Owner | Steve Briscoe | ||||||
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Location | Arlington, Texas United States map | ||||||
Vehicle | 1985 Toyota Celica The plan at this point is to use a salvaged G.E. Forklift motor with a 144 volt controller and 12, 12 volt deep cycle batteries. | ||||||
Motor | General Electric 339128 Series Wound DC Salvaged Forklift Motor | ||||||
Drivetrain | Toyota 5 speed transmission direct coupled to the G.E. motor by a solid steel coupling. | ||||||
Controller | Curtis 1231C 96 to 144 Volt 500 amp controller | ||||||
Batteries | 12, 12.00 Volt, Lead-Acid, Flooded | ||||||
System Voltage | 144 Volts | ||||||
Charger | Quick Charge 144 volt charger | ||||||
Heater | My son Bradley (the engineer) and I am still debating. He wants to stick to resistance heat. I am open to that but am thinking that a dual power source water heater might be more effective. We could heat a minimal amount of water with AC power overnight and store that thermal capacitance in the water and augment it with 12volt heating element after disconnecting from AC power. | ||||||
DC/DC Converter | None... still use a 12 Aux battery | ||||||
Top Speed | 70 MPH (112 KPH) 70 MPH so far, Speed is getting better as I cycle the batteries more. My last run on the highway was 65MPH in third gear. | ||||||
Acceleration | Very, very Good | ||||||
Range | Just added the last two batteries on 08/30/2009. Will need to cycle the new pack several times to see how it plays out. | ||||||
EV Miles |
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Seating Capacity | Currently 4 but that is subject to change. | ||||||
Curb Weight | 2,100 Pounds (954 Kilograms) | ||||||
Conversion Time | Been messing with it for 6 months now. Probably have 200 hours so far. | ||||||
Conversion Cost | Still adding up. | ||||||
Additional Features | 01/26/2009 Installed vacuum pump for the power brakes and passed the Texas state safety inspection. 03/19/2010 Just shot some new red paint. This is not my best paint job as I have not painted a car in over 24 years but it does look much better. |