It's a gas: Three-wheel Roadster gets 60 mpg on alternative fuel
The three-cylinder engine runs on compressed natural gas, making tooling down the road in the wedge-shaped Roadster a potential bargain for motorists accustomed to $3-plus-per-gallon gasoline guzzlers.
"When you figure you can buy a gallon of natural gas equivalent for 63 cents at the station and the car gets over 60 miles per gallon of natural gas, you're looking at for $3, you get five gallons and you can go 300 miles," the vehicle's chief designer, John S. Green, said Thursday during a demo of the vehicle at Rocky Mountain Raceway. "And you don't mess up the environment. It actually boggles my mind."
Green, chairman of Eco-Fueler Corp. (eco-fueler.com), based in Bend, Ore., has been thinking about it for a while as he worked on development of the Roadster. With about a dozen vehicles produced in Eugene, Ore., since last year, the company is geared to springboard to full production.
The American Roadster may someday be ubiquitous on U.S. highways, and some perhaps might roll off assembly lines in Utah.
"I would say there's about a 90 percent probability of putting a plant right here in Salt Lake City," Green said. "We're looking for additional funding to actually do a plant here."
About a dozen people work in Eugene, and the company has produced about a dozen "beta" vehicles during the past year. The company is anticipating full-scale production, with the first plant in either Lexington or the Louisville area of Kentucky.
Green said a Utah facility could have 900 to 1,200 employees, although the Kentucky plant would be two to three times that size.
"If we can get the funding, which is not excessive, and we get a building and the cooperation from the community and the state, we could probably be in production (in Utah) in six months," he said.
Visitors looking over the two Roadsters at the raceway on Thursday saw vehicles 74 inches wide in the rear and about the same length as a Toyota Camry. Roadsters weigh 1,650 pounds and have a rear, 100-plus-horsepower engine able to move three people up to 120 miles per hour. The Roadster has a detachable hardtop, a heater and air conditioner.
The weight and three-wheel configuration allow it to be classified as a motorcycle by the U.S. Department of Transportation, which means it can cruise in carpool lanes. Another potential lure is that despite the $19,900 cost, federal and state tax credits can bring that down by nearly $7,000 to about $12,900.
Recent comments
Green said that the roadter is "five to 10 times safer than...
Anonymous | May 21, 2008 at 5:55 p.m.
Wait until the price of natural gas rises...
DieselMan | May 21, 2008 at 5:48 p.m.
I think Mr. Harrison is correct. How safe could that little three...
Rod L. | May 21, 2008 at 5:47 p.m.



