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Zap Electric Cars Xebra Electric Sedan

Prepare yourself for a whole new driving experience. Xebra's do not attempt to behave like other vehicles. They are unique. They are quiet, yet agile. Imagine a world filled with silent Xebra's instead of noisy internal combustion engines. The ZAP Xebra Sedan is the offspring of more than three decades of thought and evolution. This vehicle was created as a breed by itself. Because the use and purpose of electric vehicles are different than gas cars, the wheel did indeed need to be reinvented. No Tailpipe, just plug it in! Even after counting emissions from electric generating plants, Xebra Sedan's produce 98% fewer pollutants than gas cars. It's Electric! Laugh at high oil prices, in fact, forget about gas stations, oil spills, and fumes - forever! A Xebra Sedan's appetite is meager. And you can recharge it at any electrical outlet.

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If you are familiar with this product, please update the specs list so it is complete!
Spec Value
Engine
 
Additional Features
40 mph top speed
Fuel Type
all-electric
Miles per Charge
25
Body Type
Sedan
EV Type
Neighborhood Electric Vehicle
Release Status
Available
Release Date
Top Speed

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User Reviews: Zap Electric Cars Xebra Electric Sedan

Ranked #2 in the this category Electric Cars
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Average of 6 Reviews
Overall 4 star rating
Value 4 star rating
Style and Comfort 2.5 star rating
Performance 3 star rating
Fuel Efficiency 5 star rating
Product Eco-Score 5 star rating
Company Eco-Score 4.5 star rating
See All 6 User Reviews
Most Recent User Reviews

Featured Review

Value 5 star rating
Style and Comfort 3 star rating
Performance 3.5 star rating
Fuel Efficiency 5 star rating
Product Eco-Score 5 star rating
Company Eco-Score 3.5 star rating
Overall 4.5 star rating
Pros: No gas, faster than NEVs, quirky/cute styling, available now not 2012, easy parking, sharp steering radius, inexpensive to fuel, less maintenance

Cons: My Xebra is from the first production run, but I love it warts and all, it even has stripes.
Purchase Date:October 2006 Purchase Price:$9,999.00
My truck is jealous
zapatista reviewed February 12, 2009 at 11:42 pm

 

I'm a die-hard EV nut, got the bug a long time ago.  My problem is I never had much money or time to devote to building and developing EVs.  That's why Xebra has always been just perfect for me.  I've always liked ZAP's approach of electric bikes, scooters, now motorcycles, cars and trucks.  And I'm proud to say I have come to own many of these since they started in 1994. It's sort of weird seeing so many people jumping on the electric bandwagon when ZAP has forged through very tough times in pioneering this market.  But you have to be encouraged as an EV owner to have this growing support.  I wish more people would start buying and using EVs now so it sends a stronger signal of our demand for cleaner alternatives.  I think this is the only way to truly force the change from society at large.

 

 

I also love my mid-size SUV, my truck, and it tears me up inside.  Why should owning something so cool be so bad?  When you consider all the math between the Xebra and my truck it makes me think that our transportation choices need to get a lot smarter, including my own.  Of course this same math tells me that driving my Xebra every day is costing me at least one-tenth of the operating cost of my truck.  So every day I'm driving Xebra I know I'm doing the best for my own pocketbook.  It's so cheap that I actually don't feel totally awful about owning my truck because it's there if I need it.  Put the two of them together and it's like owning a hybrid.  Although I find myself needing my truck less and less these days.  Poor guy, sitting out in the driveway all alone.

 

 

I've always wanted an electric car ever since I took my first ride in one in 1991.  I was hoping to get my hands on an EV1, but we all know how that turned out. That was when I decided to get a hold of some other kind of electric car.  Eventually I reclaimed an abandoned conversion that had only 2500 miles on it.  All it took was a new set of batteries and I was easily hitting freeways speeds, although it was difficult to get to practical ranges and after about three years I had cooked the batteries and the speed controller of the hand-built car.  The great thing is that the dealership took my electric car as a trade-in and I came to own one of the first, and one of the only striped Xebras.

 

 

I drive my Xebra almost every day.  It's certainly a step up from my ZAP bike and scooter and at under $9,999 I feel like I got a good deal as one of the first customers since their production costs rose.  I use it for all the city driving I do and my truck gets left at home.  The only time I ever go to the gas station anymore is to check my tires.  It gets a lot of attention as I drive around, but after 2-1/2 years and 5,000 miles the novelty from people has subsided, but it's always fun to drive by families with kids who smile and point, or are they laughing?

 

 

See, I know the Xebra looks funny, which is why I love it.  It looks like one of those rocket ships from the Sci Fi films of the 60s, although the Xebra stripes kind of make you think of some gaudy accessory. I found some cheap zebra-patterned blankets for the seats and I find myself looking at all sorts of Xebra accessories. I heard they stopped making Xebra stripes because it is actually an expensive and time-consuming process. I get weird comments sometimes, mostly shouted from guys in trucks!?  But I've learned something about car owners that I never truly understood before.  Cars are about class.  Too many people look at cars as status symbols and it has created this perception of what cars should be and shouldn't.  People have started reaching for better, faster, sexier cars to keep up with the joneses.  It's this same greed that created the economic bubble that is bursting in the US.  The same greed that supersized our meals, our stores and our cars.  The same greed that made me buy my truck, shoot.

 

 

But my truck is AWESOME!  I got lost on a logging road once and we went over mountains, over glaciers, through rivers.  I almost wished I could have filmed a commercial.  Xebra would never be able to do that.  On the flipside, I hate having my truck when I'm driving around town doing errands and going back and forth to work.  Finding parking, watching my fuel guage so I'm conserving fuel, feeling guilty about using 10 times the amount of precious natural resources.

 

 

Xebra has its shortcomings.  The styling could be better.  The construction was very rudimentary.  The appointments could have been more carefully selected.  The parts and components could have been upgraded.  But you know what?  If ZAP spent more time and money on these things I certainly don't think they would have been able to sell me a car for under $10,000.

 

 

People say the Xebra is slow, but you have to wonder about these people because that is like calling water wet.  The Xebra wasn't designed to be fast—get over it.  It goes 0 to 60 in, well, never, unless you're one of those maniacs who modifies his/her Xebra.  Could it go faster?  How much more money do you want to throw at it?  Me, none.  Xebra is fine the way she is.  When I'm driving I make that bionic sound, n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n.

 

 

When you look at my truck, which is made by a stellar US automaker, it is bold and brash, able to traverse mountains, with GPS navigation, power everything, room for 7, there is no comparison… that is, except for the price.  And I'm sorry to say that for all the money I paid for my truck and how nifty all the bells and whistles are, there is a serious underlying quality issue that I'm not going to go into, not to mention being an ICE.  Sorry Charlie.  The scary part is that I'll be paying off my truck forever, when my Xebra is free and cleared.  The Xebra actually helps equalize things and I'm grateful for that.

 

 

Xebra has a lot more blessings.  It is very fun to drive.  It's like a magic carpet ride.  It has never felt tippy to me because of the weight of the batteries anchoring down the center of gravity.  At speeds 40 MPH and below there is no danger of tippage, and I've tried to the point of squealing the tires.  This three-wheeled stance thing offers pretty amazing maneuverability.  Makes me look forward to seeing how the ZAP Alias will turn out.  In Xebra I can cut through traffic and parking lots better than the bigger cars around me.  Xebra can pull U-turns you never dreamed were possible before. 

 

 

The quality is a little chintzy, but other than a few items that were repaired under warranty, and from a first production run no less, it has run smoothly ever since.  I guess I could start totaling up the money saved from all the trips to the mechanic and the oil stop I would have had to do with my truck in that 2-1/2 years.  I wish I had more range so I wouldn't have to use my truck so much, but the daily range I drive is under 15 miles.  I've heard they can get a lithium battery for the Xebra that will go over 100 miles and I do the math and think, "Do I really want to spend 2 hours driving a Xebra?"  I could never really justify the cost either, which I think is more than I paid for the Xebra!  If I truly thought about it I almost feel guilty for getting the Xebra because I've driven it to 27 miles on a charge and I never use that much range.  I probably should have never gotten a truck or Xebra and just bought a Zapino, but that's another story.  A Zapino wouldn't fit all my stuff and maybe Santa will bring me one some day.

 

 

Does it feel unsafe?  A motorcycle class EV is not designed to hold up in a crash like my truck.  But when you consider the insurance between the Xebra and my truck, does that mean my truck is 2-3 times as dangerous?  Perhaps, to the other drivers.  Is driving a Xebra actually safer?  At slower speeds, it has seemed to me that there is much less danger of being in a collision.  Of course there is a level of risk you would need to assume.  But a Xebra in the hands of a good, defensive driver probably has as much chance as everyone around them of escaping an accident.  Imagine what would happen if you were on one of those stupid Harleys in an accident!  At least Xebra has stripes and you would have to be a total idiot not to see her coming.  Of course most people who drive big trucks are total idiots, wait a minute?!

 

 

I have read so many people trashing Xebra online that I can only hope to provide some counteroffensive.  It seems that with cars everyone is a critic and even I must remind myself what we are truly up against, oil.  Exxon Mobile made $46 billion last year alone.  No. 2 Chevron, a paltry $26 billion.  Maybe they should get together and give the US a bailout?  And maybe they'll buy back my truck for the price I paid for it; if ever.

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Value 4 star rating
Style and Comfort 3 star rating
Performance 3 star rating
Fuel Efficiency 4.5 star rating
Overall 4 star rating
Pros: NO GAS!

Cons: Low comfort, charging stations, distance capability
Purchase Date:October 2008 Purchase Price:$10,000.00
5 people found this review useful
Loving it ...
jack528 reviewed October 22, 2008 at 11:36 am

We just bought the car two weeks ago and since having it use it frequently. It works as advertised (good and bad). Get about 30 miles / charge at ~35 mph. Go faster, use more juice, distance goes down.

 

I use it to commute to work (less than 20 miles round trip). On the weekends we use it for every short trip.

 

I wish we had more charging stations in and around the Chicago suburbs. For now, I am working with local agencies to make such needs a reality.

 

For local trips (<15 miles) and for those people fed up with buying gas, this is an excellent purchase.

 

Keep in mind, it's small and a far cry from the Volvo I owned for the past 10 years. But I don't miss the old car, even as nice as it may have been.

 

Go electric.

 

I am getting solar panels for my garage to help charge the car with the panels.

Was this Review Helpful?
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Value 3 star rating
Style and Comfort 2 star rating
Performance 1 star rating
Fuel Efficiency 5 star rating
Overall 2 star rating
Pros: Quiet, clean, fun to drive, never buy gas

Cons: Badly designed, poorly constructed, not very safe
Purchase Date:May 2007 Purchase Price:$16,881.00
3 people found this review useful
A fun car!
daniel reviewed March 13, 2008 at 8:04 pm

Note: I'm going to begin with the negative stuff. I hope you'll keep reading to the positive stuff, because this car has both good and bad.

The Zap Xebra SD is a great idea, very poorly executed. There are multiple design flaws, such as suspension that must be replaced for the car to be usable, a charging system that can damage the batteries, extremely inaccurate odometer, speedometer, and volt meter, near-worthless windshield wiper, the motor is open to dust, dirt, road debris, and water and is mounted just over the axle where it is extremely exposed to all this, etc., etc. And the construction is so cheap that any given part is liable to be defective. The original batteries are good for about 15 miles on a charge, but can be replaced with bigger and/or more batteries.

It has only three wheels because this allows it to be licensed as a "motorcycle," thus exempting it from safety regulations, and making it possible for a small company like Zap, without the money for safety testing (which it would fail miserably in any case) to import it and sell it in the U.S. Its saving grace, from a safety standpoint, is that its top speed is around 35 mph for the stock version, and it's always safer to drive slow. Speed kills, and the Xebra doesn't go fast.

The Xebra SD is not very comfortable to sit in. (The PK is much more comfortable.) Getting in and out is awkward, and there is very little rear leg room. The front seats of the SD are uncomfortable.

Having said all that, this is the most fun car to drive I have ever owned! Because it is 100% electric, it never uses gas, and is dead-quiet when stopped, and it has no exhaust. You drive right past gas stations without ever stopping, and you fuel it by plugging it into an ordinary 110-volt electrical outlet.

It looks like it would tip over, with its three wheels, but in fact is amazingly stable. Because it is licensed as a motorcycle (not a NEV: Neighborhood Electric Vehicle) it is not subject to the 25-mph limit most states place on NEVs, and with a heavier battery pack and controller it can be "souped up" to hit 40 mph, or even 50 mph if you install larger rear tires, which effectively increase the "gear" ratio. (There are no gears. This is a one-speed vehicle.)

Hill climbing is weak, but it can climb even pretty steep hills if you have patience.

This car is an attention-getter! It is amazing how many people wave, or shout good words, and how many people will come over to look at it and ask questions when it is parked. (It helps that I had "ELECTRIC" written on it.)

It costs roughly two cents per mile to drive it where I live. (Around 1/3 kwh per mile, so you can calculate what it would cost at your electric rates.) And it is virtually maintenance-free, because it is electric, and electric motors are so simple, compared to gas engines. Unfortunately, the poor construction quality means it is not repair-free, and a number of people have reported batteries failing long before they should.

Because petroleum comes mostly from overseas, and electricity is mostly generated from domestic sources, driving electric does not contribute to our trade deficit, as driving gasoline does.

There are so few electric cars that you can buy right now, that the Xebra is just about the only game in town. A Tesla will set you back $100,000 and if you order it now you'll wait 18 months to two years to get it; ACP won't sell you a $70,000 eBox unless you live in CA; a 5-year-old used Rav4EV will set you back $60,000 if you can find one; a NEV is not allowed to go over 25 mph in most states; and although half a dozen companies or more, including GM, are promising to sell EVs "real soon," not one of them has delivered yet, after years of promising. There are some really cool videos on YouTube of prototype EVs, but none of them is actually available as I write this, and probably won't be for a year or two, and maybe longer.

But the Zap Xebra is available today, and I've been driving mine for ten months now, and for all its many flaws (and there are many, and you must be willing to put up with those if you buy a Xebra) it is my favorite car of any I've ever owned, and the most fun to drive, and the one that most puts a smile on my face every time I get in it.

Oh, and it's pronounced "Zebra."

And if you're concerned about its safety, think of it this way: It's the safest motorcycle you'll ever ride in. (And I imagine it may be the only 4-door, 4-passenger motorcycle in the world!)

I can recommend this car conditionally: If you want to make a statement against the profligate use of gasoline, or you just don't want to use gasoline because it stinks and because gas engines make a lot of noise, and if you are willing to accept the inevitable break-downs and repairs that arise out of its poor construction quality, and if you understand that the sticker price is only part of the cost because you'll have to make some modifications before it's a usable car, and if comfort is not important to you, then you'll probably love it. But if you want a car that just runs without fuss and bother, you'd probably better wait until Toyota builds an electric car. Maybe some day they will. Meanwhile I've got a smile on my face as I toodle along the streets in my three-legged clown car.

Was this Review Helpful?
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Value 4.5 star rating
Style and Comfort 3 star rating
Performance 3.5 star rating
Fuel Efficiency 5 star rating
Product Eco-Score 4.5 star rating
Company Eco-Score 5 star rating
Overall 4 star rating
Pros: electric, small, easy to maneuver, great for city parking

Cons: battery dies too quick
I like my Zap
Cafeinita reviewed December 17, 2008 at 11:51 am

 I have to say I really like my Zap Xebra. True, the battery dies too quickly (well, I get around 20 miles per charge) and the parts started squeaking way too fast but hey: it's 100% electric! I give Zap credit for what they've done so far and deeply believe they are going to improve fast.

 

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