Denise Gray, Director of global battery systems engineering and 30 year GM veteran, has announced that she will leave The General for a battery startup in California.
Since 2006, Gray oversaw the testing and development of batteries going into plug-in and non plug-in versions of GM hybrids and extended-range electric vehicles (EV). She also worked with battery suppliers in examining how new cell technologies could potentially be used in future production vehicles. It was on Gray’s watch that GM produced its first lithium-ion battery pack for the Chevrolet Volt. Most recently, Gray was the strategic lead for battery development on the Volt.
Gray said that she could not disclose the name of the startup company, but did say that it is in California and that it is still running in stealth mode, so this rules out Better Place and Tesla Motors. She said that she was looking forward to building the start-up’s operation from the ground-up which is in stark contrast to her position at GM – where she focused on a single segment of a massive business. Gray’s last day at GM is today – Friday, March 5, 2010. Click past the break to read more and get the full GM Authority Take!
In cooperation with engineers across the pond in Europe, GM is currently developing the latest addition to its array of hybrid motors. According to Autocar, GM’s latest hybrid powertrain will incorporate diesel engines and may be placed within various Opel and Vauxhall models sometime after 2012. Blending the two worlds of electric and diesel should land fantastic marks both in the city and on the highway.
The compelling part about this new powertrain is that, like GM’s other hybrid systems, it’s expected to work in a fully electric mode when operating at city speeds, shutting the engine down completely and therefore conserving fuel and emitting absolutely nothing. When in the open Bavarian countryside however, the diesel motor will engage and will achieve the superior fuel efficiency highway marks that diesel engines are famous for. It therefore seems to be a better engine than gasoline hybrids. Or is it?
While the diesel hybrids are expected to usurp less fuel, they will also command a premium – the price of saving money, if you will. Both diesel and hybrid versions of typical gasoline models always seem to be more expensive, usually because of higher production and development costs that go along with them. And according to Maurizio Cisternino, GM Europe chief engineer of advanced technology, the premium of the diesel hybrid is aimed at about 1,000 Euros over gasoline hybrid. That’s not too bad.
It still remains uncertain whether GM plans to bring the diesel hybrids to this side of the Atlantic, or if diesel variations of the Voltec powertrain (Chevy Volt, Opel Ampera) are under development.
We may get lucky, so stay tuned to GM Authority for more updates!
[Source: Autocar]
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