Dyson EV scrapped Dyson filed the above patent for its first EV Dyson has abandoned its plans to develop and build an electric car, citing that it would not be commercially viable to bring to market. The British technology company has developed a prototype EV which boss Sir James Dyson is very pleased with. However, the cost of putting it into production means the plans to build it have been scrapped. Dyson said that a buyer for the project had been searched for, though ultimately unsuccessfully. As such, the reported 500 employees in the EV division of Dyson – based in Wiltshire – no longer have anything to work on. The project to build an EV was launched in 2019, with an investment of £2 billion. Half of the funds would be channelled into development of the car, and half into battery technology. Subsequent announcements revealed that the Dyson EV, although developed in the UK, would be built in Singapore. Plans were to put the model into production in 2021. There have been a number of EV-based start-ups announce plans over the past five years or so, but few if any have successfully brought anything to market. Since Tesla, only Rimac and Polestar can be credited with any real success in the European market. The former now has backing from Porsche and is developing batteries for major automotive manufacturers, while Polestar is backed by an established manufacturer in the shape off Volvo. Add in US firm Rivian – which is expected to prove successful but does not yet sell any models – and the number of failed/failing EV ventures far outstrips those that have stayed or look set to stick. It was expected that Dyson, considering its background as an established premium technology business, would have stayed the course too, but it seems the numbers ultimately haven’t added up for the firm. A number of industry commentators are not particularly surprised, with a number reckoning that the initial of £2 billion being around a tenth that of what is required to make an impact on the EV market. Still, it is a shame that such a project could not get off the ground, both for the EV sector and the UK’s ambitions to be a major player in the automotive electric vehicle market. Dyson plans to continue its investment in battery technology, but the vehicle development will cease.
Origin: Dyson EV scrapped
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First patents surface for Dyson electric car planned for 2021
Patent drawings for what could be Dysons upcoming electric vehicleDyson Dyson’s electric car may have a long wheelbase, an interior cabin with reclining seats and an aerodynamic design, according to patents recently awarded to the company. The patents, filed about 18 months ago and made public Wednesday, are the first glimpse of the car being built by the U.K.-based company known for pricey vacuums, hair dryers and air purifiers. In an email to staff, founder James Dyson said the patents don’t reveal what our vehicle will really look like or give any specifics around what it will do, but they do provide a glimpse of some of the inventive steps the company is weighing. The patents also indicate Dyson is mulling a vehicle with larger wheels to improve efficiency. Dyson’s email also hinted at a car with a low center of gravity to improve handling. The company posted a new automotive page to its website detailing its history in the automotive world and how its experience working on motors could contribute to a car. Dyson joins a growing list of technology companies getting into the car business. Tesla has pioneered electric vehicles, Alphabet’s Waymo unit leads in self-driving technology, while Apple has had an automotive project since about 2016. Patent drawings for what could be Dyson’s upcoming electric vehicle Dyson Dyson first disclosed plans to build an electric car in 2017, saying it would invest 2 billion pounds (US$2.6 billion) on the vehicle and accompanying batteries. Last year, the company said it would build a facility in Singapore to develop the car it hopes to introduce by 2021. In his email to staff, Dyson said that testing of the car would ramp up next month and that more than 500 people are working on the
Origin: First patents surface for Dyson electric car planned for 2021
James Dyson: why we’re building an electric car
James Dyson came up with his electric car idea in the 1990s, while experimenting with equipment to collect diesel particulates by centrifugal action. He knew exhaust pollution was harmful, but his attempts to sell clean-up technology were overtaken by official directives suggesting diesels were “clean and green”. Speaking here from his Singapore base, where his cars will be made from 2021, he discusses the car’s design. The latest on Dyson’s electric car What is your motivation for making an electric car? Nobody was interested in our original exhaust clean-up idea, but we had a bright team developing high-speed electric motors for other Dyson products, we were researching air purification, we had our own aerodynamicists and we were developing solid state batteries. Put those things together and you have the main elements of an electric car. What’s your view of the sales potential of electric cars? Seems to me the industry, and industry commentators, are under-egging the likely growth of the market. People will buy them for the right reasons, because they don’t want to cause pollution. It’s nothing to do with what the industry thinks. The public will decide it wants electric cars. Your new car looks big and expensive. Where will your car sit in the firmament? Is it a premium product? I guess it is. That’s how we generally operate. We’ll make several different versions — different car types, not longer or shorter models. We’re not announcing anything about price yet, but we’re not a mass producer yet. When you go into production for the first time you can’t be the cheapest. We’ll do our best with that but we’ll be making a big car with a lot of innovation in it, so it won’t be cheap. What led you to your car’s unique proportions? It’s all about efficiency. The high ground clearance and low roof cut the car’s frontal area, which is one of the keys to efficiency. We wanted a car with good ground clearance, and you get that with big wheels. They have low rolling resistance, they’re better in snow and the wet, you can have bigger brakes but you still get a big footprint. Your patents refer to hydrogen and hybrid power as well as battery propulsion. Will this car be battery only? And will it use solid state batteries? Yes, it will be battery-powered. As for battery type, we’re not revealing that yet. But at the moment we’re researching two different types of solid state battery in four locations — UK, USA, Japan and Singapore. How important is a long battery range? I believe the public wants electric cars to go as far as possible. You’ve seen our plans; the car has a big battery pack. But aerodynamics and frontal area are also key to having a good range. People don’t want to be filling their cars with electricity to find they’re inefficient. Having efficient motors means that as well as needing less electricity to propel yourself, you make regeneration more effective. You seem very interested in comfort, and your car’s ground clearance and big wheels suggest lots of wheel travel. Will you use air suspension, adjustable ride height and ride rates? Comfort is very important to us, and something we definitely want to deliver. It’s another thing you get from big wheels. The things you mention are on offer to us. I don’t want to reveal what we’re doing, but suspension is a very important area. Pitch is a good example: if you’ve got a long wheelbase it becomes more controllable. We’re having fun with all of this. It’s an interesting area. You’ve referred a lot to keeping you car’s weight down. I presume you won’t be making this car from steel? No, we’re not up at those sort of production numbers. But we also want to be able to produce in reasonable volume. We don’t think carbon fibre ready is yet ready for our sort of operation. It’s an interesting experiment, and okay for very small volume specialist cars. That just leaves one thing, really. I don’t think we have to be too revolutionary about the way we do the chassis. I can confirm the car will have an aluminium body, but that’s as much as I want to say. What’s your weight target? Everyone knows a battery is heavy, much heavier than an internal combustion engine. But if you do it our way you get a very low centre of gravity, much lower than an internal combustion car. There is certainly a weight penalty with batteries, but you mitigate it as much as you can, and in any case, and it helps you with regeneration. Once this car is on sale, could you imagine launching cheaper models to attract more people? I think that’s going to depend a lot on the progress of technology. If we’re successful with solid state batteries, that could be a possible moment… When will you reveal more about your car? When we launch it. We’re only talking about it now because our patents are going public. We don’t usually talk about products until we launch them. We’re a private company, getting on with our own
Origin: James Dyson: why we’re building an electric car