Page added on May 4, 2008
LOS ANGELES, California (AP) — It’s safe to say Jeremy Snyder gets a charge out of the two-seat Tesla Roadster whenever he pulls one off the lot, and not because it’s equipped with an all-electric engine.
As he pulled one of the sleek new automobiles down a side street Thursday and put the pedal to the metal, its lithium-ion battery-powered engine didn’t give off sparks. It just emitted a powerful hum, like a much quieter version of a jet taking off.
“Accelerate pretty good?” asked Snyder, head of client services for Tesla, who knew the answer.
“I call it a turbine sound,” he said of the sound. “Because it’s an electric motor, it’s got 100 percent torque all the time. So it just pulls you like when you’re taking off in an airplane.”
After several years of development, the Roadster — with sleek lines like a Ferrari or Porsche and a sticker price of $109,000 — moves from the drawing boards to the market next week when Tesla’s first store opens. It’s near the University of California, Los Angeles, in the city’s tony Westwood neighborhood, where Beverly Hills, Brentwood and Hollywood practically intersect.
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