Bob Lutz: The Last Great American Car Guy

Fri, Feb 27, 2009

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Bob Lutz: The Last Great American Car Guy
Photo credit: Photograph by Taylor Castle

By the time a production version of the Toyota Prius arrived in the U.S. in 2000, it was already hailed as the future of personal transportation, and a Japanese company that was once seen as an interloper earned the American public’s adulation. GM’s board of directors hated every second of it. “The mood in the auto press was all Toyota, Toyota, Toyota,” says Lutz. “Toyota saves the planet! Only Toyota does intelligent things! Old Rust Belt America is too dumb to think of anything!” Eventually Lutz told the board, “The only way this will stop is if we send a strong technological statement.” How about letting him build an electric concept car for the 2007 Detroit auto show? He got the nod and set about working on the Volt.

That electric enthusiasm from Lutz was a 180 from his stance less than a decade earlier. He’s the first to admit he had never paid much attention to electric cars. Then he found himself at a battery company. “At the time I joined Exide, a battery to me was a prismatic black lump that started a car,” Lutz says. “I thought it would be hard to get enthusiastic. But like most things, the more you get into it, the more fascinating it is: different types, technologies, techniques.”

Then he arrived at GM and found that pushing an electric vehicle was an uphill affair. “The official view was ‘We tried electric cars, they didn’t work,’” he says. The General’s attempt is chronicled in the 2006 documentary Who Killed the Electric Car?, which recounts the life and death of the EV1, an electric roadster made by GM from 1996 to 1999. The company built 1,117 of them and leased them in California and Arizona, only to pry the much-loved cars back from their owners seven years later and crush most into oblivion. GM argues that demand for electric cars was too low and production costs too high. “The EV1 was a disaster financially, and it turned out to be a PR disaster,” says Lutz. “The movie is still out there doing damage.”

The Volt is an attempt at atonement, and a radical departure in the design of electric cars. Hybrids like the Toyota Prius switch from a battery to a gas engine depending on driving conditions, and get 40-plus miles per gallon. All-electric cars, like the $100,000 Tesla Roadster sports car, drive on pure battery power but need to spend at least a few hours with an electrical outlet to re-up.

The Volt strives for the best of both worlds. It will use only battery power for the first 40 or so miles. When the cells are nearly depleted, a small gas engine kicks in that indirectly recharges the batteries or powers the electric motor, keeping the car running for another 200–300 miles. GM sees the Volt mainly as a zero-gasoline overnight plug-in commuter car without the “range anxiety” inherent in all-electric vehicles.
The Volt was the darling of the auto show, and the board quickly green-lit a production version. Chris Paine, the director of Who Killed the Electric Car?, will be telling the Volt’s development story with his next documentary. “I like Bob’s candor and the Volt concept,” he says, “but the proof for the car companies will come when anyone can actually buy plug-in cars in showrooms.”

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This post was written by:

Jon Wilde - who has written 17 posts on Men’s Journal.


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9 Comments For This Post

  1. Nick Russo Says:

    Lutz’s comments exemplify exactly what most Americans find despicable about the top-level executives managing the “Big Three” automakers. Comments such as “I hated to see three distinguished executives who are blameless put through that ordeal.” In reference to the Congressional hearings in which all three took private jets to attend. Seriously?! Those of us whose tax dollars you’re “borrowing” didn’t mismanage the automakers into financial ruin, it was their own poor designs and lack of ability to effectively manage their relationships with the unions that landed them in the positions they’re in.
    And for the record, I happen to own both an ‘09 Chevy Malibu and a ‘00 Honda Accord. The new Malibu doesn’t hold a candle to my 9-year-old Accord with 140K miles, from both a fit and finish and a reliability perspective. Comparing Chevy to Honda is ludicrous!

    [Reply]

    Don Reply:

    “And for the record, I happen to own both an ‘09 Chevy Malibu and a ‘00 Honda Accord. The new Malibu doesn’t hold a candle to my 9-year-old Accord with 140K miles, from both a fit and finish and a reliability perspective. Comparing Chevy to Honda is ludicrous!”

    Glad you like your 140K Mile Accord, that is a fantastic car. I am wondering how you are able to predict reliability on a vehicle no more than a few months old though? You’re crazy if you don’t like the new Malibu.

    [Reply]

  2. IsGMdead Says:

    General Motors is getting close to going bankrupt and to being liquidated. Ineptitude and greed of its management, its board, and its union are finally catching up with the former king of the automotive industry.

    [Reply]

  3. IsGMdead Says:

    What can be made of this debacle called General Motors? Will they survive or wont they? Will saving GM save Jobs?

    [Reply]

  4. Ted Says:

    Looks like Bob Lutz filled his helicopter with big tax payers money, fipped the stupid people holding the bag and go off into the golden sun set.

    Thanks Bob… and not even a reach around!

    [Reply]

  5. Morgan Says:

    No Surprise that GM had to sink like the Titanic.. Just the pain and hard work of 300 Million Taxpayers going down the drain.. Whose responsible for that?

    [Reply]

  6. Paige Says:

    Did Gm deserve the bailout? You Ask me I would say NO.. why? When Honda and Toyota were out inventing new cars, GM was busy boasting about its pride and Showing off its hungry hungry Daughter the Hummer

    [Reply]

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    What add-on

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