Check out the first-ever electric car designed by Porsche, the 1898 P1
The P1 was lost for 116 years, then found in a warehouse in Austria. [credit: Porsche ]
With the Porsche Taycan finally making its way to customers, we thought it would be worth looking back and remembering Porsche's first battery-electric car. In this case, that means all the way back to 1898 and the Egger-Lohner electric vehicle, C.2 Phaeton model. Thankfully, Mr. Porsche himself referred to the car simply as the P1.
As a young man, Ferdinand Porsche was fascinated by electricity and chose not to follow in the footsteps of his small-town tinsmith father. In 1893, he moved to Vienna at the age of 18 to begin an apprenticeship at electrical firm Bela Egger & Co. while simultaneously enrolling as a student at the Imperial Technical University in Reichenberg.
This ambition and hard work paid off, as he was given a management position at Egger & Co. within just a few years of starting as an apprentice. 1897 was a milestone year for Mr. Porsche: now the head of the company's testing department, he built an electric wheel-hub motor, he met with carriage manufacturer Jacob Lohner & Co., and he began working on an electric car. Ferdinand Porsche was still just 22 years old.
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