Transportation

Top Tech Cars 2013: Volkswagen XL1

Voilá: The world’s first production 1-liter car

Volkswagen XL1
Photo: Volkswagen

The Volkswagen XL1 pushes the envelope to conserve fuel.

Volkswagen bills its XL1, a plug-in, diesel-electric hybrid, as “the most efficient car in the world.” The name reflects its claim to being the world’s first production “1-liter car,” able to go 100 kilometers on a liter of fuel—or 235 miles on a gallon. VW plans to begin selling small numbers of XL1s, likely in Europe only, by the end of this year.

The company went to extremes: Roughly as long as a subcompact VW Polo and as low as a Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder, the dolphin-bodied XL1 boasts a vanishingly low drag coefficient of 0.186. The carbon-fiber-intensive car weighs just 795 kilograms (1753 pounds), seats two occupants in offset side-by-side chairs, and integrates wing doors for easier entry and exit. A two-cylinder, 0.8-liter diesel puts out 35 kilowatts (47 horsepower), which combines with a 20-kW (27‑hp) electric motor, a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission, and a lithium-ion battery. The result is a leisurely 11.9-second squirt from 0 to 97 kilometers per hour (0 to 60 miles per hour) and a 160 km/h top speed.

But the XL1 is about saving energy, not time: The power it needs to cruise at a constant 100 km/h is less than what a typical ride-on mower uses to cut the grass: just 6.2 kW (8.3 hp).

Fuel economy: 100 kilometers on 1 liter of diesel fuel (235 mpg) Aerodynamic drag coefficient: 0.186 Power plant: 0.8-L two-cylinder diesel, 35 kW (47 hp)

Nissan DeltaWing

It flies through the air with the greatest of ease

IEEE Spectrum
FOR THE TECHNOLOGY INSIDER

Follow IEEE Spectrum

Support IEEE Spectrum

IEEE Spectrum is the flagship publication of the IEEE — the world’s largest professional organization devoted to engineering and applied sciences. Our articles, podcasts, and infographics inform our readers about developments in technology, engineering, and science.