Why hydrogen is more important to Hyundai
Why hydrogen is more important to Hyundai N than you might think
You could think that the spectacular Hyundai N Vision 74
sports coupe concept is just a retro-futuristic model that will never see the
light of day… and while that might be partly true, the brand is serious about
what powers the wedge-shaped two-door.
The N
Vision 74 runs a fuel-cell
powertrain - put hydrogen in, the
fuel-cell stack turns it into electricity (with water being the only
byproduct), and the car blasts towards the horizon thanks to twin electric
motors on the rear axle.
The technicalities of the powertrain are immense - there’s a
lot going on here. But the company is also working on a simpler solution with
hydrogen power, that being using traditional internal combustion engines to run
the zero-tailpipe-emission fuel.
Other brands are toying with the notion of powering their cars on hydrogen fuel, too. And indeed, Hyundai has the Nexo fuel-cell electric SUV on the market both in Korea and worldwide (there are about 20 on government fleets in Australia, too).
Till Wartenberg, vice-president and head of brand management
for Hyundai N, spoke with CarsGuide at an event in Korea last week,
telling us the brand sees hydrogen as a viable future powertrain option for the
company, be it fuel-cell or being used by internal combustion engines
(ICE).
“If there will be hydrogen-fuelled ICE engines, we will be
seeing,” he said. “Europe has decided against it for now, but I don’t think we
have the final answer.
“I think the future is quite colourful,” said Mr Wartenberg,
also explaining that the company isn’t going to abandon petrol-powered engines
for current or future N products.
“Honestly right now we’re focusing on our production models,
and with hydrogen [the focus is] the Nexo, and the follow-up of the Nexo, but
we don’t exclude anything - that’s why we do have the ‘rolling lab’,” he said
of the N Vision 74.
The brand showcased a number of N models that have lead to
this point in its trajectory, including the original N concept car -
the hydrogen-powered N Vision 2025 Gran Turismo racer.
“If this is going to be 2025 - there’s no plans for that
year,” he said. “But hydrogen will be, for high performance, very relevant. If
you think about endurance, durability, we have to think about hydrogen. It
answers some questions [that electric cars can’t],” he said.
And it could well be that we will see hybrid
petrol-electric N models joining the ranks, too.
“We will alter our fans, our enthusiasts, and offer them
some sort of car which they can have for that transition period [to electric
and electrified cars],” Mr Wartenberg said, indicating that the timeline of
petrol, hybrid, electric, hydrogen could be the most logical trajectory for the
brand.
Resource: Carsguide



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