The first Electric car in 1842 Our car maker s are copied that electric cars

 Davenport and Davidson try electricity.





Possibly in 1834, Robert Anderson of Scotland created  created the first electric carriage. The following year, a small electric car was built by the team of professor Stratingh of Groningen, Holland and his assistant, Christopher Becker. more practical electric vehicles were bought onto the road by the both American Thomas Davenport (1802-51) and Scotsman Robert Davidson (1804 - 1894) circa 1842. Both of these inventors introduced non-rechargeable electric cells in the electric car.

The Parisian engineer   Charles Jentaud  fitted a carriage with an electric motor in 1881. William Edward Ayrton and Jhon Perry, professors at the London's city and Guilds institute, began road trials with an electrical tricycle in 1882; three years later a battery-driven electric cab serviced Brighton. Around 1900, internal combustion engines were only one of there competing technologies for the propelling cars. steam engines were used, while electric vehicles were clean, quite and did not smell , in the United states, electric cabs dominated in major cities for several years.




The electric vehicle did not fail because of the limited range of batteries or their weight. Historian Michel Schiffer and the other maintain, rather, that  failed business strategies were more important. Thus , Most Motor cars  in the twentieth century relied on internal combustion, except for niche applications such as urban deliveries. At the end of the century, after several efforts from small manufactures , General motors made available an all-electric vehicle called  EV1 from 1996 to 2003. In the late 1990 s, Toyota and Honda introduced hybrid vehicles combining  internal combustion engines and the batteries. TZ
 

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