Jet Industries
Jet Industries, Inc., located in Austin, Texas, was a company that sold battery electric vehicles during the late 1970s and early 1980s. The vehicles were converted from existing models from manufacturers such as Subaru, Mazda, Ford and Chrysler. Accounts of total vehicle sales vary, but Stan Skokan, the Northern California distributor for Jet Industries, estimated total output at over 1400 vehicles.[1] The company was founded by A. Forbes Crawford and William L. Bales. Bales previously founded Tri-Motor Corp., an electric golf cart company, which he sold in 1960, and then founded a snowmobile company that he sold in 1970, later to become Chaparral Snowmobiles.[2][3] Jet Industries was incorporated in 1977 and discontinued operations in the early 1980s.
Vehicles that the company sold included:[4][5]
- Electra-Van 600 (a converted Subaru Sambar 600), powered by a 20-horsepower General Electric motor.
- Electra-Van 750 (converted Mazda B2000/Ford Courier pickup trucks), powered by a 30-horsepower motor.
- Electrica (converted Ford Escort/Mercury Lynx cars).
- Electrica 007 (converted Dodge Omni 024/Plymouth Horizon TC3 cars). The company claimed these cars had an average range of 50 miles and a top speed of 70 mph.
Other models included the 1000 van (a converted Dodge Van), the 1400 van (a converted Dodge Maxivan), and the 1000P pickup truck.
References[]
- ^ DeBolt, Daniel. Too far ahead of his time. Mountain View Voice. March 2, 2007 [1]
- ^ Hartford, Bill; Mort Schultz. Your first electric car- build or buy? Popular Mechanics. October 1979 [2]
- ^ Freeman, Trevor. Jet Industries Electravan 600. generationhighoutput.com. April 21, 2015 [3]
- ^ Jet Industries. Cartype - a museum of automobile typography. cartype.com [4]
- ^ Jet Industries ElectraVan Literature. nissandiesel.dyndns.org
External links[]
Jet Industries (Electric Car Manufacturer) Facebook page [5]
- Battery electric vehicle manufacturers
- Electric vehicle manufacturers of the United States
- Electric vehicle industry
- Production electric cars
- Battery electric vehicles
- United States manufacturing company stubs