Owner | Kerry Keene |
---|---|
Location | Southend on Sea, England United Kingdom map |
Vehicle | 2000 Suzuki Alto My current ICE vehicle that I am driving around 20 miles a day with the fastest road speed limit being 50 mph (traffic allowing!). Owning an ICE car for this one purpose (as we have a newer, nicer 2nd car), is ridiculous Very basic car, manual steering, wind up windows, no central door locking and general lack of luxuries. The ambition is to start witch a cheap "forkendwift" like vehicle and use money saved from fuel costs to upgrade / hack components later on in its new life as an EV. Hopefully, I'll end up with a nice little hot hatch in time. After part one of the conversion is complete I will try my hand at the "$50 Paint job" |
Motor | Brush Electrical Engineering Company Ltd, A Hawker Series Wound DC 48v x 380 amps, 2500 rpm Bought from ebay, from someone who had already removed it from a fork lift. I removed / stripped hydraulic pump, dismantled the Motor, cleaned it and painted it red. |
Drivetrain | Manual transmission, front wheel drive. I also have a spare Transmission and flywheel which I am using as a template for the adapter plate and coupler which I hope will keep the clutch. |
Controller | Curtis 1253-4802 |
Batteries | 0.00 Volt, Dreaming of Lifepo4, More likely to get Gel acid |
Heater | Plan to use ceramic element hidden in existing fan/heater box |
DC/DC Converter | Standard 12v battery |
Instrumentation | Whilst its under construction, a voltmeter? Liked idea from EV Capri of BMS via bluetooth dongle info to phone. With Arduino boards and Android tablets so cheap, i hope to go this direction for the permanent dash set up. |
Top Speed | 50 MPH (80 KPH) Planned comfortable/maintainable speed of 40 for part one of this project |
Range | 25 Miles (40 Kilometers) Planned minimum for part one |
Seating Capacity | has 5 seat belts but rear bench seat would only ever seat 2. Would need to keep car as a 2+2 |
Curb Weight | 0 Standard car 700lbs |
Conversion Time | I have 5 Months tax left. Will this be the last tax disc I ever buy? |
Additional Features | Want to keep clutch as I expect gear changing will be needed a lot with such a low voltage system. After buying the car, i learned this Suzuki Alto design is made in India (sold in India as Suzuki/Maruti ZEN). Although I a little disappointed that she isn't JDM, I did learn (acording to Wikipedia at least), that a lot of things are borrowed from the Suzuki Swift platform, including the engine, gearbox and mounting points are all the same. So upgrading and sourcing bits should be easy (?!). Also, I thought it was very apt that (reference the name of the car for the Indian market), The word "ZEN" is an acronym standing for Zero Engine Noise |
any one done this or doing this in the UK? Only advice I could get out of the DVLA was an email I have copied below. If anyone has been through this process and has any advice, please email me. If the changes are to fuel type or engine and cylinder capacity (cc) it may affect your vehicle tax. Due to this documentary evidence must be produced with a covering letter explaining the changes, together with your V5C and apply to your nearest DVLA Local Office to retax in the appropriate tax class. Any changes to the engine number and cc must also be submitted with written evidence. Written evidence for engine number and cc can be a receipt for the replacement engine, written evidence from the manufacturer, an inspection report provided for insurance purposes or written confirmation on headed paper from a garage, if the changes took place before you bought the vehicle. For any changes to the fuel type, for vehicles registered after 1 March 2001, you must produce evidence in the form of a letter on headed paper and receipt from the garage that carried out the work if your existing engine is converted. Any changes to the revenue weight for larger vehicle (Heavy Goods Vehicle HGV) may also affect your vehicle tax and you will be required to produce a plating certificate or design weight certificate to your DVLA Local Office. You can find the address for your nearest DVLA Local Office by telephoning 0300 123 1277 (you will be asked to give a post code) or at www.direct.gov.uk/dvlalocal |