Owner | David Harrington | ||||||||
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Owner's Other EV | 1996 Honda Civic | ||||||||
Location | Boxborough, Massachusetts United States map | ||||||||
Web/Email | WebPage | ||||||||
Vehicle | 2001 Honda Civic EX This Civic is a torque monster! | ||||||||
Motor | Netgain Warp 9 Series Wound DC 9.25" Diameter motor, 270 ft-lbs of torque at 1000 AMPS! | ||||||||
Drivetrain | 5 Speed manual transmission with Stage 4 racing clutch to handle 1000 AMPS to the FB1-4001a motor. | ||||||||
Controller | Cafe Electric Z1K-LV Beast of a controller! Up to 156 Volts and 1000 AMPs | ||||||||
Batteries | 45 CALB/Skyenergy SE180AH, 3.20 Volt, Lithium Iron Phosphate 26 KWh of power! | ||||||||
System Voltage | 144 Volts | ||||||||
Charger | TSM2500 Dual TSM2500 from Thunderstruck Motors. Current programmed for 5KW charging. | ||||||||
Heater | Ceramic 600w Heater | ||||||||
DC/DC Converter | Zivan 14.5v 50 AMP | ||||||||
Instrumentation | Zilla DAQ, working on volt and amp meters. | ||||||||
Top Speed | 85 MPH (136 KPH) The low end power is incredible. Shifting with the clutch is well worth it, is so easy to drive. | ||||||||
Acceleration | 0-60 in 12 seconds | ||||||||
Range | 80 Miles (128 Kilometers) Estimated 60-80 miles per charge depending on traffic and speed. | ||||||||
Watt Hours/Mile | 285 Wh/Mile This was based on my 30.6 mile commute, with half 40 MPH and half 60+ MPH and using 60.1 AH total. | ||||||||
EV Miles |
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Seating Capacity | 5 adults | ||||||||
Curb Weight | 2,750 Pounds (1,250 Kilograms) Stock weight was 2550 and I removed 350 lb | ||||||||
Tires | 185/65/R15 | ||||||||
Conversion Time | 5 Weeks | ||||||||
Conversion Cost | $20k | ||||||||
Additional Features | Audi vacuum pump for the brakes and upgraded suspension to handle the weight of the car. Going to increase the heater wattage and hooked the A/C up to the rear motor shaft. Also going to swap the steering rack with an Electric Power Steering Rack from a Civic Si. | ||||||||
This is my second EV, which used most of the components from my previous Civic EV. This time I wanted performance and range, so lithium was the only option. This EV was in planning for nearly 4 years, which is why it only took 5 weeks to convert. Honda's are great to work on because they have many aftermarket parts and most of the core parts don't change in bolting pattern from 92-05. 3/3/2013 - Warp9 and Can-EV adapter installed. 11/2013 - Upgraded springs to stop sagging in rear. 4/2016 - Replaced the Katz 1500w water heater with a 600 Ceramic heater unit. 11/2016 - Working on replacing the steering rack with an EPS rack from a Civic Si. Also going to increase heater wattage. 3/2/2017 - Upgraded heater to 900w ceramic. |