June 9, 2010 | 12
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ChargeCar aims to create a kit that makes it easy for local auto
shops to convert conventional cars to electric.
By Saqib
Rahim and Climatewire
PITTSBURGH -- Chuck Wichrowski remembers the first car he ever worked
on, when he was just a college graduate and knew nothing about cars:
His wife's 1970 Chevy Nova.
"I just sort of applied the college model, which is: You look the
things up, you get a book, and then you do it," Wichrowski said.
drove the Steel City through its industrial heyday. But times have
changed in Pittsburgh, and while he still runs Baum Boulevard
Automotive, his customers have moved on to mostly foreign cars, and
increasingly, hybrids.
cars need less maintenance than the gas-driven ones. Yet he has loaned a
mechanic to a local university to help it design electric cars for
regular Pittsburghers, and he thinks his shop can cash in if the future
really is electric.
Mellon University, which is designing cars to get residents to
work without burning a pint of gas or even wasting an electron, the
future of electric cars is Pittsburgh.
project say that instead of selling pricey new vehicles, they want to
create a kit that makes it easy for local auto shops like Wichrowski's
to convert a gasoline car to run on electricity.
professor at CMU and a co-director of ChargeCar. "There's a ton of
shops that can do that kind of thing. There's mechanical know-how in
this town like no other that I've seen."
through small, independent companies or engineers tinkering in their
garages. But ChargeCar is likely the first effort to gut a gasoline car
and redesign it for a single purpose: the perfect commute.
drive, they found that most trips are about half a dozen miles. Some
zoom along the highway, while others plod past stop signs and red
lights. Some drive on flat roads; others climb or coast down the city's
hilly terrain.
supercapacitor and controlled by software, could make most of these
miles electric-powered, at a price Pittsburghers could afford.
ChargeCar's latest projects sit in a former gas station across the
street from Carnegie Mellon. One is a 2006 Honda Civic: Over the next
month, the team will convert it into a short-range, all-electric car.
Wichrowski's mechanic will lend a hand and advise on how to make such
conversions as simple as possible for other auto repairers in
Pittsburgh.
outside, it looks like a common Scion xB; surrounding the cockpit,
though, are scores of dials and gauges.
As Nourbakhsh pulls onto the road, he points to wobbling needles and
flashing numbers on the computer screen. This car is powered by a
battery and a supercapacitor, and these gauges are constantly crunching
numbers: how much juice is left, how much power is flowing, how hot the
battery is.
He switches between using the supercapacitor and the battery. He
tries each one on hills, up and down. When he slows at a red light, he
can choose which device he wants to charge up.
As the professor fiddles, the team is learning important facts about
the most efficient way to power an electric car.
The reason has to do with how batteries work -- and a major
technical challenge for automakers.
Custom-designed batteries?
Batteries are good at storing energy, but they degrade if they have to
take on, or release, too much power too quickly. To deal with that
degradation, automakers stuff cars with larger batteries, but that adds
cost and weight.
Unlike batteries, supercapacitors are built for abuse: They can take
a huge charge and discharge, thousands of times, without losing a step.
They're not so good at holding a charge, Nourbakhsh says, so the
team decided to pair one with a battery.
Those Pittsburgh hills and traffic lights? They become energy
savers.
"When you're stopping, all the current gets dumped into the
capacitor, therefore saving the energy so that you can reuse it, rather
than going into the battery, because putting it into the battery costs
battery life," he says.
As the argument goes, if one knows exactly how someone drives, it's
possible to come up with the perfect-size battery and supercapacitor for
that driver.
At www.chargecar.org, the
group is asking Web surfers to share information on their commutes in
gasoline cars, including every highway ride and stop at Starbucks.
A $10,000 price tag
Nourbakhsh and his team are at work on a computer program that can
predict where a driver speeds up, hits traffic and pauses for doughnuts
-- all to make a battery system that's the perfect size.
Over time, this program could even learn more about the driver,
firing up the capacitor or battery at precisely the right times to get
her to work.
Nourbakhsh says a regular battery may cost $8,000, but adding a
$1,000 capacitor to handle the sudden charges means the battery doesn't
need to be as big, so the combo may cost only $2,000.
The total price of conversion? ChargeCar is targeting a $10,000 tag.
Paul Scott, vice president of advocacy group Plug-in America,
said such a system could be the "magic bullet" of energy storage in
cars, since it balances capacity and power.
Capacitors have already drawn interest from researchers, engineers
and even some of the automakers. A spokesman for Toyota said, however,
that the company has placed more focus on other electric technologies
because it found capacitors too costly.
Scott panned the idea of designing electric cars mainly geared to
the commute. "Everybody I know drives a car a lot of different ways,"
not just for commuting but also for going to the movies or visiting
friends, he said.
Mechanics say this is the future
"If you optimize a car for just one specific task, it may not work as
well for other tasks," he said.
Nourbakhsh said the car doesn't have to spend its last electron at
the office -- it's possible to design "headroom" for a specific commute
while still being efficient and saving on cost.
"But the point is, for the thing you do most frequently -- that you
spend the most energy on -- let's have it be super-efficient at that,"
he said in an e-mail.
Some families might choose to have a ChargeCar and reserve a
gasoline car for longer trips, said Leland Thorpe, a master's student at
Carnegie Mellon who's on the ChargeCar team.
The project is recruiting local companies to sponsor the first wave
of car conversions. Nourbakhsh says that would be a uniquely Pittsburgh
solution, as companies "green" their reputations and Pittsburghers do
the work in auto shops.
Even if electric cars catch on in Pittsburgh, Wichrowski, the
manager of Baum Boulevard Automotive, isn't worried about having to lay
off mechanics.
"Every hybrid car that we have also has conventional brakes,
conventional exhaust, other things that you really need to do to have a
regular car," he said as customers milled in and out of the shop. "They
just have an added layer of the hybrid system bolted into the car
somewhere."
He said today, some cars have up to a dozen computers
to control their systems: air conditioners, power steering and the
like.
The modern mechanic often has the equipment and know-how to work
with them, so electric cars shouldn't be too much harder.
"This is something that all the technicians are going to have to
move into," he says. "If you want to repair cars, you're going to have
to be able to know how to do this."
Reprinted from Climatewire with permission from Environment &
Energy Publishing, LLC. www.eenews.net,
202-628-6500
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