the car of the future - en-v

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The Car of the Future - EN-V To fill the niche of “Short-Range Urban Transport, GM designed the EN-V where roads are tighter and space is limited. But driving distances are shorter than rural or suburban trips. It’s about half the length of a Smart Car and Weighs only 900 lbs. GM designed the EN-V, which had its North American debut last week at CES, to fill the niche of short-range urban transport,

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To fill the niche of “Short-Range Urban Transport, GM designed the EN-V where roads are tighter and space is limited. But driving distances are shorter than rural or suburban trips. It’s about half the length of a Smart Car and Weighs only 900 lbs.

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Page 1: The Car of the Future - EN-V

The Car of the Future - EN-V

To fill the niche of “Short-Range Urban Transport, GM designed the EN-V where roads are tighter and space is

limited. But driving distances are shorter than rural or suburban trips. It’s about half the length of a Smart Car and

Weighs only 900 lbs.

GM designed the EN-V, which had its North American debut last week at CES, to fill the niche of short-range

urban transport,

Page 2: The Car of the Future - EN-V

where roads are tighter and parking space is limited, but driving distances are shorter than rural or suburban

trips.

Page 3: The Car of the Future - EN-V

It’s about half the length of a Smart car and weighs only 900 lbs.

Page 4: The Car of the Future - EN-V

Each model – Miao, Jiao, and Xiao – has its own unique style and color,

Page 5: The Car of the Future - EN-V

but they all have two-seat cabins fitted onto a two-wheel base, co-designed by Segway.

Page 6: The Car of the Future - EN-V

The base provides extreme mobility and allows the car to do cool things, like turn in place.

Page 7: The Car of the Future - EN-V

It’s powered by a lithium-ion battery pack, and it uses gyroscopic sensors to balance the car’s weight and

detect the direction and angle of tilt. 

Page 8: The Car of the Future - EN-V

The sensors can also independently rotate the wheels forward or backward as needed for balance and

propulsion.

Page 9: The Car of the Future - EN-V

Don’t worry – test drivers have said that when you’re driving, you can’t feel any tilting or wheel movement.

Page 10: The Car of the Future - EN-V

Perhaps the coolest feature of the EN-V is its communication system.

Page 11: The Car of the Future - EN-V

It uses sonar to detect pedestrians, other cars, and cyclists, and a slew of other gadgets – cameras, GPS, car-

to-car communication – combined with the sonar allow the car to drive all by itself.

Page 12: The Car of the Future - EN-V

Plus, you’ll never have to worry about searching for a parking space ever again. With a smartphone, you

could simply program your EN-V to park itself and return to you when you need it.

Page 13: The Car of the Future - EN-V

Unfortunately, we won’t see the EN-V on the road for quite some time.

Page 14: The Car of the Future - EN-V

GM says it’ll be another 20 or 30 years before consumers really need this type of car, but we’re glad to see

they’re thinking ahead.