Owner | Gjovik University College |
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Location | Oppland Norway map |
Web/Email | WebPage |
Vehicle | 1974 Volkswagen Beetle, Jeans Edition The car was nothing but an empty, sandblasted shell when we got it. We not only had to convert it to electric, but also restore it, weld it together where it had rust-problems and paint it! |
Motor | Clark 5.2 kW Continuous and up to 16,8 kW for 2 minutes Series Wound DC Taken from a donated Clark CTM 16 S truck, along with its pot. meter and DC-DC-converter. |
Drivetrain | Stock transmission with no clutch. Shifting gears is done with simply lifting your foot off the gas-pedal and shifting gears. No grinding whatsoever. |
Controller | Curtis 1205 48V and peak at 350A for 2 minutes. |
Batteries | 8 Haze Marine Gel, 12.00 Volt, Lead-Acid, Gel (3 "in the gas-tank", one where the spare wheel sat, and 4 behind the rear seats) 48V and 220 Ah altogether. |
System Voltage | 48 Volts |
Charger | Nuova Elettra RPE, 48V 30A A big transformer mounted in the front compartment, with the "display" cut out and reset right behind the lid to the original glove box. |
Heater | 12V heater mounted where the cd-player would be and a fan that moves air from the motor-compartment to the vents below the windscreen. |
DC/DC Converter | Clark Material Handling - CTM 16 S DC-DC converter Produced by Miltronik Working on mounting Solar Panels on the roof that will charge the 12V battery. |
Instrumentation | Stock, with battery-meter. |
Top Speed | 40 MPH (64 KPH) |
Acceleration | Good at low speeds. Very slow at higher speeds. It doesn't like hills that much. |
Range | The low voltage makes quite a bit of waste-heat. Unsure about the range. Theoretically it could run for 2 hours, but realistically, maybe 1 hour? |
Watt Hours/Mile | No idea |
Seating Capacity | 2 adults |
Curb Weight | 2,150 Pounds (977 Kilograms) |
Tires | Summer-tires with painted rims. |
Conversion Time | 5 months of extra-curricular time |
Conversion Cost | 60 000 NOK ~= 10 000 USD |
Additional Features | Going to mount two BP Solar Panels on the roof for 12V charging and ventilation. This will hopefully eradicate the need for a DCDC converter. |
12th of October 2011: It's getting registered! The norwegian DMV has approved it, and so has the local VW shop:) |