battery tech of that era, lead acid batteries just don't cut it for ev use. Too heavy and not much range, unless driven very carefully.

  • (Score: 1) by bobthecimmerian on Wednesday January 24 2018, @11:51AM

    by bobthecimmerian (6834) on Wednesday January 24 2018, @11:51AM (#627106)

    The early Corvair rear suspension design was such that if you swerved suddenly it would 'buck' and your risk of a rollover was substantially higher than it was for other similar size cars. So the problem wasn't "It's different", the problem was "It's less safe even than other similar size cars of the same period". After the lawsuits started coming GM fixed the rear suspension design, but by then it was too late - sales dropped because of the bad reputation.

    I really don't think fear of lawsuits was the problem with the EV-1, or they never would have built it. I think there must be some other story - like they made a deal with some senator to get some legislation they wanted in return for investing in electric cars, and they fulfilled their end of the bargain and then ditched the program.