The program "overcame many challenges and has forged a useful and productive partnership of industry and government participants" by "resulting in three concept cars that demonstrate the feasibility of a variety of new automotive technologies" with
diesel-electric transmission. The three domestic automakers (GM, Ford, and Chrysler) developed fully-operational
concept cars. They were
full-sized five-passenger family cars and achieved at least . General Motors developed the 80 mpg
Precept, Ford designed the 72 mpg
Prodigy, and Chrysler built the 72 mpg
ESX-3. They featured aerodynamic lightweight aluminum or thermoplastic construction and used a
hybrid vehicle drivetrain, pairing 3- or 4-cylinder diesel engines with electric motors drawing from or
lithium ion batteries. • Development of carbon foam with extremely high heat conductivity (2000 R&D 100 Award) • Near frictionless carbon coating, many times slicker than Teflon (1998 R&D 100 Award) • Oxygen-rich air supplier for clean diesel technology (1999 R&D 100 Award) • Development of a compact microchannel fuel vaporizer to convert gasoline to hydrogen for fuel cells (1999 R&D 100 Award) • Development of aftertreatment devices to remove nitrogen oxides from diesel exhaust with efficiencies greater than 90 percent when used with diesel fuel containing 3 ppm of sulfur • Improvement of the overall efficiency and
power-to-weight ratios of power electronics to within 25 percent of targets while reducing the cost by 86 percent to $10/kW since 1995 • Reduction in cost of lightweight aluminum, magnesium, and glass-fiber-reinforced polymer components to less than 50% of the cost of steel • Reduction in the cost of fuel cells from $10,000/kW in 1994 to $300/kW in 2000 • Substantial weight reduction to within 5-10% of the vehicle weight reduction goal ==Criticisms==