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GM EV1: A revolutionary antique that’s still the car of the future

1987 Sunraycer with a proved electric system later adopted for the Impact. (GM/TNS)

It cost as much as a Mercedes, could travel only 79 miles, and was both the hero and villain of Hollywood. Only 10 years after it rolled into driveways, almost all were crushed. One remains operational … and it’s parked at The Smithsonian. A qualified antique, it’s still the car of the future.

On Earth Day in 1990, General Motors Chairman Roger Smith announced his company would put the Impact concept electric vehicle into production. That lined up with California legislation that required automakers to sell zero-emission vehicles as 10% of their fleet by 2003. Unfortunately, nobody knew how to actually produce a sellable version.

The Impact was not GM’s first electric car. It tested the XP512E city car in 1969 and co-developed the Lunar Rover. Back on Earth, GM entered Australia’s 1987 World Solar Challenge with the Sunraycer that covered 1,867 miles ahead of all other competitors. The Sunraycer’s electrics underpinned both the Impact prototype and production-spec 1996 EV1, leased through Saturn retailers for $33,000 ($60,000 today).

“GM’s engineers really were dedicated to the EV1,” said Michael Shnayerson, author of "The Car That Could: The Inside Story of GM’s Revolutionary Electric Vehicle." “It was fun to hang out with them and feel the passion. One of my favorite characters was an outsider, Stan Ovshinsky, an inventor who with his wife developed the nickel-metal hydride battery.”

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