Owner | Boyd Briese |
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Location | Brisbane, Queensland Australia map |
Vehicle | 1991 Mazda 121 This is one of the 'jellybean' 121's. No aircon, no power windows, no central locking. It does have power steering. A real driver's car. |
Motor | 3-Phase AC 7.5kw Aluminium frame motor from CMG rewound as a 160Hz motor (from 50Hz), or as a 130volt motor from 400volts. |
Drivetrain | 5 speed manual |
Controller | Polyspede CT1-301 This is a 22kw/30hp industrial 3 phase controller. |
Batteries | 48.00 Volt, Lithium-Ion A dozen 48volt20Ah LiFePO4 ebike batteries which should give about 11.5kWh. Each battery contains 272 (16x17) 18650 cells. |
System Voltage | 576 Volts |
Charger | 48v 5Amp chargers that came with the batteries. I hope to use four of them (to charge 4 separate 48v clusters). The brand on the charger is 'Gaozao' |
Heater | heating element from a ceramic blow heater. |
DC/DC Converter | Vicor VI-262-CV Two 300v to 15v converters (150w each) to keep the auxiliary battery charged. These will be tweaked to deliver about 13.8v |
Instrumentation | original manual speedo. Controller info pad will provide other interesting info. |
Seating Capacity | 5 now and hopefully 5 after conversion. |
Curb Weight | 0 I understand the original weight is 810kg. No GVM given!! |
Tires | Black and old. |
Conversion Cost | donor car AUD3000 controller AUD2000 motor AUD2300 batteries AUD6370 (thanks to the good AUD/USD rate in late October 2009) after freight, GST etc. coupling AUD150 |
So far I've got the car. The plan is to replace the 1.3l ICE with a three phase AC motor and Life battery pack. Hopefully the result will get me a top speed of over 100km/h, easy cruising at 80km/h and a range of 60+ km. Photos and more info to come. 30 October 2009 The parts are slowly coming together. The controller is here, the motor is being rewound and the batteries have just been ordered from China. There are still many problems to sort out, which is why I'm so glad to be a member of the Australian Electric Vehicle Association (AEVA), Brisbane branch. 7 November 2009 Picked up the motor yesterday. I think a baby blue motor will look good under the bonnet. 16 December 2009 The coupling was delivered about a week ago. The batteries arrived on Friday (11th). 20 May 2010 Time to get serious. We couldn't imagine not having our second car during the conversion, so we've just bought another 121. (Maybe it will be converted later). April 2011 My eight year old son finally nagged me into getting into things. One Sunday afternoon saw the cooling system and most of the exhaust removed. A whole Friday had the ICE out of the car. Then there was several hours grinding at my adaptor plate to make space for the drive shaft. Removing the fuel tank was a few more hours of fun. The dashboard has been removed so that I could replace the original water heat exchanger with an electric element. Now it's time to begin reassembling and find parts for the batteries etc. September 2013 Back on the job after a few other projects around the home. I had made a good deal of progress under the bonnet, including mating the gearbox and motor, and mounting three battery boxes. Now it's time to mount the batteries at the back end of the car (in boot and in fuel tank space) and finish up the wiring. |