Slashdot Mirror


Student Killed Driving Solar Car

Lev13than writes "Tragedy struck the University of Toronto's Blue Sky Solar Racing Team on Thursday when 21-year old student Andrew Frow was killed in a car accident. It appears that Frow lost control of the low-riding experimental car and was struck by a minivan head-on. The team was driving from Stratford to Waterloo (about an hour west of Toronto) as part of a tour of universities in Ontario and Quebec to mark the one-year anniversary of the 2003 Blackout. This is a big setback for solar power advocates, especially as the blackout anniversary will pass with remedial legislation stranded in Congress. More information on the accident is available here." The vehicle's design is not really street-safe - this will be a problem as more efficient, lighter cars share the road with Hummers.

6 of 847 comments (clear)

  1. Kitchener-Waterloo Record Story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The most detailed story I've read about this was in The Kitchener-Waterloo Record, which unfortunately is subscription-only. From a Google News search, I don't see the article duplicated anywhere, so I am copying and pasting the article here. (There were also two photos, which unfortunately can't be linked to. Perhaps someone else with a subscription can set up a mirror.) Andrew Frow, RIP. :-(

    U of T student dies in solar car; Vehicle out of control near Waterloo Regulations being followed, police say

    A University of Toronto student is dead after the solar car he was driving veered out of control on a highway just west of Waterloo Region yesterday afternoon.

    Andrew Frow, 21, of Toronto was driving the university's team car east along Highway 7 and 8, from Stratford to Waterloo, as part of a Canadian solar car tour. The small low-riding car suddenly went out of control at about 4 30 p.m., veering across the centre line of the two-lane highway, said Constable Glen Childerley of Perth County Ontario Provincial Police.

    The car then swerved back into its lane, hitting the right shoulder. It then plowed across the highway into the path of a minivan in the westbound lane.

    "It zoomed right across the road and was T-boned by the van," said Childerley, adding the driver was alone in the solar car.

    The impact destroyed the car. Its solar-panelled roof was flung off and its shell ended up in the ditch on the north side of the highway.

    The driver's teammates rushed to his aid. The students were in two minivans, one driving in front of the solar car, one behind, when the crash occurred.

    Two of his teammates frantically performed CPR on the young man as he lay in the wreckage, said truck driver David Hackett, who pulled up at the scene moments after the accident.

    Hackett, a volunteer firefighter in his hometown of Maryhill, offered to take over from the visibly upset woman doing mouth-to- mouth.

    "I'm just sorry we couldn't do more," said Hackett, who was delivering groceries to Stratford when he came across the crash.

    "I am grateful for the training that I had and that I could respond."

    Paramedics, Stratford firefighters and OPP soon arrived on the scene and took the driver by ambulance to another ambulance with a doctor and waiting medical team.

    The crew took the young man to a Kitchener hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    After he was rushed away, police began inspecting the mangled wreckage in the ditch to determine why the crash occurred. That section of the highway was closed for hours as they worked.

    Hunks of metal, some bearing the University of Toronto logo, were strewn across the grassy ditch.

    As police worked, students on the U of T team huddled across the street, many hugging each other.

    They did not want to talk to the news media last night.

    Rudy Schoenhoeffer, who was driving the minivan that hit the solar car, was also there.

    "I'm just saying a prayer for him," the Stratford man said quietly as he stood by his van, its front end dented.

    He was on his way home from work in Cambridge when the crash occurred.

    Jessica Whiteside, U of T's acting associate director of news services, said it was too early last night for anyone at the university to comment.

    Childerley said solar cars have to get a special permit from the Ministry of Transportation to drive on roads and highways, and must travel with a regular vehicle in front and behind. Those vehicles must have flashing yellow lights on their roofs.

    The U of T car was following these regulations.

    Kitchener-Waterloo Record

    [Photo] The U of T solar car drives along Western Rd. toward the University of Western Ontario in London yesterday. Later, near Waterloo, another driver lost control.

    [Photo] OPP investigate the scene of the fatal solar car accident on Highway 7 and 8 near the town of Shakespeare, Ont., yesterday.

  2. SUVs shouldn't really be a problem... by i.r.id10t · · Score: 4, Informative

    After all, many of the most popular ones are banned from many roads in California and other states. Since its a MSN article, I''ll elaborate - they are popular because they are big enough to get the large truck for commercial use tax discount... which also happens to be the weight limit for restrictions on most residential streets in Californial (and other places).

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
  3. Re:bad design, not the power by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is exactly what I was going to say. In certain classes of racing (NASCAR in the post-earnhardt-sr. era, I believe) you are required to use a specified carbon fiber crash bumper which is multicellular and will dissipate truly insane amounts of energy. Of course, they're intensely expensive, but I'd say they're well worth it. When it becomes reasonably inexpensive to build such structures I think it will be both reasonable and expected for many light vehicles to be built of such things in perhaps three or four pieces, and when a piece is damaged to any degree it will have to be replaced. It might even be cheaper to give the car one big body and replace the whole thing if the car is in a collision, swapping the entire contents into a new car with a preinstalled wiring harness and fuel lines.

    Such a vehicle will likely have plastic body panels on the outside, to protect from damage by rocks and such.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  4. Re:bad design, not the power by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Informative

    Frankly that car was not street legal, it shouldn't have been allowed on the highway

    "solar cars have to get a special permit from the Ministry of Transportation to drive on roads and highways, and must travel with a regular vehicle in front and behind. Those vehicles must have flashing yellow lights on their roofs.
    The U of T car was following these regulations."

    Quoted from a copy-paste post above...

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  5. Re:Who's driving whom? by TigerNut · · Score: 4, Informative
    I'm not familiar with the design of the car, but most likely the steering was just a wheel or tiller (like bicycle handlebars) - it doesn't have to be high-tech to be susceptible to sudden failure. It may be that the solar car was struck by a sudden wind gust, made more severe by the fact that he was following the team minivan (thus being subject to the turbulence that exists behind any big blunt object being moved through the air). If the solar car had the misfortune of being designed as a tricycle with one front wheel and two rear wheels, then it would have the same stability issues that eventually drove three-wheeled ATVs out of the marketplace. It's possible that the steering didn't have sufficient caster to be stable at speed, or under all combinations of skid angle. These are all things that might have been contributing factors to the loss of control, which is the main thing that caused the crash and resulting fatality. The fact that the solar car was struck by a minivan, or that the solar car wasn't designed to survive such a mishap, is kind of secondary. Having a steering and suspension geometry that is stable under all foreseen combinations of driver and road input should be a mandatory requirement for a vehicle being driven on public roads.

    At one point in my past I built and roadraced GT cars. The combination of slick race-compound tires (9" wide on a 2000 pound car), and the steering axis offset required to allow their use, meant that the steering effort was OK when the front tires weren't sliding, and the caster would re-center the steering. But under conditions where the car was going sideways beyond a certain limit, the steering would drive itself to lock unless you manually wrestled it back to center. Not for the faint of heart or puny forearm development.

    --

    Less is more.

  6. Re:It's not that sad by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 4, Informative
    The kid had to know that driving that car on the road with "regular" cars was the vehicular equivalent to entering an American Football game naked

    Not really...note from the story that there was a support minivan in front of him, and another behind him. That's pretty good protection.

    He lost control, and crossed the lane into oncoming traffic. That would likely have been fatal on a motorcycle, or even many smaller regular cars.