Owner | James | ||||||||
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Location | Sydney, New South Wales Australia map | ||||||||
Web | WebPage | ||||||||
Vehicle | 1966 Morris J2 - 152 Omnivan A mint-condition town van with 15cwt (750kg) carry capacity and low ratio gears. | ||||||||
Motor | Kostov R20 11inch Series Wound DC running at 144v in direct drive | ||||||||
Drivetrain | rear wheel drive, originally powered by a 1.6litre B-Series 4cyl, 66bhp at 4300rpm, with max torque 122Nm at 2200rpm. Top speed 50mph. | ||||||||
Controller | Zeva MC600S 600A peak (200amps rated) at 144v for an absolute peak of 86kw | ||||||||
Batteries | 45 CALB/Skyenergy 180AHA, 3.20 Volt, Lithium Iron Phosphate total pack = 25.92kwh | ||||||||
System Voltage | 144 Volts | ||||||||
Charger | Elcon (something that works well with a solid and reliable LiFePo B.M.S.) | ||||||||
Heater | None. | ||||||||
DC/DC Converter | Iota currently using a 12v deep cycle PbAcid battery | ||||||||
Instrumentation | TBS E-Xpert Pro with 5:1 voltage pre- scaler to handle the 144v | ||||||||
Top Speed | 60 MPH (96 KPH) Predicted based on motor rpm data and diff ratio. Motor is rated to 5300rpm but I haven't taken it that high yet! | ||||||||
Acceleration | better than original, but it's never going to smoke off anyone at the lights. I'm still in test phase. From a standstill it's ok, but from 20kph+ it's really gutsy, MUCH more power than the original. | ||||||||
Range | 80 Miles (128 Kilometers) based on my tests to date, I used 23% of the pack for 22miles | ||||||||
EV Miles |
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Seating Capacity | 5 adults | ||||||||
Curb Weight | 3,344 Pounds (1,519 Kilograms) 1520kg | ||||||||
Tires | Nankang light commercial | ||||||||
Conversion Time | 12 months part time | ||||||||
Additional Features | (to be updated as the build happens) | ||||||||
UPDATE July 2019 - This Van is for sale! I'm under tremendous pressure to keep it original, since it's in such good condition. My opinion is that the van was built to be driven. They built around 160,000 of these between 1956 and 1967, and they were used for a wide variety of purposes, including police, ambulance, postal and delivery services and yet there aren't many left on the roads. Why? Because they are so difficult to maintain and keep roadworthy. Because they are loud and hot in the cabin, and because they aren't able to keep up with modern highway traffic. As an EV, the van is driven daily, is quiet and cool, and the ongoing maintenance costs aren't so prohibitive that it becomes unmanageable. edit (9th Nov 2010) : Decided to change the motor and controller to a Kostov 11inch with Zeva 600MS DC controller, for more torque and higher rated power. I'm also going to make the van direct-drive so have removed the gearbox as well. For those in horror, I have dry-stored the ICE components for the next owner, should they want to restore it back to its noisy, hot and slow former self. |