Owner | Herb Welch | ||||||||
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Location | Helena, Montana United States map | ||||||||
Vehicle | 1990 Ford Ranger This is a standard Ford Ranger 2-WD pickup which has become my daily driver. | ||||||||
Motor | Advanced DC FB-4001 Series Wound DC | ||||||||
Drivetrain | Stock 5-speed transmission and clutch. I added two leaves to both rear springs and put new heavy duty coils up front. | ||||||||
Controller | Curtis 1231C | ||||||||
Batteries | 20, 6.00 Volt, Lead-Acid, Flooded | ||||||||
System Voltage | 120 Volts | ||||||||
Charger | Russco SC-120 | ||||||||
Heater | I installed a PTC module that was robbed out of a Wal-Mart space heater in the existing heater core. Works ok but more heat would be nice. | ||||||||
DC/DC Converter | Iota DLS-30 Very slick converter that can operate on either AC or DC power. | ||||||||
Instrumentation | Voltmeter, Ammeter and a Curtis 900 | ||||||||
Top Speed | 70 MPH (112 KPH) | ||||||||
Acceleration | Acceleration is as good as the 4 cylinder engine the truck came with. | ||||||||
Range | 50 Miles (80 Kilometers) During the summer months my range has been around 50 miles on a charge and 30 during the winter. | ||||||||
Watt Hours/Mile | On flat ground, 40 amps keeps me at around 35mph | ||||||||
EV Miles |
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Seating Capacity | Two comfortably or three close friends. | ||||||||
Curb Weight | 4,220 Pounds (1,918 Kilograms) | ||||||||
Tires | All season all the way around. | ||||||||
Conversion Time | Six months worth of weekends. | ||||||||
Conversion Cost | $6,000 and climbing. | ||||||||
Additional Features | Hydraulic bed lift to make battery service safe and easy and runs to the dump a snap. Canadus battery de-sulfator. 3 Kilowatt pure sine wave inverter for backup AC power | ||||||||
WoW! another driving year down the tubes. Some people including myself like raw data on projects like these, so here it is. Total electric miles driven.................... 7,260 Total Kwh of electricity for charging...........4,107 Total cost of electricity for charging...........369.63 Charging cycles from an average of 50% discharge 558 Batteries begin service August 1st 2006, 3 years ago. Back in June I lost one battery due to an open circuit and replaced it with a new one. Two years ago I installed a Canadus battery de-sulphator on my truck due to an increase in my charge time. My charge rate has dropped from a high of 11 Kwh a day back down to the 7 Kwh I experienced when the batteries were new. The unit was not cheap but seems to make a difference, only time will tell. In November I obtained salvaged 3Kw inverter designed for 100 VDC input and installed it in my garage. It will be used as a backup power source for my home and be powered by my trucks battery pack. |