Cohort Outtake: Citicar, Miles EV and Olds Delta 88 Royale – The Odd Threesome

Cohort Ralf K (Don Kincl) has uploaded a bunch of new finds. We’ll get to the rest as a batch post later, but this one deserves a bit of exclusive attention. This is a rather unusual grouping, with the big Olds partially hiding two lead acid-era EVs. The one on the right is a Citicar, or possibly its later permutation, the Commuta-Car, a product of the first energy crisis and essentially a golf car with an enclosed cab and a license plate. We did a post on it here.

The Miles EV was a product of what might be called the third energy crisis, a run up of oil prices in the early aughts as a result of growing global demand from China and other rapidly developing countries. 2006 saw prices nearly set  anew inflation-adjusted record. And that wasn’t all: concerns about global warming and other environmental issues sparked a nascent EV boomlet, for those desperate enough and too impatient to wait for the Nissan leaf and the new generation of modern EVs. The ill-fated Zap Xebra was a primary (bad)player at the time.

The Miles was a Chinese-built Daihatsu Move converted to electric propulsion via the usual means at the time, meaning golf-cart 6V lead acid batteries, which gave it a range of maybe up to 50 miles, with fresh batteries. Because it was a four-wheeler, it had to be licensed as a NEV (Neighborhood EV), with a top speed of 25 mph.

My son Ed drove and reviewed this red Miles back in his just-starting out days at TTAC. Not surprisingly, these were flying off the dealer’s lot in Portland at the time. So where are they all now? Oh right; sitting in a driveway with another dead EV pioneer. Unless one keeps buying fresh batteries for these, they just die.

I’m going to assume the Olds 88 has not been converted to an EV. But that’s not to say it might not have been. One of my big regrets is not shooting a somewhat similar but even better collection of vintage EVs in a driveway in Eugene before they were all junked, presumably. There was a Citicar, a Renault 8 conversion, and a 1977 or so Cadillac four door sedan conversion, which had a big humped (non-stock) trunk lid, presumably to leave a bit of luggage space above what had to be a mighty large array of lead acid batteries. I’ve tried in vain to find another or similar one on Google, so either it was a one-off, or built in extremely limited numbers. How I wish I had taken a picture of it and the three others.

And what was the last car in that driveway; the only one that ran and was the daily driver? An elderly Camry.