Owner | Jack Marshall | ||||||
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Location | Los Gatos, California United States map | ||||||
Vehicle | 1974 Porsche 914 | ||||||
Motor | Azure Dynamics/Solectria AC24LS 3-Phase AC | ||||||
Drivetrain | I used the stock clutch and five speed transaxle, but I had problems with vibrations around 4500 rpm. So I got the flywheel machined down from its original 17 lbs. to about 11 lbs., shortened the motor shaft and spacer ring by about 5/8" and had everything really well balanced. This completely eliminated the problems. Now I get best efficiency at 45 mph in 2nd gear - a bit over 5000 rpm. (Many thanks to Mike Brown, "Mr. Electro Automotive".) | ||||||
Controller | Azure Dynamics/Solectria DMOC445 This controller is a really nice design, but it's tough to make any sophisticated electronics reliable in a vehicle. Now that Azure is out of business I've had the thing opened up several times on the workbench. I replaced the connectors on a particularly troublesome ribbon cable and everything seems to work fine now. | ||||||
Batteries | 18 US Battery 8VGC HC - XC, 8.00 Volt, Lead-Acid, Flooded | ||||||
System Voltage | 144 Volts | ||||||
Charger | Elcon PFC-2500 A standard J1772 charging connector is mounted on the right side of the front bumper. A Modular EV Power AVC2 vehicle control module and 110/240 VAC compliant charging electronics are used so charging works fine from 120 VAC at home or up to 240 VAC from a commercial charging station. The PFC-2500 provides 1500W at 120VAC input or 2500W at 220VAC. | ||||||
Heater | I used a pair of travel-size hair dryers connected into the original heating ducts. They're switched using a beefy DC relay controlled by the original heater switch on the floor. I hooked them up in parallel and set their switches to "low" and this works fine from the 144V main battery. | ||||||
DC/DC Converter | Elcon TDC 144 14 EGC | ||||||
Instrumentation | Ammeter (+300/-150A), SOC Gauge, 12V system voltmeter. The original tachometer, alternator light and oil pressure light are driven from the Azure Dynamics controller. | ||||||
Top Speed | 70 MPH (112 KPH) This was on flat road with nearly a full charge. | ||||||
Acceleration | The acceleration isn't anything to write home about - zero to sixty is over 20 seconds. | ||||||
Range | 45 Miles (72 Kilometers) This is typical range at 35 to 45 mph on a warm day with some red lights and only moderate accelerations. I try to drive fewer than 40 miles on a charge. Any farther and the performance really suffers. | ||||||
Watt Hours/Mile | 400 Wh/Mile This is the typical wall socket to odometer efficiency at 35 to 45 mph on a warm day. It's a strong function of driving style and I've seen it as low as 285 Whr/mi driving like granny or as high as 500 Whr/mi out for a joyride. | ||||||
EV Miles |
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Seating Capacity | Two adults or driver plus guitar. | ||||||
Curb Weight | 3,000 Pounds (1,363 Kilograms) Preconversion curb weight was 2100 lbs. and 3000 lbs is a best guess. | ||||||
Tires | Continental PureContact 195/65R15 at 45 psi. | ||||||
Conversion Time | Total duration 2 1/2 years -- actually about a year of weekends, and then another year of tweaking. (And still making refinements all the time...) | ||||||
Conversion Cost | About $18,500 plus the cost of some transmission, steering and suspension repairs. | ||||||
Additional Features | - Electric windshield washer pump (from a 911) in place of the original spare tire pressurized washer. - New hood shocks in front and rear from Camp 914. - New fuse panel with blade fuses from J-West Engineering. | ||||||
I used the Electro Automotive AC VoltsPorsche kit and tried not to add anything too modern looking. Sunshine still has that sweet 1970's look and feel. Milestones: 11 April 2010 - completed in time for the 40th Earth Day 13 June 2011 - passed the "1,000 EV Miles" mark 3 March 2012 - 5,000 EV Miles 6 November 2013 - First charging at work 3 February 2014 - Upgraded to PFC-2500 charger - 4 1/2 hour charging at work. 11 March 2014 - 10,000 EV Miles 23 May 2015 - Sold to another EV conversion enthusiast! |