suni51 wrote:We already have a car REVA like this one the only difference is that we have not yet marketed it properly
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REVA
I agree. For any manufacturer, the way the Marketing strategy is employed to promote the product plays a key role. The strategy should be kept in mind the necessity of safe guarding the buyer and emission factors. You know how important is the emission factor to balance the
ecological balance.. And Nissan is not an exception.
rambabu wrote:suni51 wrote:We already have a car REVA like this one the only difference is that we have not yet marketed it properly
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REVA
I agree. For any manufacturer, the way the Marketing strategy is employed to promote the product plays a key role. The strategy should be kept in mind the necessity of safe guarding the buyer and emission factors. You know how important is the emission factor to balance the
ecological balance.. And Nissan is not an exception.
There are other bad factors related to e vehicles and one of the major problem is consumption of electricity which is a rare commodity in India beside the Lead-Acid battery used in these vehicles have their own complications on environment.
Electric cars not as Green as people might think.
There are other bad factors related to e vehicles and one of the major problem is consumption of electricity which is a rare commodity in India beside the Lead-Acid battery used in these vehicles have their own complications on environment.
Having said this all I would go for an ecar if the power supply improves and the car could travel a little more than it currently does.
I too have seen the REVA. Cute car but expensive. Although it is believed that with no recurrent petrol filling costs it makes up for the price in a few years. Convenient definitely but battery charging takes too long and what if it gets exhausted mid way ???
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