September 24, 2007 9:28 PM PDT

Tesla delays production of its electric sports car

Editors' note: This blog initially misstated the refund amount for people who pay $5,000 to get on the waiting list but then later cancel their order. The amount is $4,950.

Tesla Motors is pushing out production of its sports car again, but the car goes farther on a battery charge than previously expected.

The company said late Monday night that it will deliver 50 Tesla Roadsters, its $98,000 all-electric sports car, in the first quarter of 2008 and 650 in total in 2008.

Earlier this year, the company said it would try to come out with cars before the end of 2007. (In 2006 and earlier in 2007, the company was shooting for mid-2007.) Tesla also said it would try to come out with 800 cars during the first year of production.

See you next year.

(Credit: Michael Kanellos/CNET Networks)

"We may have a few production cars built late this year, but the vast majority will come out in 2008," a company spokesman said in an e-mail. The number of cars produced may go up depending on demand, but 650 is the current goal of new interim CEO Michael Marks.

The delays will allow the company to conduct further durability and reliability tests, which can cost millions of dollars and take several months. Testing is one of the reasons that you don't see a lot of successful car start-ups, according to some car executives and investors.

In one bright spot for the company, a Tesla Roadster went 245 miles on a single charge in a recent test. That works out to 235 miles for highway driving and 255 miles a charge for city driving. (These cars, like hybrids, get better city mileage because braking recharges the battery.) Earlier this year, the company lowered its estimates from 250 miles on a charge to 200 miles.

The company also changed its waiting policy. Until now, you could join a "club" to get in line to get a car. Premium club members, or buyers, plunked down $50,000 and got priority on cars coming off the line. Patient buyers only had to put down $35,000 but had to wait behind the premium buyers. However, the full amount was refundable until three months before the car was going to be manufactured, when potential buyers had to confirm which options they wanted. If you bought the car, the club fee was applied in full to the purchase price.

Now, Tesla wants people to pay $5,000 to get on the list. You get $4,950 back if you cancel your order.

Another electric car company, Phoenix Motorcars, also had to delay its electric SUV this year.

Tesla is also providing batteries to Norway's Think, which wants to come out with an electric city car in Europe this fall.

Recent posts from News Blog
Sprint HTC Touch Diamond outed early
Woman to virtual ex: 'I won't be ignored!'
Swiss secret sauce to power green choppers
iLink to deliver answers to military online communities
Vonage names new CEO
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 17 comments
Lightning
by aemarques September 25, 2007 2:58 AM PDT
An all-electric sports car? Maybe you should buy one in England...
http://www.lightningcarcompany.com/home.php
Reply to this comment View reply
Inaccurate mileage claims
by theBike45 September 25, 2007 6:16 AM PDT
Tesla originally claimed 250 mile range and also ridiculously claiemd that it could always be acheived, regardless of A/C usage, terrain, etc.. which told the EV world that the people at Tesla
didn't undestand electric vehicles. The Feds tested and reduced the mileage figure to 200 miles. Now Tesla is back claiming 250 miles. That is pretty typical of the Tesla company, which has had credibility issues with practically every claim they've made. The battery pack costs somewhere between $21K and $30K. Tesla isn't saying. It will probably last around 5 years,
normally around 60,000 miles, although Tesla claims 150,000 mile lifespan, which would require
30,000 miles per year. And so the stories go ....
Reply to this comment View reply
(Electric) Sports Car
by KURT_ SWELL September 25, 2007 8:28 AM PDT
anybody remember the Carmichael auto?....
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
mike tyson going to jail
by jlatsa September 25, 2007 8:41 AM PDT
he should not go to jail
Reply to this comment
ZAP is in productin
by garystarr711 September 25, 2007 7:34 PM PDT
thanks for your update..although it important to mentione that ZAP at www.zapworld.com is in full production on its xebra electric car and truck now.
Reply to this comment
EV of such class is the technological milestone like Sputnik
by Alexander Bell September 29, 2007 7:54 PM PDT
The mass production of a pure Electric car, truly competitive with the best of high-end luxury gas guzzlers is an astonishing technological breakthrough, a milestone in a human history of the same importance and significance as Sputnik, which marked the beginning of space age 50 years ago. The biggest thing of current decade is Energy, in particular ? Electric energy (more on this topic in ?GEL Initiative?, available online at http://www.alexanderbell.us/Initiative/GEL.htm)
Reply to this comment View reply
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

News Blog topics

Featured blogs

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • News - Business Tech

    Chrome's JavaScript challenge to Silverlight

    The advent of Google's Chrome browser, software pros say, should spur a big speedup for JavaScript, which would raise its standing against Microsoft's Silverlight technology.

  • Gallery

    Photos: Top 10 reviews of the week

    Here are CNET Reviews' 10 favorite items from the past week, including the TiVo HD XL, Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H50, and the Dish Network's newest digital TV converter box.

  • News - Apple

    Apple watchers spot 'iPod Nano' pix, iTunes hints

    The rumor mill has long been predicting a longer, leaner new version of the iPod Nano, and now it's conjuring up some pictures.

  • Outside the Lines

    EIC Squared: Chrome, iPods, and a Dell-Salesforce union

    On this week's EIC Squared podcast CNET's Dan Farber and ZDNet's Larry Dignan discuss Google's latest rocket launch--the Chrome browser--as well as Apple's iPod event next week and a Dell-Salesforce.com union.

  • Video

    Katie Couric reflects on first Webcast

    The political conventions are over and so are CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric's first series of Webcasts. CNET's Kara Tsuboi sat down with Couric on the final night of the Republican National Convention to discuss what she liked about Webcasting, some of her most memorable guests, and whether TV news will still be around by the next round of conventions.

  • News - Digital Media

    At 10 years old, whither Google?

    Daniel Sieberg of CBS News looks at how the company grew exponentially from start-up to superstar and part of our culture, but what's ahead?

  • Video

    YouTube plays party politics

    During the presidential campaigning four years ago, YouTube didn't even exist. Now it's a tool candidates must master to get their message across. CNET's Kara Tsuboi stops by the YouTube upload booths at the Democratic and Republican conventions to find out why Google's video site has such a big presence in Denver and St. Paul, Minn.

  • News - Gaming and Culture

    Are Demo and TechCrunch50 fragmenting their audiences?

    With both events scheduled to start Monday, many press, as well as venture capitalists and others are having to choose which one to attend.

  • News - Cutting Edge

    Execs predict next Google-like tech

    On eve of company's 10-year anniversary, researchers and business pundits speculate about what technologies might someday have as much impact as Google.

  • Gallery

    Images: The art of 'Spore' prototypes

    Will Wright and his Maxis team worked on dozens of prototypes to test the elements of their soon-to-be-released evolution game. Here's a sampling.

  • Webware

    Mozilla releases second Firefox 3.1 alpha

    Added features include support for a new video tag element introduced with the HTML 5 standard, along with some speed enhancements.

  • Green Tech

    Duke Energy to invest in mini solar power plants

    Can hundreds of rooftop solar panels collectively operate like a central power plant? Duke Energy launches $100 million distributed solar program to find out.