“It’s  the sports car of the future, the way BMW imagines it.” That’s how  Adrian van Hooydonk, director of BMW’s group design, describes the “BMW  Vision Efficient Dynamics” two-door concept vehicle to be unveiled at  the upcoming Frankfurt Auto Show. Think of it as a showcase of the many  fuel-efficient technologies that BMW has in various stages of  development. Some of the technologies already appear in production  vehicles, while the feasibility of rolling out other systems stretch the  future to the point of never.
BMW’s overarching goal was to  combine breath-taking speed and groundbreaking efficiency. In the BMW  Vision, that boils down to 4.8-second 0-to-60 miles per hour  acceleration and 63 mile to the gallon.
First,  BMW engineers use the rear-axle to combine a turbo-charged small diesel  engine and the mildest forms of hybrid technology. That kind of combo  comes standard in BMW 1-series cars in Europe. The Vision's setup is a  little more similar to the BMW 320d, also to debut in Frankfurt, which  uses a 2.0-liter four-cylinder diesel to deliver 162 horsepower, while  promising more than 57 miles to the gallon. The BMW Vision takes it a  step further by downsizing the engine to a 1.5-liter three-cylinder  diesel engine mated with the more robust hybrid system found in the  pricey BMW ActiveHybrid7, expected in the US early next year.
Not  satisfied with 162 horsepower, BMW adds a second motor to drive the  front wheels exclusively by electricity. When both motors and the diesel  engine are called into service, the overall system can put out 356  horsepower. The BMW Vision is lightweight and aerodynamic. The design  features an aluminum chassis and suspension, and an outer skin made  mostly of polycarbonate glass. The car’s slippery design boasts a drag  coefficient of 0.22—beating out the Toyota Prius’s 0.25.
To mitigate the fuel efficiency penalty paid for power, the BMW  Vision utilizes plug-in hybrid technology. This is where the Vision  becomes more of a fantasy. The combination of diesel and hybrid  technologies is widely viewed as cost prohibitive. Adding enough battery  power to allow the BMW Vision EfficientDynamics to travel for 30 miles  of all-electric drive, as BMW is promising, would send costs through the  roof.
BMW also indicates that the Vision only needs a 187-pound  10.8 kWh battery to achieve the 30-mile all-electric goal. To pull that  off, the Vision, according to BMW, will discharge the battery pack's  capacity by 80 percent, which is likely to significantly reduce the  longevity of the battery. (The Chevy Volt will use about 50 percent of  its capacity to help ensure a lifetime of use.)
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