Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Update: Segway and GM showcase HiTech PUMA project, but NOT a PRODUCT you can buy.

General Motors (GM) is teaming with Segway, the scooter company, to develop a battery-powered vehicle to cut urban congestion and pollution.
The companies plan to announce the partnership Tuesday in New York, where they are testing a prototype of the partially enclosed, two-seat, two-wheel scooter. The venture is called Project PUMA, for Personal Urban Mobility and Accessibility.
PHOTOS: GM, Segway unveil 2-wheel prototype
The companies hope to recruit partners, such as cities or colleges, to set up Puma travel lanes, like bicycle lanes. They'd be used to test the vehicles and their on-board wireless communicators designed to keep them safely apart and even operate them while drivers do other tasks.
The Pumas also could be operated manually. Not intended for highway use, they would hit about 35 miles per hour and go up to 35 miles on a charge.
"There's no technology that has to be invented here. It's really just putting the pieces together," says Chris Borroni-Bird, director of the project for GM.
Nonetheless it could take years to get to market. "It's not going on sale anytime" soon, he said. The partnership with Segway began about 18 months ago, predating GM's emergency survival loans from the government.
GM is developing the electronic wireless systems for safe, autonomous operation. Segway is responsible for the self-balancing, electric, two-wheel chassis. The prototype has "training wheels" front and rear, helpful at stoplights. Pumas would use lithium-ion batteries, like those Segway uses in its stand-up scooters.
Though being unveiled in New York, the Pumas might appeal most in densely packed cities in places such as India and China, Borroni-Bird says. There they would seem a big step up from bicycles. Americans, who are used to cars, might not take them as seriously.
He forecasts energy consumption equivalent to 200 miles per gallon of gasoline. That falls to about 70 mpg adding in fuel to generate electricity used to charge its battery.
FD: Segway has not been getting good business press lately. The Innovative scooter has stalled out in terms of sales. What GM and Segway were showing as PUMA has been shown before as the Human Transporter...


Business Week covered them:
http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/jan2003/sb20030116_1926.htm
Is Segway Going Anywhere?

Entrepreneur inventor Dean Kamen's trouble finding a market for his scooter is a reminder that a novel idea isn't necessarily a hot one
Dean Kamen has some awfully impressive accomplishments under his belt. The self-taught inventor has made millions on such breakthrough devices as a stent to keep arteries clear and a portable dialysis machine for kidney patients. So will he notch up another win with his latest project, the much-hyped Segway Human Transporter?

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