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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

2011 Chevrolet Volt electric/hybrid on the market in USA

Safety features on the "2011 Chevy Volt" include antilock brakes, stability control, front side airbags, front knee airbags and full-length side curtain airbags.
The change-over from battery charge to generator power can be difficult to notice, though the pre-production Volts we've driven do have a disconcerting generator noise level; the engine revs regardless of engine speed.

The 2011 Chevrolet Volt ranks 3 out of 19 Upscale Midsize Cars. Amid industry debate (“It’s an electric car!” “It’s neither!”), Chevrolet has rolled out the Volt. The Volt is neither a hybrid car nor an electric car. Chevrolet calls it an extended range electric vehicle. For those buyers, the Chevrolet Volt is largely an electric car.


https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEibp62eS9Aigdp8klbO_zcOW_jDf2KOocwZ4aOrCtBh6jyfewz2LSs8_3rFoHlm2f40A2ex4NnBweWbL1tf9MlhM61r3r7kV_BdtJLuywbpoKYrfq2HPyR04FKwP8Imkh67ysz0embM8Ig/s1600/2011_chevrolet_volt_press2_image_002.jpg

Two of the top competing electric/hybrid vehicles currently on the market in the USA happen to be Nissan's Leaf and Chevy's Volt. While the Volt is actually a hybrid vehicle that has a rather extensive range, and the Leaf is purely an electrical vehicle, the two models do share some similarities as far as price, mileage per charge or per gallon (Volt) and safety specs are concerned. Let's take a look at how they stack up to one another, and even take a peek at their pricing so you can decide which one is best suited for your needs.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiSll1wABuJVg1IgPxbIHKdG_jWXWYOrSa693zezFa5l8mZkU4XxaWzN3hK5nP2LZ8Pw1P774clrZMCZyebUk4XpzLkbx61FgUbrxB4VK7rT63IVxLqJrtVHThLXXQpWsbfWOvm0TuKlWUe/s1600/Chevrolet+Volt+4.jpg

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