TTAC News Round-up: Volkswagen E-Stall, Jeep Debut Has a Latin Flavor, and GM Has a Good Day in Court

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

If you didn’t think an electric car could stall, Volkswagen has a Golf-sized dose of reality for you.

That, Jeep’s Compass/Patriot successor wants to woo south of the Equator, General Motors gets some good legal news, there’s money in them there charging stations, and Volvo gets a PR boost … after the break!

e-Golf fades to black

With millions of its maligned diesel vehicles waiting to be recalled, the last thing Volkswagen needed was a recall on its electric Golf models.

The automaker is recalling the 5,600 e-Golfs sold in the U.S. since late 2014 to fix a stalling issue caused by battery software, Reuters reports:

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Monday that the German automaker is recalling its 2015-2016 e-Golf electric vehicle because software in the “high-voltage battery management system may inadvertently classify a brief internal electrical current surge/peak as a critical battery condition,” which could cause the car to shut down.

The only thing greener than an electric car is one that isn’t running, but for Volkswagen the recall is just another headache (and PR hit) as it tries to recast itself as a leader in EV technology.

Jeep courts the boys from Brazil

The upcoming replacement for Jeep’s Compass and Patriot won’t get its coming out party in the United States, or anywhere else in North America for that matter.

According to CarAdvice, the Fiat-based vehicle designed to replace both aging models will have its world premiere in Brazil, where the first of the new C-segment SUVs will roll off the line:

Jeep already makes the Renegade (which in part serves as a slightly smaller Patriot replacement) in the state-of-the-art new plant it opened in Brazil last year.

“There’s no problem with it, we decided to launch new C SUV actually in Brazil, which we’re planning on at the moment, it will be the first plant the gets the global vehicle. No delays, it’s on track, we just thought it was more appropriate,” [Jeep brand head Mike] Manley insisted.

The yet-unnamed model will be unveiled in the third quarter of 2016, and is rumored to ride atop a stretched version of the platform underpinning the Jeep Renegade and Fiat 500X. The entry-level Compass and Patriot bowed in 2007, and despite their age, continue to be strong sellers.

Good news for GM

A fraud claim leveled at General Motors over the faulty ignition switch scandal was thrown out by a federal judge on March 28, improving the automaker’s outlook for settling the remaining cases, Bloomberg reports:

A federal judge in Manhattan on Monday dismissed the allegation, agreeing with GM that driver Dionne Spain hadn’t presented enough evidence to show that the company made false or misleading statements about the defect in its cars. U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman didn’t issue a written opinion. The ruling follows Furman’s earlier rejection of other claims, including a demand for punitive damages.

Jurors in Manhattan federal court will still weigh whether Spain’s 2007 Saturn Sky had a defect and whether that defect led to a crash on a New Orleans bridge in 2014. GM rested its defense Monday and the case will go to the jury Tuesday.

Despite paying $2 billion to accident victims and the U.S. government in the wake of the scandal, GM is challenging cases it feels aren’t related to the ignition issue.

Mining for electrons

The market for electric vehicle charging stations is about to get hotter than a faulty cell phone.

Market research company MarketsandMarkets has issued a report that forecasts recharging infrastructure reaching a market value of $12.61 billion by 2022.

Between now and 2022, the company estimates the public recharging station market will reflect a 29.8 percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR), thanks to private and public investments in the fledgling network.

Although Tesla has both feet in the EV game with its Supercharger network, most manufacturers of recharging stations are mainly European companies you’ve never heard of.

Volvo scores safety car PR coup

A Volvo V60 Polestar will be leading the field at FIA World Touring Car Championship races starting in April, the Swedish automaker has announced.

The speedy wagon, outfitted to comply with track safety rules, is the centerpiece of a long-term agreement signed by WTCC and Volvo’s performance division.

“It was an easy decision to start a cooperation with the WTCC on the Official Safety Car,” said Alexander Murdzevski Schedvin, Head of Motorsport at Polestar, in a news release.

“This allows us to close the circle from track to road by showcasing customers the take-home alternative of our racing car technology in the form of the Volvo V60 Polestar Safety Car, at the same time being part of the vital and extensive safety work of the championship,”

The agreement will mean a big visibility boost for Polestar, whose products were recently made available on all Volvo vehicles.

[Images: Light bulb, James Bow e/Flickr ( CC BY 2.0); Volvo V60 Polestar, Pawel Dwulit/Toronto Star]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • SCE to AUX SCE to AUX on Mar 29, 2016

    Too bad about the e-Golf, which gets good reviews. It's only a compliance car (available in just a few states), so the PR damage is rather limited.

    • Luke42 Luke42 on Mar 29, 2016

      The E-Golf is not ready for prime time, I guess. But that's never stopped VW before...!

  • Rcx141 Rcx141 on Mar 29, 2016

    If anybody could make an electric car that could stall, it'd be Faultswagen !

  • Golden2husky I'd never recommend a modern Ford at this moment in time - not only the continual recalls, but there seems to be a lot of marginal parts and poor engineering ideas (an internal water pump, really?)...Almost overnight I am seeing Cybertrucks with increasing frequency. Teslas in general are thick on the ground around here but was surprised to see the trucks appear so quickly. They need better assembly quality and in the right light, some of the stainless panels seem to be a different hue from the neighboring panel.
  • Kosmo Millville MN (motocross track). Best in the land, and I could actually afford a vehicle that would do it justice!
  • Michael S6 Interesting how Toyota is filling every niche. My wife recently test drove a RX350h and this Crown Signia will probably save $5-10 thousand and offer a similar package. Toyota must be making a killing as our local Toyota dealers have hardly any stock.
  • Nrd515 GM: If you are going to revive the Camaro again, PLEASE do the following:[list=1][*]Make it actually good looking, and avoid the first gen "tribute" disaster of the last 14 years. You managed to take the pretty ugly 2010 to 2106 cars and then make them even uglier for the last years. And you wondered why it didn't sell? Look at the back of the car and you really think that's a good look?[/*][*]Make the car's trunk actually useful for more than golf clubs. [/*][*]Make it slightly larger inside, the last two gens have been almost like being in a small cave. The interior was hideous, too. Boring is fine, as long as it's in black.[/*][/list=1]I am a 2 time Camaro owner ('79 and '86), and a one time Trans Am ('79) owner. Instead of a Camaro, I have owned 2 Challengers.
  • Nrd515 When my '18 Torred Challenger was stolen back in Feb, I never expected to get it back in any kind of decent shape and had negotiated a deal to buy a '23 Scat Pack in Plum Crazy Purple. I almost bought my '18 in that color, but I worried I would get tired of it. I see a PCP Challenger all the time and like it, and the PCP car was equipped exactly as my present car is, so it was an easy choice. My car was found minutes after I had finished the negotiation, and 2 months later, about $2000 out of pocket, and the insurance paying about $12K in repairs, the car is back and is now a huge hassle to steal with a wheel lock, neutral release blocking plate, Carlock, and a Fast 5.0 throttle lock out. No cell phone with the correct code, all it does is idle.
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