General Motors EV1 was a Engineering and technology good articles nominee, but did not meet the
good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be
renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
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General Motors EV1 article. This is
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General Motors Impact was nominated for
deletion.
The discussion was closed on 28 February 2011 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were
merged into
General Motors EV1. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see
its history; for its talk page, see
here.
Spotchecks. Footnote numbers refer to
this version.
FN 63 cites "Traditionally vehicles use heat produced by the engine to heat the passenger compartment. But since electric vehicles generate minimal waste heat, an alternative solution had to be conceived. GM opted for a heat pump to regulate the temperature inside the EV1, consuming a third of the energy required by a traditional unit for both cooling and heating. Nevertheless the system effectively warmed passengers only when temperatures exceed 30 °C (86 °F). To address colder climates, upcoming electric vehicles were anticipated to incorporate heat pumps alongside compact fuel-fired heaters." The source has "Conventional vehicles use heat generated by the engine to warm the passenger compartment. But because there is little waste heat in an electric vehicle, another solution had to be found. GM turned to a heat pump to cool and heat the EV1’s interior using a third of the energy of a conventional unit. However, the system will keep passengers warm only in temperatures above 30 degrees ... For colder climates, future electric vehicles are expected to use heat pumps in combination with small fuel-fired heaters." This is essentially the same as the source, with a few words changed. This needs to be rewritten without using the source's sentence structure, per
WP:CLOP.
FN 103 cites "The Williams APU had the capability to operate on either compressed natural gas or gasoline. According to GM's assertions, the vehicle could attain 60 miles per US gallon (3.9 L/100 km; 72 mpg‑imp) when running on the latter, offering a total range of 390 miles (630 km). Conversely when operating solely in electric mode, it was estimated to achieve a range of 40 miles (64 km)." The source has "the Williams APU was capable of running on compressed natural gas or gasoline. GM claimed the car could achieve 60 mpg running on the latter, with a total range of 390 miles. Alternatively, it would achieve 40 miles running solely in electric mode." Same problem here.
FN 71 cites "Efforts to minimize weight extended to most of the components of the car, including the incorporation of magnesium in the frames of the seats." The source has "Efforts to reduce weight extended to the little bits in the car, including the use of magnesium in the seat frames." Same problem again.
FN 54 cites "On March 2, 2000 GM issued a recall for 450 first generation EV1s. The automaker had determined that a faulty charge port cable could eventually build up enough heat to catch on fire." The source does not give the date of the recall, nor does it mention a faulty charge port cable.
I'm sorry, 750h+; this seems like a well-researched article, but when four out of four spotchecks fail, I have no choice but to fail the article. I recommend going through the sources and making sure there are no close paraphrasing problems remaining before renominating, as well as checking for problems such as the unsourced details in the final point above.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
02:29, 28 June 2024 (UTC)reply
This was a pretty old article anyways, I mostly wanted to see the result. Thanks for the review nonetheless
750h+02:54, 28 June 2024 (UTC)reply
possible typo that needs correction
The current text shows: "as well as a four-model model".