AP TELEVISION
Las Vegas, US - 4 January 2015
1. Mid of Faraday FFZERO1 electric concept car
Las Vegas, US - 6 January 2015
2. Various of Faraday FFZERO1 electric concept car on display at the Consumer Electronic Show (CES)
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Page Beermann, Exterior Design Chief, Faraday Future:
"This car is a technology test bed for us. We're exploring things like aerodynamics, chassis development, materials, as well as the design language."
4. Various of Faraday FFZERO1 electric concept car on display
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Page Beermann, Exterior Design Chief, Faraday Future:
"I envisage this as much more of like a track enthusiast's car. You know, someone that would probably not even drive it on the road."
6. Mid of Josh Tavel, Vehicle Chief Engineer for Chevrolet Bolt EV, driving new Chevrolet Bolt EV
7. Wide of new Chevrolet Bolt EV coming to a stop
8. Various of new Chevrolet Bolt EV
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Josh Tavel, Vehicle Chief Engineer for Chevrolet Bolt EV:
"With every step we've made at Chevrolet - from the Volt EV to the Spark EV to the second gen Volt and now the Bolt EV - we've really built a good heritage and we keep increasing that pedigree. We know what the customers want, more importantly we know how the customers use the vehicles and everything that we've learnt is going into these vehicles."
10. Various of new Chevrolet Bolt EV
11. SOUNDBITE: (English) Josh Tavel, Vehicle Chief Engineer for Chevrolet Bolt EV:
"There'll always be some people that still have fear, right? Until it's a completely mainstream product perhaps that won't happen. My biggest thing is going to be about getting the people in the vehicles, letting them experience all the good things that electrification brings to a vehicle, it's a completely different driving experience."
12. Mid of BMW employee preparing to park car using gesture control technology
13. Close of BMW employee's hands demonstrating gesture-controlled parking technology with smart watch
14. Various of BMW i3 self-parking
15. SOUNDBITE: (English) Philipp Reinisch, BMW Group:
"With gesture control parking, it's possible to move your car using a gesture. You activate the car first by shaking your arm like this and then you're doing like a tennis forehand and sending the car into the free parking space."
16. Tilt up as BMW i3 drives away
17. Pull out of sign reading (English): "Think New." at Volkswagen CES booth
18. Various of Volkswagen BUDD-e concept bus on display
19. Setup shot of Herbert Diess, Chairman of the board of management, Volkswagen, talking to media
20. Cutaway of video camera screen
21. SOUNDBITE: (English) Herbert Diess, Chairman of the board of management, Volkswagen:
"It's much more, it's high technology, it's a long-range electric car, it's fully-connected, it's a very emotional car and it will be state of the art by the end of this decade."
22. Various of Volkswagen employee demonstrating BUDD-e gesture control technology
23. SOUNDBITE: (English) Herbert Diess, Chairman of the board of management, Volkswagen:
"The car will be an integral part of the internet, probably the most important part in the internet. The car will be always online, fully connected, we will have automotive cloud which will make the car really safe to drive, very convenient."
24. Wide high shot of CES show floor
25. High shot of CES attendees on show floor
25. Various of Toyota FCV Plus on display
26. Various of Rinspeed 'Etos' concept car on display
27. Various of Rinspeed employee demonstrating retractable steering wheel for autonomous driving
28. SOUNDBITE: (English) Frank Rinderknecht, CEO of Rinspeed:
"In my opinion, whether you drive a sports car or a sedan, once you're traffic you're stuck and then you want to do something else, you want to maybe work, you want to entertain yourself, you want to read and that means that you need space and the steering wheel for those activities are just simply in the way."
29. Various of drone sat on Rinspeed 'Etos' rear
30. SOUNDBITE: (English) Frank Rinderknecht, CEO of Rinspeed:
"The drone is for us a sign of connectivity, it's also a twinkle of the eye. Let's assume it's valentines day, you forgot to order roses for your wife, you order them online, the drones goes and picks them up and even delivers them."
31. Tilt down to Rinspeed 'Etos' concept car on display
LEAD IN:
200mph electric supercars and cars that park themselves with just a swish of their owner's wrist are just some of the latest hi-tech motors at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
The auto industry is increasingly using the technology show to demonstrate its latest gadgets and advances.
STORY-LINE:
This futuristic looking electric supercar can reach speeds of up to 200mph according to its maker Faraday.
The single-seater Faraday FFZero1 features all of the latest hi-tech gadgetry expected in a car making its debut at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
Page Beermann, Exterior Design Chief of Faraday Future says: "This car is a technology test bed for us. We're exploring things like aerodynamics, chassis development, materials, as well as the design language."
For example, a smartphone can be embedded in the steering wheel to give the driver real-time data and can even be used to tune and alter the way the car is set-up.
The FFZero1 is the brainchild of California-based car maker Faraday Future and is strictly a concept for now... and even if it ever does go into production then you're unlikely to ever see one on the road.
"I envisage this as much more of like a track enthusiast's car. You know, someone that would probably not even drive it on the road," says Beermann.
The modular chassis design can be converted to make it longer or shorter - so various configurations can enable more battery packs to be added for greater range.
Although the FFZero1 might be a concept, Faraday is planning to build its first production cars within two years and is already being tipped as a rival for local electric car makers Tesla.
If 200mph supercars are a bit too much for your needs, then Chevrolet's new Bolt might make a more practical electric alternative.
The 2017 production model was also unveiled at CES - which is fast becoming an important platform for car makers to reinforce their technological credentials.
The Bolt is designed as an affordable long-range electric vehicle and the successor to Chevrolet's Volt. Chevrolet claims the Bolt has a range of more than 200 miles.
Josh Tavel, the Vehicle Chief Engineer for Chevrolet Bolt EV, says: "With every step we've made at Chevrolet - from the Volt EV to the Spark EV to the second gen Volt and now the Bolt EV - we've really built a good heritage and we keep increasing that pedigree. We know what the customers want, more importantly we know how the customers use the vehicles and everything that we've learnt is going into these vehicles."
The Bolt was first introduced as a concept a year ago and production could begin by the end of 2016.
The car could come with an app that will make car sharing easier and also include advanced GPS route mapping which can predict precise range based on driving habits, weather conditions and the number of hills on the planned route.
But is range anxiety and the worry about being an early adopter of a relatively new technology still putting off motorists from going electric in 2016.
"There'll always be some people that still have fear, right? Until it's a completely mainstream product perhaps that won't happen. My biggest thing is going to be about getting the people in the vehicles, letting them experience all the good things that electrification brings to a vehicle, it's a completely different driving experience," says Tavel.
Outside the show hall BMW is demonstrating its self-parking cars.
Ok, so cars parking themselves is nothing new - but this BMW i3 has been fitted with gesture control. Its driver swipes his wrist and the smart watch he is wearing communicates with the car... the car rolls slowly into life and parks itself.
Philipp Reinisch from the BMW Group says: "With gesture control parking, it's possible to move your car using a gesture. You activate the car first by shaking your arm like this and then you're doing like a tennis forehand and sending the car into the free parking space."
Volkswagen's old Microbus is getting a major update and could be in a garage near you in around three years.
The company unveiled a futuristic battery-powered concept of the bus called the BUDD-e. VW expects it to be able to go 373 miles (600 kilometres) on a single charge, far longer than electric vehicles today, due to a more efficient battery technology.
Herbert Diess, Chairman of the board of management at Volkswagen says: "It's much more, it's high technology, it's a long-range electric car, it's fully-connected, it's a very emotional car and it will be state of the art by the end of this decade."
The Budd-e has internet connections to smart home devices and can be charged to 80 percent of its battery capacity in about 15 minutes, VW claims.
It also has gesture recognition technology to control the infotainment screen, and the doors can be controlled by voice commands.
VW didn't say in its releases if the new Microbus will actually go into production, but said that the BUDD-e "demonstrates what electric mobility could be like by the year 2019."
"The car will be an integral part of the internet, probably the most important part in the internet. The car will be always online, fully connected, we will have automotive cloud which will make the car really safe to drive, very convenient," says Diess.
VW says it's likely that the Budd-e will become a production model.
While some auto makers like General Motors will be looking to boost current car sales, companies like Rinspeed will be looking years - perhaps decades - into the future.
The Swiss car makers unveiled a self-driving concept car called 'Etos'.
A total of eight HD exterior cameras visually monitor the vehicle's surroundings, establishing 180-degree panoramic views, virtual exterior mirrors and no blind spots.
Inside, there's a retracting steering wheel which creates added space when in auto-pilot mode, allowing drivers to explore two curved 21.5-inch Ultra HD widescreen monitors or simply read a book.
Frank Rinderknecht, CEO of Rinspeed says: "In my opinion, whether you drive a sports car or a sedan, once you're traffic you're stuck and then you want to do something else, you want to maybe work, you want to entertain yourself, you want to read and that means that you need space and the steering wheel for those activities are just simply in the way."
The Etos comes complete with an on-board DJI drone to snap road selfies during journeys... or even more unusual missions.
"The drone is for us a sign of connectivity, it's also a twinkle of the eye. Let's assume it's valentines day, you forgot to order roses for your wife, you order them online, the drones goes and picks them up and even delivers them," says Rinderknecht.
It may seem like science fiction for some, but Rinspeed's Etos concept vehicle may inspire cars of the future.
The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) runs 6-9 January in Las Vegas and over 3,600 exhibitors are showing off their latest consumer tech products and services.