Technical Analysis: 2008 Chevrolet Equinox Fuel Cell/HydroGen4
Filed under: Hydrogen, Chevrolet, GM, AutoblogGreen Exclusive

Click on the Equinox Fuel Cell for a high res gallery
In the fall of 2006, General Motors announced plans to launch the largest ever field test of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles with Project Driveway. The intent was to build over 100 fuel cell-powered Chevrolet Equinoxes and provide them to regular drivers to use for a period of time in real world conditions so that the company could gather data about the vehicles perform. Everything in the article below applies equally to the Equinox fuel cell and the HydroGen4 which is the re-badged version for Europe. Only the name is different.
Having significant numbers of regular customers drive your vehicles is very different from having engineers drive them. Most importantly, they will tend to see a much wider variation of both road and driver input conditions than you will ever see on a proving ground. When a vehicle is being developed usually at most only a few dozen people responsible for each of the systems, like power-train, brakes, chassis, body, etc., will ever spend any significant amount of time driving them. Those engineers tend to focus on what they know to be the likely problem areas and get those fixed.
Continue reading after the jump

General Motors chairman Rick Wagoner will be making a speech this Wednesday at the Los Angeles auto show and is expected to make some announcements about upcoming alternative fuel vehicles the company is working on. Apparently Wagoner isn't expected to discuss details or unveil actual vehicles, but will instead outline GM's plans and strategy for rolling out new hybrids, electric vehicles and hydrogen vehicles over the next few years. The series hybrid that they are developing along with the new parallel hybrids coming in 2008 will probably be the highlights. Product details and actual vehicle unveilings are still likely to come in January at the Detroit auto show. This speech is mostly to try and deflect some of the criticism GM got in the wake of the movie "Who Killed the Electric Car?" for their actions with the EV1 electric car. 










