From the “floating bubble” theme of its wheels and body-colored
grille to its debut of Ford’s now well-known road-and-leaf
environmental logo, the circa-1992 Ford Ecostar featured none of
the raw edges or engineering quirks typically expected of developmental
electric vehicles of the time. Gone were the pop-riveted sheetmetal,
the ubiquitous wires, and the function-before-form approach. While
the Ecostar had a good start since it was based on Ford’s
European Escort Van, the automaker’s attention-to-detail with
this electric vehicle variant was notable.

Time
spent behind the wheel of the Ecostar during test drives in 1992
through 1994 proved this a capable vehicle, with good acceleration
in traffic and performance on par with most internal combustion
engine vehicles of its class. Steering was crisp and overall handling
very good, with the vehicle feeling quite stable even during hard
transient maneuvers, no doubt helped by a low center of gravity
created by its heavy sodium-sulfur battery pack mounted beneath
the cargo floor. Its 15 second 0 to 60 mph acceleration was good
for an electric vehicle of that time but sedate by gasoline engine
standards, although acceleration capabilities were never lacking
in any driving situation GCJ editors experienced. Data gathered
by Ford as part of its 105 vehicle demonstration showed its test
Ecostars averaging a 94 mile driving range with a maximum recorded
range of 155 miles.
The most significant feature of the Ecostar was its hot (600 degree
F) sodium-sulfur battery, a technology invented by Ford in the 1960s.
The battery operated at this temperature to allow a molecular reaction
between molten sodium and sulfur that created the substantial electricity
needed to power an EV. Heat was largely contained within the battery’s
double-walled, stainless steel vacuum housing. Because the Ecostar’s
sodium-sulfur batteries remained hot regardless of outside temperature,
they offered consistent performance even in the extremely cold weather
that often sapped an EV’s driving range.
While sodium-sulfur appeared a potential player in the early 1990s,
other battery technologies emerged offering fewer technical challenges
and greater peak power, making them better suited for electric vehicle
use. The Ford Ecostar fleet with its sodium-sulfur batteries faded
into the electric vehicle’s colorful history, a chapter closed
but not forgotten.