BYD F6DM


The BYD F6DM was a planned plug-in hybrid mid-size sedan. A planned fully electric version was called F6e. The manufacturer, Chinese automaker BYD, is owned by BYD Company Limited, China's largest mobile phone battery maker. The car remained a prototype, with BYD currently focusing their efforts on the BYD Qin after having developed the smaller F3DM, the all-electric e6, and the hybrid SUV S8DM.

History

The F6DM was introduced at the 2008 North American International Auto Show.
Based on the BYD F6, the F6DM uses lithium iron phosphate battery, a type of li-ion battery under trade name "Ferrous", that can be recharged to 70 percent of capacity in 10 minutes. Iron-Phosphate Lithium-Ion batteries are claimed to be much safer than Cobalt-Oxide Lithium-Ion batteries, which have a history of causing fires in consumer electronic devices.
BYD claims that a test model can travel on electric power before the gasoline engine will be needed, and that the battery can be fully recharged from an outlet in nine hours.

USA

, a Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary and shareholder in BYD, discussed with BYD Auto how to set up a U.S. dealer network for the F6DM.