Forgotten Concept: Saturn Flextreme

Saturn Flextreme Concept

Saturn Flextreme Concept This is an installation in a collection of blog posts looking back

on show automobiles that we feel was entitled to a bit even more attention than they obtained. If you have a recommendation for a ForgottenConcept topic, please shoot us a line or leave a remark listed below. Saturn Flextreme First Shown: 2008 Detroit Auto Show Summary: Plug-in hybrid portable automobile Sales Pitch:”Flextreme reveals that non-traditional reasoning can cause excellent automobiles.”More Forgotten Concepts Saturn Flextreme Information: First seen at the 2008 Detroit Auto Show, the Saturn Flextreme Concept was an online clone of the Opel Flextreme

Concept which had been introduced

at the 2007 Frankfort Auto

Show just a couple of weeks earlier. The Flextreme principle was a 4-door compact cars and truck including a plug-in serial-hybrid drivetrain similar to that introduced in the Chevrolet Volt Concept introduced at the Detroit Show a year previously. Unlike the Volt Concept, which featured a small gasoline engine, the Flextreme was powered by a little 1.3-liter diesel. When completely billed, the Flextreme was declared to travel approximately 34 miles on electrical power

alone, after which the diesel engine took control of. Saturn declared a combined electric/diesel series of 444 miles. The Flextreme featured center-opening side doors which, when opened together, created a usefully big passage to the vehicle’s interior. Instead of a back hatch, the Flextreme integrated a set of gullwing-style doors situated on the car’s rear bodyside. For metropolitan travelers, a pair of Segway Personal Transporters were stored under the car’s cargo area and could be accessed from outside of the auto. No word on if the Segway batteries were charged while in storage space under the vehicle.

Forgotten Concept: Briggs & Stratton Hybrid Saturn Flextreme CG Says: The Chevrolet Volt Concept was introduced to much fanfare back in 2007, but the buzz might have come primarily from the car press, which seemed to comprehend the E-Flex plug-in crossbreed system much better than the general public. When the manufacturing Volt got here for 2011, public reaction was lukewarm at best, as General Motors dealt with public and also media apprehension, particularly that from Fox News. Because of this,

Volt versions like the Opel and Saturn Flextreme never developed right into complete manufacturing designs. Sadly, the E-Flex idea– which is vary much like Nissan’s e-Power system– never saw life past the Volt, unless you count the brief, and also exceptionally uncommon, Cadillac ELR

. Test Drive: 2014 Cadillac ELR Saturn Flextreme Listen to the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast Follow Tom onTwitter Saturn Flextreme Concept Gallery(Click listed below for bigger pictures)

2014 Chevrolet Volt to be Less”Shocking” Car Stuff Podcast Created by: Tom Appel on October 31, 2022.

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