GM Hy-wire: Major Step Forward in Reinventing Automobile
GM creates world's first drivable fuel cell and by-wire vehicle
For Release:
August 14, 2002
CONTACTS:
Scott Fosgard, GM Advanced Technology
Phone: (586) 947-3295; (810) 899-2582 (cell)
Email: scott.fosgard@gm.com
Susan Garavaglia, GM Advanced Technology
Phone: (586) 575-3465
Email: susan.garavaglia@gm.com
Johan Willems, Product Communications,
GM Europe
Phone: 41 1 825 25 19; 41 79 605 6260 (cell)
Email: johan.willems@ch.gm.com
Santa Barbara, CA - Driving
closer to reinventing the automobile, General Motors Corp.
today revealed a look at Hy-wire, the world's first drivable
vehicle that combines a hydrogen fuel cell with by-wire technology.
The GM Hy-wire, appropriately named for
its technology, incorporates the features first envisioned
in the AUTOnomy concept vehicle at the 2002 North American
International Auto Show in Detroit and the Geneva Motor Show.
Hy-wire will be introduced to the public at the Paris Motor
Show Sept. 26.Early photos were released today.
"The fact that we developed Hy-wire as
a drivable concept vehicle in just eight months (from its
introduction in Detroit) shows our commitment to this technology
and the speed at which we are progressing," said Rick Wagoner,
GM's president and CEO.
"With AUTOnomy, GM shared a vision. Hy-wire
accelerates our progress with a functional proof of concept
which strengthens our confidence in our ability to gain marketplace
acceptance of production fuel cell vehicles."
Larry Burns, GM's vice president of research
and development and planning, said, "We are driving to have
compelling and affordable fuel cell vehicles on the road by
the end of the decade. With Hy-wire, we have taken the technology
as it exists today and packaged it into an innovative drivable
vehicle comparable in size and weight to today's luxury automobiles.
"All of the touring sedan's propulsion
and control systems are contained within an 11-inch-thick
skateboard-like chassis, maximizing the interior space for
five occupants and their cargo. There is no engine to see
over, no pedals to operate - merely a single unit called X-drive
that is easily set to either a left or right driving position."
Hy-wire is the product of global cooperation.
GM designers and engineers in the United States developed
the vehicle chassis and body design, as well as the engineering
and electrical system integration. Engineers at GM's research
facility in Mainz-Kastel, Germany, integrated the fuel-cell
propulsion system, which is the same system designed for the
HydroGen3 concept (top speed of 160 kilometers/hour or 97
mph), based on an Opel Zafira and shown for the first time
at the 2001 Frankfurt Motor Show. American designers also
worked closely with Italian design house Stile Bertone in
Turin, where the body was built. The SKF Group, headquartered
in Sweden, developed the by-wire technology in the Netherlands
and in Italy.
"By combining fuel cell and by-wire technology,
we've packaged this vehicle in a new way, opening up a new
world of chassis architectures and customized bodies for individualized
expression," said Chris Borroni-Bird, director of GM's Design
and Technology Fusion Group and program director of the Hy-wire
concept. "It is a significant step towards a new kind of automobile
that is substantially more friendly to the environment and
provides consumers positive benefits in driving dynamics,
safety and freedom of individual expression."
According to Wayne Cherry, GM's vice president
of Design, the chassis architecture provides designers the
freedom to create a number of different body styles.
"Until now, fuel cells and by-wire have
been demonstrated as if they were an end in themselves," said
Cherry. "But we look at this technology as enabling us to
create a number of exciting new body styles for consumers
to choose from. This is just the second interpretation of
many to come."
Hy-wire is a sporty yet elegant four-door
vehicle with clean lines and short overhangs.
"It's a luxury vehicle in the sense that
it is a luxury to have the kind of space and visibility this
car provides," said Ed Welburn, executive director of GM Design
for Body-on-Frame Architectures. "The design is built around
the fact that there is no engine compartment; the vehicle
is very open from front to rear. This is intentional to highlight
the openness in the interior and the range of possibilities."
To show off this radically new architecture,
the front and rear panels are made of transparent glass. Onlookers
can see through the car from front to rear; the liberal use
of glass and the absence of a hood also provide a greater
visual command of the road for the driver. To reinforce this
effect even the seat backs are open. There is no post between
the front and rear doors, known as a B-pillar. Drivers and
passengers have greatly enhanced legroom.
"The most dramatic view of this car may
be from the driver's seat," Welburn said. "Imagine having
no engine, instrument panel or foot pedals in front of you
- an open, yet secure cockpit with a floor to ceiling view.
It's like being in my living room looking out my picture window."
The X-drive, which allows steering, braking
and other vehicle systems to be controlled electronically
rather than mechanically, provides greater freedom for the
driver.
Drivers now have the option to brake and
accelerate with either the right or left hand. The driver
accelerates by gently twisting either the right or left handgrip,
and brakes by squeezing the brake actuator also located on
the handgrips. The handgrips glide up and down for steering,
somewhat different than today's vehicles where the steering
wheel revolves around a steering column.
The X-drive, which also incorporates an
electronic monitor for vital car functions, shuttles easily
from side-to-side on a horizontal bar that stretches across
the full width of the vehicle. It provides another example
of the extreme flexibility of the car's architecture.
A single docking port provides the electrical
connection between the all-aluminum chassis and the fiberglass
body. Mechanically, there are 10 body attachment linkages.
The fuel cell stack, which produces a continuously
available power of 94 kilowatts, is installed in the back
of the chassis. Most of the chassis is 11-inches thick, tapering
to 7 inches at the edges. The electrical motor drives the
front wheels and is installed transversely between them. Three
cylindrical storage tanks (5,000 psi - pounds per square inch
or 350 bars) are located centrally in the chassis.
"The new packaging of the components was
a major challenge and certainly, in terms of compactness,
we're not at the finish line yet," said Erhard Schubert, director
of the Mainz-Kastel facility. "But this functional prototype
impressively demonstrates just how flexible our fuel cell
technology is and the opportunities it offers."
Hy-wire weighs 1,900 kilograms (4,180 pounds)
with 20-inch tires in front and 22-inch tires in the rear.
Putting all technical elements into the chassis provides a
low center of gravity, giving the architecture both a high
safety and driving dynamics potential. Passive safety requirements
will be fulfilled using impact-absorbing elements, so-called
crash boxes, at a later stage of development.
"Most of the powertrain load has been evenly
distributed between the front and rear of the chassis so there
is a lower center of gravity for the whole vehicle, without
sacrificing ground clearance," Borroni-Bird said. "This contributes
to the overall safety of the vehicle by enabling superior
handling, while resisting rollover forces, with the tallest
body attached. "
Hy-wire so profoundly changes the automotive
industry that GM has more than 30 patents in progress covering
business models, technologies and manufacturing processes
related to the concept and more inventions are being added
all the time.
"Someday, Hy-wire could be displayed in
a museum side-by-side with the first horseless carriages of
Carl Benz or Gottlieb Daimler, or next to Henry Ford's Model
T," Burns said.
General Motors (NYSE: GM), the world's largest
vehicle manufacturer, designs, builds and markets cars and
trucks worldwide. It has been the global automotive sales
leader since 1931. GM employs about 355,000 people around
the world. More information on GM can be found at www.gm.com.
|