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The Chrysler TEVan, also known as the Dodge Caravan Electric or Plymouth Voyager Electric, was a battery electric vehicle produced from 1993 to 1995 by Chrysler, based on the contemporary gasoline-powered second generation Chrysler minivans, and sold primarily to electric utilities throughout the United States.
1996 Dodge Caravan (no driver-side sliding door) Dodge Grand Caravan LE rear view. The third-generation Chrysler minivans were available in long- and short–wheelbase models; three- and four-door configurations; and eight different powertrains, including electric and compressed natural gas; on a single, flexible platform.
A battery electric variant of the short-wheelbase third generation Chrysler minivans was introduced in 1997 for lease to fleets as the Dodge Caravan EPIC and Plymouth Voyager EPIC, [8] taking the EPIC suffix from the earlier 1992 concept, equipped with high-voltage lead acid batteries.
From 1993 to 1995, the Chrysler TEVan was a limited-production electric vehicle based on the Dodge Caravan; sold to fleet buyers, between 56 and 80 were produced. For 1994, Chrysler offered a CNG (compressed natural gas) version of its minivan; the fuel tank replaced the spare tire well.
The following list includes original "Dodge" models designed outside the US or rebadged models from other manufacturers/brands. ... Caravan USA: 1984: 2020: 1000 ...
2004–2006 Dodge Ram SRT10; 1992–2002 Dodge Viper RT/10; 1996–2002 Dodge Viper GTS; 2003–2007 Dodge Viper SRT-10; Fiat C510 — 5-speed transaxle 2014–present Jeep Renegade (1.6L E.torQ) Fiat C635 — 6-speed transaxle 2011–2020 Dodge Journey/Fiat Freemont (2.0L MultiJet) 2013–2016 Dodge Dart (1.4L turbo)
It is positioned as the higher-end Chrysler minivan, above the Dodge Grand Caravan until 2020 and above the Chrysler Voyager (rebadged as the Chrysler Grand Caravan in Canada) since 2020. [8] The minivan is produced with two powertrains, a 3.6 L gasoline-powered engine and a plug-in hybrid.
In 1999, Dodge introduced the Caravan EPIC, a fully electric minivan. The EPIC was powered by 28 12-volt NiMH batteries and was capable of traveling up to 80 miles (130 km) on a single charge. The EPIC was sold as a fleet-only lease vehicle. Production of the EPIC was discontinued in 2001. Only a few hundred of these vehicles were produced and ...