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the HAND 'MADE's' (maid's) tale!.....in Japan the electric cars are HAND MADE....
#1
......no assembly lines....


Small is beautiful: Japan's hand-made electric cars

.....While auto manufacturing giants spend millions to develop environmentally-friendly electric cars, one Japanese company has taken a more low-key approach, crafting hand-made "green" cars.

Takeoka Jidosha Kogei may be the antithesis of the world's Hondas and Nissans. The family-run business makes its cars from scratch in a garage workshop in the snowy foothills in the northwest of the country.

There are no industrial robots or assembly lines in sight. Instead just a dozen mechanics crafting each model by hand, right up to the finishing touch of adding a set of beady headlights to their "Milieu" range.

The cars seem to owe much of their design to Japan's manga cartoon tradition -- their one-seater T-10 seems barely large enough for an adult driver, with just enough extra room left for a small pet, as requested by customers.

The box-shaped two-door car -- which is dubbed the "Eco-beagle" and comes in green, white, red and canary yellow -- has a relatively affordable price tag of 856,000 yen (9,600 dollars).

Company head Manabu Takeoka said he wants to change the image of minicars, which he said "are generally viewed as cars for the elderly, or for drivers who had their normal licences removed due to drunken driving".

"We've improved the shape of our latest model to make it cuter, to attract younger clients," he said.

Like other electric cars, it runs on a lithium-ion battery. It can also be charged from a conventional wall socket.

The latest model can drive up to 70 kilometres (45 miles) at 60 kilometres per hour when fully charged.

Takeoka's cars are aimed at rural households, which often have more than one car, as opposed to the cities, where more people opt for public transport to avoid the cost of parking.

The Takeoka lineup includes six models made from lightweight fibre-reinforced plastic, ranging from one- to four-seater cars. They measure less than three meters (10 feet) and weigh between 300 and 740 kilograms (660 to 1,600 pounds).

"People who buy our cars use them primarily to run errands or go shopping a few hundred metres from their homes. They don't need to charge the cars on the road if they already did so at home," said Takeoka.

Takeoka began its business in 1981 by building minicars for the disabled......



'MADE'...in Manhattan......?
_____________________________________
I reject your reality and substitute my own!
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#2
So it's a funny looking golf cart???
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#3
Maybe not so useful in two feet of snow, or 6 inches of snow for that matter!
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#4
I don't know how much utility they have.

45mi range and 35+ mph makes it a decent around town car. It doesn't look like it can carry a lot.

Kinda cute. Parking would be a breeze.
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#5
Each electron lovingly hand-picked, dew-fresh in the early morning before the sun's heat removes the blush from the rosy cheeks; each one carefully polished to a rich silvery sheen and gently packaged in only the finest of oxygen-free copper 7/7/7 stranded and braided containment devices which are, in turn, protected from the harsh environmental elements by select wrappings of the rarest non-conductive hermetic sealing materiel.

Bon apétit!
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#6
that was beautiful caber.
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