Future studies for the automotive industry
Clear visions
"eXasis" Concept Car
Concept cars allow designers and engineers to go beyond the limits. Plastics from Bayer MaterialScience open up new possibilities.
Studies and concept cars were once again the stars at the Geneva Motor Show in 2007. But it wasn’t only the major carmakers who drew crowds of experts, photographers and fans. Interest also focused on Rinspeed, a small Swiss design company that has been attracting attention for 30 years. Rinspeed’s founder, Frank Rinderknecht, presented his latest creation in Geneva: ‘eXasis’ simply stole the show from many larger exhibitors. His car has a cigar-shaped body, from which the exposed wheels protrude. It is reminiscent of legendary racing cars from the early 20th century.
“Cars need to be made lighter again to reduce CO2. For this reason, it is impossible to do without modern plastics. Yet environmentally compatible cars must not be seen as a “declaration of abstinence”, says carmaker Frank Rinderknecht. |
The eXasis is no exception to this stunning series. For Rinderknecht, the car symbolizes the creation process of the car itself, in which “mind become material” – and visions are turned into a tangible car. “Through its transparency, the eXasis doesn’t seem to have quite arrived in our material world,” says the designer, talking about his newest baby. Nevertheless, however beautiful the design may be, it will presumably share the fate of most other concept cars and remain a “one-off.” In the few cases where one of them has made it to the production line against all odds, very little has remained of the original model. It is only very rarely – VW’s New Beetle, for example, is a case in point – that the design team’s vision actually becomes reality, with thousands of cars rolling off the conveyor belt.
But then it’s not really about production-line manufacture. “We pursue developments like this to demonstrate our technological leadership,” says Dr. Thomas Weber, the member of the Board at DaimlerChrysler responsible for development. Many ideas generated by the company’s team of engineers in southern Germany have gone on to write automotive history. “The C111, a flounder with gull-wing doors, delighted auto fans throughout the world in 1969 to such an extent that some of them submitted an order for one with a blank check – but despite this, the car never made it to the production line. The NAFA short-distance urban traffic vehicle from 1982 was the spiritual model for the Smart and the A Class. And back in 1991, the company unveiled a car with a radar device to measure the distance from the car in front. Basically, today’s S Class is a blend of all the highlights in Daimler’s concept cars from the last 20 years. It demonstrates what is technically feasible.
But then it’s not really about production-line manufacture. “We pursue developments like this to demonstrate our technological leadership,” says Dr. Thomas Weber, the member of the Board at DaimlerChrysler responsible for development. Many ideas generated by the company’s team of engineers in southern Germany have gone on to write automotive history. “The C111, a flounder with gull-wing doors, delighted auto fans throughout the world in 1969 to such an extent that some of them submitted an order for one with a blank check – but despite this, the car never made it to the production line. The NAFA short-distance urban traffic vehicle from 1982 was the spiritual model for the Smart and the A Class. And back in 1991, the company unveiled a car with a radar device to measure the distance from the car in front. Basically, today’s S Class is a blend of all the highlights in Daimler’s concept cars from the last 20 years. It demonstrates what is technically feasible.
The concept car owes its transparency to high-tech Makrolon plastic from Bayer MaterialScience. The eXasis also contains other Bayer MaterialScience products: the soft-feel coating, the paintwork, and electrically conductive films. |
In the time when all cars were made of metal, making a car of plastic was certainly a visionary idea. Yet present-day car designers endeavor to incorporate as much plastic as possible, just as the developers of the Bayer old-timer with the registration “LEV-K 67 H” had predicted. Plastic is lighter, can be used far more flexibly, and provides designers with undreamed-of possibilities.
Rinderknecht demonstrates this with the eXasis (150 horse power, top speed of 210 km/h), which uses proven Bayer MaterialScience polycarbonates for the transparent body. Ian Paterson, the Bayer MaterialScience Board member responsible for innovation, adds: “We want the eXasis to stimulate ideas for the future of the automobile. The eco-roadster is attractive, powerful, fast and yet almost CO2-free.” In other words, driving enjoyment and ecology can go hand in hand. The eXasis weighs only 750 kg, consumes 6.3 liters of bioethanol E 85 over 100 kilometers, and has a CO2 emission of only 20 grams per kilometer (a mid-size car emits 200 grams). Top-class plastics turn visions into reality.