Owner | Jay Dee |
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Location | Torrance, California United States map |
Web | WebPage |
Vehicle | 1970 Myers Motors B.F. Myers . This is a 1970 B.F. Myers "Towdster" Dune Buggy. Bruce designed its predecessor, the "Tow'd", to be light enough to be towed behind a car for offroad fun in the desert. A tow bar slid out of the steering column support when needed. Instead of the shortened VW chassis under a fiberglass body that is the basis for most Dune Buggies, Bruce saved weight by integrating seats and a trunk into a fiberglass body, which rests on a steel hoop that connects the front end and the rear transaxle. However, when it turned out that people wanted to drive it to the desert instead, he made the "Towdster". This had lights and fenders that made it street legal, but could be quickly removed for offroad fun. It was the lightest street-legal donor I was able to find after a few years of searching. This one has a VW beetle transaxle in the rear with drum brakes and IRS (Independent Rear Suspension, vs swing axle), and a Karmann Ghia front end with disk brakes. There are lots of pictures and videos on this build thread: ==> WebPage /> sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=34&t=50717 Walkaround Video on YouTube shot in 4k: ==> WebPage Test drive at the beach video on youtube, starts with some vid of the rear wheel and then GoPro off the passenger side: ==> WebPage . |
Motor | Advanced DC FB1-4001a Series Wound DC . Standard 9" motor with a tailshaft . |
Drivetrain | 4-Speed VW transaxle, CANEV Adaptor plate, rear motor (9" ADC FB1-4001a) |
Controller | Cafe Electric Zilla Z2K-LV . The controller's 2,000a max output is overkill for this build, and way more amps than a single 9" motor can use, but I got it a good price. I have since bought a more appropriate Z1K-HV to replace it, but I haven't gotten around to swapping it in yet. I upgraded the hairball to one with -A and -P options, and I find the Prius hall-effect pedal is much smoother than the PB-6 throttle it replaced. All the cables in the power circuit are 4/0. In addition to the (+) side EV200 contactor managed by the Zilla, I have a (-) side EV200 contactor activated by a dash switch. . |
Batteries | 42 A123 Systems APM20 cells in series, 3 parallel cells each, 3.65 Volt, Lithium Iron Phosphate . The pack is made of three a123 factory-made modules: one large 28s3p module (106lbs) and two 7s3p modules (30lb each). Because of a123's low resistance, it has very little Peukert-Effect sag under load. The low resistance also allows for a 30c discharge, so this pack could could theoretically put out 1,800a. The Zilla Z2K is up to that duty cycle, but it far exceeds what the motor and chassis could handle. I pulled 7,532wh from the pack on the only full- discharge test I have done so far, 57.19ah until the lowest cell hit a conservative 2.7v limit. Pretty good for a pack rated at 58.5ah, I expected to hit 2.7v at an 80% DOD not almost 100%. No BMS, but I have an array of (6) CellLogs that present a bar-graph display of each cell's voltage, and provide a cell-level low voltage alarm. I designed a battery box in sketchup to fit the area behind the seats where the gas tank used to be, and paid a metal shop to weld it from aluminum 6061 sheet. It has a slow blow fuse in the middle of the pack, and silicon fuses on both the positive and negative terminals. The entire pack weighs only 219lbs, including cell modules, battery box, 4/0 cabling, fuses, and all mounting hardware. . |
System Voltage | 154 Volts |
Charger | Vicor Megapack PSU . I bulk charge with a Vicor Megapack that has (3) 48v/4.2a cards in it configured to 150v+. Thanks to the quality of a123's LiFePO4 chemistry, the pack stays pretty well balanced, but periodically I follow a bulk charge with a top balance using an array of Voltphreaks 2a Single-Cell chargers. . |
Heater | Sunny Los Angeles beach weather! |
DC/DC Converter | . To avoid the added complexity and high fail rate of of a DC-DC converters, I power the 12v systems with a 4s1p pack of 10ah Headway LifePO4 cells instead. I have a 4s1p pack of a123 19.5ah AMP20 cells to replace the Headways when I get back to working on this project. . |
Instrumentation | . A Grin Technologies (thanks Justin!) Cycleanalyst V3 in a 3D printed enclosure do columb counting and display volts/amps/KW and much more. (6) CellLogs in a 3D printed enclosure monitor the pack. Remote LEDs from the hairball in the dash. Everything else is stock VW. . |
Top Speed | 75 MPH (120 KPH) . Top end is limited by chassis, and not power - a lightweight dune buggy is made for off-road, not high speed. When it had a gas engine it was manageable at 75mph, and it has MUCH more power now. . |
Acceleration | . Stunning, like nothing I have felt before. Since this only weighs about 1,000lbs, at full amps the power-to-weight ratio is similar to that of the 3,500lb 2015 Corvette Z06 - not that the chassis could make as elegant use of the power. While rolling along in 2nd gear I can break the tires loose with a tap of the throttle. However, after about a dozen or so of these rolling burnouts, the clutch started slipping. Replacing it with a KEP (Kennedy Engineered Products) stage 1 pressure plate (180lb/ft) and clutch did not help. I think I broke something in the transaxle since the onset of the problem was sudden. Maybe under heavy load, the pinion shifts and the tranny binds up a little? It still pulls pretty hard under a gentler throttle, but I can't do the wild stuff again until I sort this out. . |
Range | 25 Miles (40 Kilometers) . I got 24.9 miles in my real-world max discharge/range test, which included lots of stops, steep hills, and hard launches. I only need 16 miles for my daily commute, less for beach rides when I retire, so this more than meets my needs. However, I would like to get at least 35 miles from this to prove out my original Design Criteria. Under Rickard's 100whm/1,000lbs theory, I should get a 75 mile range from the 7.5kw that the pack supplies. That probably exceeds reality, but I think by servicing mechanicals I can get a better wh/m. . |
Watt Hours/Mile | 303 Wh/Mile . I think the WHM consumption is pretty high for such a light vehicle. Maybe I have a frame leak in the motor (which was used for years in my VW Bus Conversion). Maybe the transaxle problem I am pondering is wasting power. I haven't checked the wheel bearings yet, they probably need service and are consequently wasting power. All things to look at when I get over being burned out on this project again. . |
Seating Capacity | . 2 people and a trunk. . |
Curb Weight | 1,035 Pounds (470 Kilograms) . I have not had this formally weighed this yet. While researching the donor, I got a lot of data points saying that a gas powered tow'd weighed 1,000lbs, so I use this as my basis. I have carefully weighed everything I've removed and added to the car during the conversion, and about 35lbs more went in than came out. In the process, I shifted about 100lbs from behind the rear axle to well in front of the rear axle, improving weight distribution. I chose a Towdster because I was specifically looking for the lightest freeway-legal donor vehicle I could find. For comparison, the data points I was finding indicated that typical dune buggy on a VW chassis weighs about 1,300lbs, and the VW Beetle weighs 1,760-1,850lbs. . |
Tires | 4 |
Conversion Time | . I bought this in May of 2013. I finished it the first time in September of 2014, but the 500a Kelly Controller I used would only supply 88a so it accelerated like a golf cart, leading to my most significant burnout on the project. In July 2015 I started Phase II - the Zilla Z2K upgrade and a bunch of improvements. Phase II was completed when I did my full-discharge test in December 2015. As typical, I had to do a lot of restoration along the way that significantly added to the timeline. Despite the previous owner's assertions to the contrary, the build was pretty tired when I got it, almost every system needed reconditioning. It was extremely dirty too, but now you could eat off the tranny if that is your thing. I also completely rewired the entire car from scratch and designed the layout/harness myself. I learned a whole lot about VWs along the way, which added significantly to the enjoyment side of the equation. I had a few periods when I was burned out from working on it every night/weekend/vacation, and I had to forget about the project in order to regain interest in working on it. Right now I am burned out on it again - it is hard to take a running EV and break it down into a pile of parts in my garage, not to mention going back to having a huge project hanging over my head. For now I am just enjoying it as is. It is pretty functional, but there is still a lot I would like to do with it, so I don't know that it will ever be finished. . |
Conversion Cost | . A Breakdown of major expenses: The donor cost $6k, and $600 to ship down to me. Dune buggies can be had for less than half that, but this one streamlined my project because it was already registered for the street, had front disc brakes, and rear IRS suspension. The motor and a123 pack and Kelly controller were from my VW bus conversion, so they could be considered used but in the total I base their cost on the price I paid for them. I bought a few Zillas along the way, cheap on eBay, and had them fixed at Manzanita Micro. I paid to have the battery box welded for me, but if time wasn't an issue I could have saved money by doing it myself. I also paid to have a controller mounting plate water jetted which was more of a vanity than necessity. All told, I think I am into it for about 15k after factoring in samples, incidentals, tools, and dead ends, but the education I got along the way is worth more than that to me - and wow did it expand my design vocabulary and understanding of materials. With what I know now, and a cheaper donor, I could do this for under 10k. . |
Additional Features | . Too many to mention. Lots of pictures and details on this build thread: ==> WebPage . |
. I wanted to demonstrate that by designing for a 35 mile range, an EV could better leverage the benefits of the electric drivetrain, making it extremely light to be as fast and agile as a supercar, yet economical to build and run, non-polluting and low maintenance. I am one of the 60% of Americans who travel less than 30 miles per day. With all the hype about range anxiety, car manufacturers are building EVs with ever larger, heavier, and more expensive packs, in turn requiring heavier chassis, bigger motors, and more complex systems. I think we lose many of the advantages of a simple electric drivetrain when we build EVs to service the duty cycle of gasoline car. I'm not knocking Tesla - Elon Musk is my hero and a model S or X is in my post-retirement future - I'm pointing out that Tesla's are more car than much of America wants to pay for. I think there are some great options out there for those of us who appreciate the benefits of an EV. However, I can understand the uninitiated not wanting to pay $30k for an EV that only does 100 miles and looks/handles/accelerates like a low end car... But they WOULD pay $10k for an EV that performs like a supercar even if it only does 35 miles. If I can build such an example for 10k, surely Big Auto can do it cheaper wholesale and make a profit. I think there is an untapped niche market there, but servicing it would be a parasitic drain on the sales and service of more expensive vehicles, so Big Auto is unlikely to do so. NEVs are a step in the right direction, but hampered by 25-35mph speed limits and heavy lead-acid batteries. For example, 98% of my commute to work is on 25mph-35mph suburban streets, but the entrance to my company is on a 45mph road so I can't get there in an NEV. Although I paid a lot for a "classic car" donor so my message wouldn't get lost in the looks, anyone with appropriate skills could do a similar build for less than $10k, using a $2.5k generic dune buggy, a used motor/controller for $3k-$4k, and part of an a123 battery pack from a wrecked Chevy Spark for $3k. As I got into dune buggies, I discovered that there is a huge garage-built culture out there, father/son teams and serial hobbyists building buggy after buggy, so I hope a few of them give an EV build a try! . |