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DIY Hybrid Car Kit

Hybride And The Groom writes "Building hybrids uses machinery that pollutes the environment. The solution? Ship the parts of a hybrid individually and get your customers to put the car together themselves. That's exactly what Robert Q Riley Enterprises is doing, according to a story on CNet today, with its XR-3 hybrid. It'll cost you $25,000 for the bits, plus zero dollars in manufacture, I hope. Better yet, cough up $200 for the blueprints and schematics and even build the parts yourself. It's no secret that many hybrid drivers are smug enough as it is. Allow them to brag about having built the damn cars themselves and we might be entering obscenely smug territory."

309 comments

  1. oh well by ILuvRamen · · Score: 1

    At least that way repair shops won't have to be all confused about fixing the new technology that they didn't have time to learn about yet cuz the owner can just swap anything out.

    --
    Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
    1. Re:oh well by roc97007 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > At least that way repair shops won't have to be all confused about fixing the new technology [...]

      Yeah, they can be all confused trying to figure out what the user has done to the thing.

      Let's take an example we can relate to. A company advertises that they can send you the parts to a PC and directions on putting it together. Many of the unwashed public take advantage of this. Local nerdshops are inundated with half-assed assembly jobs, and the natives get really unfriendly when they're told that the best thing to do is junk it as a bad investment and buy an assembled car, er, PC off the lot, er shelf.

      One could argue that this deal is for people who know what they're doing. I submit that this is not exactly true -- it's for people with $25,000 who *think* they know what they're doing.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    2. Re:oh well by Atraxen · · Score: 1

      I think we'd have cars built from so many different part sources that no Western mechanic would know what to do with it. that was certainly the case with Soviet-era tractors; if they couldn't get a part, they found a way to make a different part work.

      That said, it might be good for Western mechanics to improve their creative approach to repairs; that ability has been broken in the last few decades.

      That's right, as far as the brain goes, in Soviet Russia, tractors fix YOU!

      --
      Be careful of your thoughts; they could become words at any minute...
    3. Re:oh well by kalirion · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hmm, could you put this in terms of a car analogy?

    4. Re:oh well by Shotgun · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You built it yourself. Why would you be taking it to a repair shop?

      And what is with the can't do attitude? A constant theme on /. is the "anti-science" or "anti-intelligence" attitude in the US. Why is an "anti-ability to bolt a few parts together" attitude any better?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    5. Re:oh well by schlick · · Score: 1

      One problem though... this is a car. America is a car culture. Can't put together your own computer? You're not a geek or a nerd then. Can't work on/put together a car... YOU'RE NOT A MAN! Get in the kitchen with the rest of the women!

      Well you get the point.

      --
      "It's because they're stupid, that's why. That's why everybody does everything." -Homer Simpson
    6. Re:oh well by Talderas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would assume that part of the problem would be the inherent safety problems with assembly by the untrained. Not safety with the actual assembly, though I'm sure there could be a fair share of collapses, or miss use of tools, but the safety of the vehicle on the road. What happens if as soon as the car gets up to 50 mph, the axle comes loose?

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    7. Re:oh well by AnotherUsername · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey, everyone knows you always have parts left over when you do it yourself. You must be one of those 'safety' people who want to take power from the people. Enjoy your time in hell, communist!

      Er, what I meant to say was,

      I agree.

      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    8. Re:oh well by jweller · · Score: 1

      Anyone who successfully builds their own car, even from a kit, isn't going to take it to a shop for repairs. I'll grant you that a number of these will not get completed, but the $25k price tag is steep enough to discourage most of the truly inept.

    9. Re:oh well by marxmarv · · Score: 1

      Shoot the hostage.

      --
      /. -- the Free Republic of technology.
    10. Re:oh well by roc97007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > You built it yourself. Why would you be taking it to a repair shop?

      Because... it doesn't work? Because you've botched the ignition or torqued the steering improperly or pinched a wire somewhere?

      > And what is with the can't do attitude? A constant theme on /. is the "anti-science" or "anti-intelligence" attitude in the US. Why is an "anti-ability to bolt a few parts together" attitude any better?

      Oh, there's obviously going to be many successes. Lots of people have successfully built kit cars -- the AC Cobra replicas, Lotus Seven, etc. I'm not disputing that people who put together kit cars couldn't do this. I'm wondering aloud if this is a way to solve the carbon footprint of construction. I'm having a difficult time believing that the kind of person who wants to build a car to reduce their carbon footprint is the same kind of person who builds a Pagano in his garage.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    11. Re:oh well by Kazymyr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Mod parent up. This is likely the main reason why this project will never see the light of the day. I can't imagine a DIY vehicle getting approved over road safety.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    12. Re:oh well by mollymoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It happens all the time in the UK. There's a healthy market for kit cars (well, car kits) and some people design and build the entire thing themselves. You build it, the man from the VOSA comes round, makes sure the brakes work and so on, gives you your SVA (Single Vehicle Approval) certificate and you're good to go. The requirements are lower than for production cars (eg. no crash testing, for obvious reasons), but as long as the brakes and steering work and the wheels won't fall off it won't be a danger to other road users - the safety of the driver/builder is their own problem.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    13. Re:oh well by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ever heard of Kit Cars?

      It's been done for years. Sandrails (dune buggies), hot rods (some very custom ones are more or less ground up built).

    14. Re:oh well by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Funny

      This is like building Gentoo from sources to get around patented codex and binary driver license problems.

    15. Re:oh well by couchslug · · Score: 3, Informative

      "I can't imagine a DIY vehicle getting approved over road safety."

      All that is required in my state is to document a reasonable number of the major parts (to answer any questions like "how do I know they aren't stolen?") and coordinate with DMV to send an officer by to inspect it. Upon his approval title will be issued. Also works with antique vehicles from states that didn't require titles for transfer.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    16. Re:oh well by socz · · Score: 1

      even if they don't have the skills to put it together, do you want someone who just got by to be driving that on the road while you're kids are out on their bikes?

      BTW what about the people who always end up with left over parts? lol

      --
      My abilities are only limited by my imagination
    17. Re:oh well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A constant theme on /. is the "anti-science" or "anti-intelligence" attitude in the US. Why is an "anti-ability to bolt a few parts together" attitude any better?

      If you read through the GP's posting record, you'll see a history of anti-science and anti-scientist sentiment.

    18. Re:oh well by Artista42 · · Score: 2, Informative

      With cars certain things like how tight the bolts are screwed on matters. With the plug on the oil pan you don't want to do more than hand-tighten it, but you sure as hell want to do more than that when putting on the wheels. People who don't know things like that are going to have some time trying to put together their own car.

    19. Re:oh well by ImitationEnergy · · Score: 0
      --
      Industrial Age 2 + How-to Stop Malignant Cancers.
    20. Re:oh well by patches · · Score: 1

      Well if that is case, then people shouldn't be allowed to take a wrench or socket to the car they bought off the car lot.

      --
      The worst part of being athiest.... You don't have anyone to talk to during orgasm!
    21. Re:oh well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yah i agree! That's why the wheels fall off on the freeway when they only put 1 lugnut back on the rim!

      - socz

    22. Re:oh well by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      People who don't know things like that are going to have some time trying to put together their own car.

      People who can't read the instructions or watch the video won't invest in the raw materials (let alone a kit) to build it themselves. If you can't be bothered to learn to use a torque wrench, you won't even consider this. Pick up any Hane's Manual for any make of car you care to look at. It has the torque specs for all the important fasteners. There's your data. The skill necessary to use the torque wrench are trivial.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  2. Neat idea... by KGIII · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At least that one looks cool but, really, who has the time to do this? If they have the time then do they have the interest or the money?

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    1. Re:Neat idea... by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One could buy a new one of these for half of $25,000 for an even more smug satisfaction.

      Or, one could buy 10 or more easy-to-DIY-fix old VW beetles with enough spare parts and earth-frendliness to last a lifetime.

    2. Re:Neat idea... by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Which is not a hybrid, but a standard gasoline engine (albeit a 1.0L gasoline engine)

    3. Re:Neat idea... by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      Smarts aren't actually that fuel efficient -- 35mpg hwy/31mpg city if I remember correctly. It's not even a regular hybrid, let alone a *plug-in hybrid*, like this vehicle. Of course, for this vehicle, ignore the BS mileage figures; most EV and PHEV manufacturers come up with fake "mpg" figures that assume you drive X miles on electricity and Y miles on gasoline, where X is much greater than Y, and then ignore the electricity. Still, it's hugely beneficial. Even from our current grid, according to a DOE study, due to the greater efficiency of power plants, you get a third lower CO2 emissions by going electric.

      For those who are interested in going electric, and aren't into novelty kit cars, here's a list of 33 upcoming EVs and PHEVs, excluding motorcycles and commercial vans/semis, not counting concept cars, and not counting cars from new companies that haven't shown compelling evidence of working toward production.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    4. Re:Neat idea... by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      I have an old Miata that I will retire soon in favor of a car with a back seat. I plan to keep the car, and I've been seriously thinking about trying to convert it to electric. If I leave the transmission in place and just replace the engine, and use lead-acid batteries, I should be able to get a 25-mile range with overnight recharges.

      More importantly, it would give me a chance to feel things that aren't plastic, something that bothers me about modern life. I missed the opportunity to learn car work when my grandfather died young, and I've always regretted that. I already garden and have made a choice to devote more time to the acquisition and preparation of the foods I eat. Mechanical work is just an extension of that.

      ----------

      All that said, for $10,000 I could get a kit to build this car as electric only (lead-acid), and add the diesel engine later? Or I could get the car with a diesel engine and 125 MPG and add the electric system later when lithium ion batteries become cheaper? Both of those sound like pretty good deals to me.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    5. Re:Neat idea... by bytedoyen · · Score: 1, Troll

      1. Based on the speed at which most Prius drivers go, they have plenty of time on their hands. and 2. wouldn't it be better to spend the money on retro-fitting older cars. Better to reuse than recycle.

    6. Re:Neat idea... by networkconsultant · · Score: 1

      Loremo to the rescue! Remember the Germans invented the modern highway: http://evolution.loremo.com/index.php?lang=en

    7. Re:Neat idea... by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      1. Based on the speed at which most Prius drivers go, they have plenty of time on their hands. and 2. wouldn't it be better to spend the money on retro-fitting older cars. Better to reuse than recycle.

      Actually there's a Prius owner that drove the same stretch of the 401 as I did at approximately the same time every day and let me tell you, at average speeds of 130-140KPH I wonder why they didn't just buy a damn Corolla and save the extra cash.

      --
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      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    8. Re:Neat idea... by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      Or, one could buy 10 or more easy-to-DIY-fix old VW beetles with enough spare parts and earth-frendliness to last a lifetime.

      People who call Bugs easy to fix have never owned a Dodge Dart. Or better yet a 61-67 Ford van. You could do a bottom end rebuild from inside the vehicle on those. But my best balance of fuel economy and ease of maintenance was the Datsun b210/210. I used to get over 40MPG highway in my late model five speed 210. The 1978 EPA rating was 50MPG highway. It was a better car than the Bug in almost every way. No gas fired heater though.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    9. Re:Neat idea... by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      Why lead-acid? I don't understand why so many EV converters use it nowadays. Because of its lower upfront costs? You're just wasting your money further down the road because you'll have to keep replacing them. Why not just install something that lasts, like lithium phosphate or stabilized spinel cells? You'll end up with a better handling, lighter-weight, more powerful, lower maintenance, faster charging vehicle to boot.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    10. Re:Neat idea... by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      You could do a bottom end rebuild from inside the vehicle on those.

      Heh. You can do that on a few modern cars (I just finished a 99 escort), but it probably isn't the best way to do a rebuild.

    11. Re:Neat idea... by alisson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey if your local mechanic already owns a yacht, he may as well build himself a prius :)

      But other than that, I agree. Who has the time and money? Upper management, and they don't have the interest. Who has the time and interest? Me, but I don't have the money!

    12. Re:Neat idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear Sir,

      You have been misled by the market. The SmartCar is neither gas efficient, nor eco-friendly. It's gas consumption is easily beat by hybrids or old cars with aero-mods. It is highly unaerodynamic and it is small. Small != efficient.

      People in America like big things. Do not associate efficiency with small please. Then people will not think they can be efficient unless they sacrifice things.
      Having a four-person vehicle filled is better than needing two smart-cars.

      Get a Prius, a motorcycle, or a velomobile if you want to be smug and actually make a difference (well, Prius doesn't make too much of a difference).

      Thank you for your consideration in this matter, you mis/uninformed American.

    13. Re:Neat idea... by louden+obscure · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or, one could buy 10 or more easy-to-DIY-fix old VW beetles with enough spare parts and earth-frendliness to last a lifetime.

      nope. i've been through that. i used to traipse through junkyards in search of beetle parts, often finding the part i wanted to be in the same condition as the part that needed replacement.
      and damn near freezing to death during the winter months while driving was never much fun.
      or having the engine seize when the number three exhaust decided enough was enough because the stock oil cooler was sorta in the way...
      or the accelerator cable broke in traffic in a blizzard or...
      i think the earth-friendly part of this solution would be the damn thing won't be running long enough to seriously pollute the atmosphere. that's just me, of course, YMMV.

      --
      Serenity now, insanity later.
    14. Re:Neat idea... by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1

      The difference is that in the Econoline you were sitting in the cab. They were mid-engine vans. You could do it outside in a snowstorm and never know the difference. A friend of mine was doing his bottom end bearings in the rain once when a VW van enthusiast we knew happened by. Needless to say, the guy was seriously rethinking his choice of vehicle by the time he left.

      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
    15. Re:Neat idea... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Us mechanical engineers and maybe an automotive mechanic but a machinist could pry do this for under 10,000 and in under a week if he has access to his own shop. Those machinist bastards are clever we need more of them instead of shipping their jobs overseas.

    16. Re:Neat idea... by Paranatural · · Score: 3, Informative

      As an aside, I've never actually encountered a hybrid owner who was smug about it. A few of my friends own them and it has never even actually been mentioned other than when I was thinking of getting one and asked how it had been running.

    17. Re:Neat idea... by Bob-taro · · Score: 3, Funny

      At least that one looks cool but, really, who has the time to do this? If they have the time then do they have the interest or the money?

      Right, I mean, we all have time for slashdot, but you can't exactly build a car in your cubicle without people noticing!

      --
      Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
    18. Re:Neat idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think anyone seriously expects everyone to do it. It's just a fun project for geeks with money. Well, unless the person who wrote the summary was completely serious... I thought he was speaking lightly.

      I don't know why each photo of it needed its own new page, though.

    19. Re:Neat idea... by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      Let's see

      Slick looking 3 wheel Diesel / electric modular plug-in hybrid that get's between 125 and 230 MPG

      vs

      Cutesy looking 4 wheel gas boxster that gets 33/41 MPG

      Considering you can start by just getting the diesel engine kit for ~$10K and add the electric motor later I'd still opt for the XR3.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    20. Re:Neat idea... by mollymoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Smart is a city car. The brick-like shape isn't very aerodynamic, but low mass is far more important than efficient aerodynamics for city driving. Around town it's much more efficient than most things. If you're starting and stopping, small = efficient, or more accurately, light = efficient.

      If you want a real car that's efficient, buy a Peugeot diesel hatchback. 60 mpg (UK gallons) with no need for fancy hybrid crap, 3/4 the price of a Prius. Unless you and you family are startlingly obese, have three 6'3" kids or regularly drive across continents a 308 is plenty of car. Actually, my dad does drive across continents in his 307 diesel, but only 2-up.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    21. Re:Neat idea... by mollymoo · · Score: 1

      Lead acid batteries are cheap, simple and have good power-to-weight ratio. Not so great in terms of energy density though.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    22. Re:Neat idea... by Bearpaw · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I hear you.

      I have friends and acquaintances who own hybrids, I live in an area where they seem to be fairly common, and I have never, ever encountered anyone being smug about it. I have, however, gotten seriously tired of self-righteous people complaining about these supposed hordes of smug hybrid drivers.

      It seems to have become a requirement: "Any mention of hybrid vehicles must by law be accompanied by a reference to their smug owners."

      Want smug? Try talking to a Hummer owner.

    23. Re:Neat idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A fish doesn't think about the water being wet.

    24. Re:Neat idea... by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      I started driving in an 84 Nissan Sentra almost the same car. It got 40+ on the highway (we had 55 mph speed limit then which helped) and it was cheap to fix. Where's a 50-60mph GAS car comparable to that?

    25. Re:Neat idea... by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      most importantly, they have known, available recycling facilities. One dark side of electric cars is that they use some nasty materials in the batteries and other parts that cause poisoning if they get handled improperly.

    26. Re:Neat idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the Prius can get 40mpg at 145KPH with more interior space.

    27. Re:Neat idea... by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Except the closest to a Peugeot diesel hatchback you can buy in the US is a VW diesel hatchback.

      And they don't sell them any more (because Golfs are made in Germany instead of Mexico, yet are sold for less than the Mexican-made Jettas,) so the closest to that that you can get is a VW diesel sedan (saloon.)

    28. Re:Neat idea... by bhtooefr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And you could probably cut that price further by getting a used motor of that class... I've got access to a bunch of Kubota D950 motors (slightly larger displacement, older, but same technology) that I could probably get for free.

      Or, pay a little more, and get a different motor - I'm thinking a Yanmar 3TNV82A-BDSA. Yes, it's over 100 lbs heavier, but you get 10 more horsepower, and below 3000 RPM a significant increase in BSFC, due to it being direct injection.

      (Alternately, you could probably put that engine's head and fuel injection system on a smaller Yanmar such as the 3TNV70-CSA.)

    29. Re:Neat idea... by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      Because the Prius can get 40mpg at 145KPH with more interior space.

      Bull. At 145KPH the Prius is using an under-powered 4 cylinder engine and dragging the heavily electrical components along for the ride. The interior space is roughly comparable and you'll wind up with even poorer fuel economy.

      In Canadian gallons, the Prius gets 67MPG tested at an average speed of 77KPH and a top speed of 97KPH on a 16-km course. Keeping in mind the deterioration of economy from the city rating of 71MPG on a stop-and-go 12km course with an average speed of 32KPH and a top speed of 91KPH with 18 stops and approx. 4 minutes of idling time. Remember that the Prius was designed for short, stop-and-go city commutes so the higher you bring the speed the sharper the decline in economy.

      Sorry sir, but you're going to have to try an awful lot harder than that. :)

      n.b. Anybody who buys a Hybrid Synergy Driveline vehicle without doing their proper research and winds up driving like a maniac like that individual in the silver Pruis is, frankly, either mentally deficient, has a disproportionate amount of money compared to grey matter, or is a yuppie hippy environmentalist who only cares about telling their friends they drive a damned Prius.

      Otherwise I'd like to direct your attention to the recent Top Gear track test where they drove the Prius around the track at top speed and followed it in a BMW M3 (or was it an M5?) and discovered that the German car consumed less fuel. So if you want to drive at 145KPH on the 401 twice a day, buy a Bimmer. You'll be doing the environment a favour.

      QED, etc.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    30. Re:Neat idea... by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      Ahh ... memories. I used to have a diesel VW Rabbit. It ran forever on a tank of fuel. Of course, it only made a grand total of 48 horsepower.

      As my roommate once said after borrowing it, "That's not an accelerator, that's a volume control."

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    31. Re:Neat idea... by Rei · · Score: 1

      Their power to weight ratio is quite poor in comparison to the stable li-ion forms. They're only "cheap" if you completely ignore maintenance.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    32. Re:Neat idea... by Rei · · Score: 1

      One *myth* about electric cars is that all EV batteries inherently use some nasty materials. Only two common types of batteries are particularly toxic -- lead-acid and nickel-cadmium. These should always be recycled. NiMH is somewhat toxic, and should also be recycled. Conventional li-ion are minorly toxic (the LiCoO2 cathode); it's best to recycle them, but it's not a huge deal if you don't. The automotive li-ions with non-cobalt cathodes are essentially nontoxic, as are zebras.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    33. Re:Neat idea... by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      I've got an 86 Golf diesel that's rotting away, waiting for a friend to take the engine... I had the 1.6L, so I got 52 hp! w00t!

      The last year for the Golf diesel in the US (the Rabbit is a rebadged Golf, but the 2006.5-present Rabbit has never been sold with a diesel) is 2006.

    34. Re:Neat idea... by Firrenzi · · Score: 1

      Right, I mean, we all have time for slashdot, but you can't exactly build a car in your cubicle without people noticing!

      You don't work for a government company do you?

      --
      The Tao that can be named is not the Tao
    35. Re:Neat idea... by mscholin · · Score: 1

      But San Fransisco was destroyed by the smug cloud that was formed from hybrid owners! It's not possible for someone to drive a hybrid and not be smug about it.

    36. Re:Neat idea... by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      They are also "cheap" in terms of start-up cost. I can drop $1k on a hobby car's batteries and meet my needs. It's a much larger barrier to entry to drop $10k on a hobby car.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
  3. buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by scarbelly · · Score: 5, Informative

    there are plenty of people doing nice electric S10's for under $10k including the donor car. The 40 miles round trip per charge is almost twice what I need.

    --
    I'll have the fries, please....
    1. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by BitterOldGUy · · Score: 1

      there are plenty of people doing nice electric S10's for under $10k including the donor car. The 40 miles round trip per charge is almost twice what I need.

      I had the same thought. Or at least a kit to put the hybrid guts in an old VW or old Hyundai - for less than $25,000 which I'm sure a lot of that cost is for that fancy ugly looking body and frame.

    2. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is what I am doing. It is a fun project to design and build. Plus, I needed a truck to haul stuff around town anyway. It's also safe and practical to drive, and other people wouldn't be scared to ride in it on the highway going 70 mph.

      And if you do it right, most people wouldn't be able to tell from looking at it that it is an electric vehicle. It looks the same as any other truck.

    3. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Rei · · Score: 1

      Sure, if a used vehicle, 40 miles range, 60mph top speed, very poor power, and having to replace your lead-acid batteries every 3-6 years is acceptable to you, then yes, you can do that. As for me, I need 100+ miles range, 80-90mph top speed, reasonable acceleration, and a battery pack that lasts the life of the vehicle. Hence, I'm on the waiting list for a $27k Aptera. However, it's hardly the only such vehicle that's coming out in the next couple years; there are dozens. If, for some reason, Aptera weren't to work out, I'd probably go with a Mitsubishi i-MiEV. I just prefer the Aptera because of its extreme efficiency.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    4. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by rhpenguin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Heck yes! I'm actually building an EV S-10 right now.. I'm coming in at around $7K total build costs after selling the ICE and other ICE related objects I don't need. However, my range is going to be around 150 miles.

    5. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nuclear power is the way to go. Will the LHC come to our recue by finding a safe and cheap solution?

    6. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by snowraver1 · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt about it, an electric car is not for everyone. I personally, could not have just an electric car (vacations, etc), but our second car could be electric. For commuting, electric is IMO, the way to go.

      To the parent: The costs of owning an electric car and a gas car are different. Aside from the obvoius fuel cost differences, an electric car is MUCH more reliable than a gas car. An electic car has very few moving parts. Ever spent $1000 repairing your car becuase of a hard to pin down problem?

      Oil chagnes are my least favourite part of owning a car. Every several months I have to wait in line for 30 mins to wait 20 mins for some high school kid to change my oil @ $50/pop. Electric cars need oil changes something like every 70k km.

      My point is (and I do have one) that while electric are not in a position to kill gas cars, they do make sense to be used for daily commutes. I think that the maintenance for electric cars (battery replacements) would be quite in line with conventional cars.

      No, I don't have an electric car (but would like one in the coming years).

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      Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. This comment may not be copied in any way including, but not limited to caching.
    7. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Linux_ho · · Score: 1

      At $7k you've got to be using lead-acid batteries... 150 miles? At what speed, 20 mph? Color me skeptical. Good luck with that, anyway.

      --
      include $sig;
      1;
    8. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Rei · · Score: 1

      Don't get me wrong; I'm such an advocate of EVs that I'm on the waiting list for an Aptera ;) I'm just "keeping it real" here. Yes, the drivetrain is simpler. However, the drivetrain isn't the only thing on a vehicle that can break. Tires, brake pads, brake rotors, drive belts and pulleys (my Aptera will have two of each; the belts alone will cost ~$100 and have to be replaced every couple years), air conditioning/heating, radio (in the Aptera, there's an in-car computer nav/entertainment system, four nav cameras, and several LCD displays), locks/windows, seats, seatbelts, airbags, cooling fans, windshield wipers and fluid, brake fluid, power steering fluid (if not rack & pinion), traction control (if present), ESC (if present), headlights, brake lights, running lights, internal lights, and so on. If you're lucky, you might cut your maintenance costs in half. It'll probably be more than that, however.

      From all of the numbers I've seen, lead-acid EVs and those with traditional li-ion (instead of the long-life variants) simply don't make financial sense. You spend too much on the battery replacements to offset the fuel costs. With more long-life batteries (NiMH, stable li-ions, zebra, etc), however, the numbers do make a compelling economic argument to switch, even with the (currently) high price of batteries.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    9. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by spike2131 · · Score: 1

      I think putting a nuclear reactor in an S-10 is a little much. If you are going to have a nuclear powered truck, I'd go with at least an F-150.

      --
      SpyDock: Scientific Python in a Docker container
    10. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by rhpenguin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, I only paid $200 for the truck.

      To get costs at that $7K number I completely rebuilt the ICE motor with some performance goodies that I had kicking around the garage and sold it for a pretty penny to someone who didn't know any better, sold the entire interior, box, ECU and wiring harness, etc. To get the weight down and make the truck get the range I'm shooting for I chopped a lot of the body away, tubbed and tubed with a full FIA approved safety cage the truck, replaced the dash with a lightweight aluminum dash, fiberglass race seats, and hand fabbed a lot of the new body from fiberglass. Basically the kind of prep work that goes into a race car to make it really light is the kind of stuff I've done. Two guys can lift the rolling chassis up with ease.

      Of course, having all the tools, knowhow and patience to do everything myself DRASTICALLY brings the cost down. .

    11. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by theinvisibleguy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My dad's been working on converting a Dodge Ram, one of the little ones that had a Mitsubishi engine, however this project has gone on for over 10 years. He started it for the exact same reasons but the time just isn't there.

    12. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      $50 a pop? You need to check out the plethora of coupons that you are probably already getting to cut that at least in half. (I'm ignoring the even cheaper option of doing it yourself since I'm a lazy bum who doesn't do oil changes myself either.)

    13. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to check out the plethora of coupons that you are probably already getting

      That, or learn to change it yourself. It's not that difficult. Unless you're in the city and don't really have a place to perform even simple maintenance yourself.

    14. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by snowraver1 · · Score: 1

      in the Aptera, there's an in-car computer nav/entertainment system, four nav cameras, and several LCD displays), locks/windows, seats, seatbelts, airbags, cooling fans, windshield wipers and fluid, brake fluid, power steering fluid (if not rack & pinion), traction control (if present), ESC (if present), headlights, brake lights, running lights, internal lights, and so on. If you're lucky, you might cut your maintenance costs in half. It'll probably be more than that, however.

      All this is present in a gas powered car too, making this a moot point.

      --
      Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. This comment may not be copied in any way including, but not limited to caching.
    15. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      I said that in my parenthetical comment.

    16. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Rei · · Score: 1

      Right. Present in *both*; they can break in *both*. Parts in the drivetrain are only a fraction of things that can break in a car. Hence, the difference in maintenance isn't as big as you might think.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    17. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by saigon_from_europe · · Score: 1

      Apart from the shell (which is very durable in modern cars, even in the cheap ones), most complicate system that both electric and gas powered car do have is breaking system. Ok, we may say that the air conditioning is more complicate, but it is not an essential part.

      Electric car does not have: transmission (reliable part but very expensive if it breaks), it does not have a clutch, it does not have an ICE engine.

      Electric car, unlike the ICE one has an electronic device that converts battery voltage to the desired voltage of the engine. This is equivalent of the carburetor or "direct injection" in modern cars. But being an electronic component it does not have any movable part. Being static adds very much to the reliability. And of course, there is an electric motor.

      To make this long story short. Less movable parts - better reliability.

      As an electric engineer, I would place my bet that electric cars will be significantly easier/cheaper to maintain, but it is very hard to know what the probabilities really would be. Maybe first widely sold models will be poorly built for some totally unrelated reason.

      Current electric vehicles - typically trains, trams and forklifts - are built as extremely robust, so it is very hard to compare them to cars.

      --
      No sig today.
    18. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      And of course you re-used / recycled all the parts that you hacked off, right?

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      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    19. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to electric by Rei · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing that they'll be lower maintenance. I'm disagreeing that there will be a huge difference, as many people describing them make the situation out to be. I agree that your typical ruggedized 3-phase brushless AC motor, a cooling fan, an inverter, and optionally a charger are simpler than an entire ICE drivetrain (esp. if the ICE drivetrain has a transmission). However, that's only a fraction of what can break.

      You don't seem to be making a "huge difference" argument, so I think we're in agreement :)

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  4. "Zero dollars in manufacture" by Mononoke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It'll cost you $25,000 for the bits, plus zero dollars in manufacture, I hope.

    Only if your time is worth zero dollars.

    --
    NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
    1. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by pecosdave · · Score: 3, Funny

      I know some people like that. Unfortunately, since there time is actually worth close to zero dollars asking them to build it for me would get me close to zero progress wouldn't it? Actually my guess is they would screw it up so bad I would have to throw it all out and buy another kit if I tried to get them to build it for me.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    2. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by noidentity · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Same goes for the zero pollution to manufacture; last time I checked, it takes food, shelter, diversions, etc. to "power" a human. I wouldn't be surprised if having people build things by hand polluted the environment more than by machine. Sure, the machine generates more obvious pollution, but it's building them tens to hundreds as times as fast as a human.

    3. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Qzukk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Only if your time is worth zero dollars.

      Or the entertainment you receive from putting together your own toys is greater than the cost of your time, in which case you might even "profit".

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    4. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It'll cost you $25,000 for the bits, plus zero dollars in manufacture, I hope.

      Only if your time is worth zero dollars.

      So just like Open Source Software, then.

      It should go over very well here.

      For the record, if my car wasn't under a very comprehensive warranty for the next five years, I'd order the parts and do the conversion just so I could say that I'd done it.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    5. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 2, Informative

      Same goes for the zero pollution to manufacture; last time I checked, it takes food, shelter, diversions, etc. to "power" a human. I wouldn't be surprised if having people build things by hand polluted the environment more than by machine.

      And that same human requires those same things regardless of whether or not he's building a car from a kit, right? At least until we can manage to make cryostasis actually work that is.

    6. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      I move at light speed, you insensitive clod!

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    7. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but that human is already alive and using food, shelter, etc and polluting like you are saying. So would you rather have a machine which adds direct pollution or at least make the 'polluting' human productive. It's going to happen either way, unless you advocate killing people.

    8. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Rei · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not exactly. Exercise increases the rate of burning calories (that's why people who want to lose weight do it). The human body is inefficient about turning food calories into kinetic energy, and plants are inefficient at turning sunlight into calories (photosynthesis is fairly efficient, but most of the energy doesn't end up stored in a way we can recover through digestion -- usually somewhere between a fraction of one percent and a few percent is). And there's all of the energy involved in growing, harvesting, processing, and transporting that food, which is often greater than the energy contained in the food.

      Lastly, there's a value to time. The person could instead, for example, be building wind turbines or installing solar arrays. The biggest reason why this is a kit car is almost certainly because the maker didn't want to have to work out a cost-effective mass production system, not because it's somehow better for the environment that way.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    9. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by maxume · · Score: 1

      Working cryostatis may well require more energy than staying alive the old fashioned way.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    10. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Only if your time is worth zero dollars.

      So just like Open Source Software, then.

      The implication of Zawinski's assertion is false.
      What matters is if it is cheaper for you to do it than it is for you to pay someone else to do it and any future modifications down the line since without source you never get the option to do it yourself.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    11. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. Exercise increases the rate of burning calories (that's why people who want to lose weight do it)....Lastly, there's a value to time. The person could instead, for example, be building wind turbines or installing solar array

      So you're telling me that if this person were not involved in building a kit car, they'd either be doing nothing or building wind turbines or installing solar panels? That's a bit far-fetched don't you think?

    12. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by fprintf · · Score: 1

      Given the weight of many slashdotters, or Americans anyway, I would say they can build a few cars for free on the energy in their stored fat reserves. If the average builder of one of these cars is 20 pounds overweight, they'd need to do 60,000 calories worth of moving about in addition to what they do every day anyway. I'd say that the energy costs of feeding the likely human builders of these cars is negligible, and in many cases would provide a benefit to the person -- heck, 20 pounds less weight in the electric car means better perfomance too!

      --
      This post brought to you by your friendly neighborhood MBA.
    13. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Dare+nMc · · Score: 3, Informative

      The biggest reason why this is a kit car is almost certainly because

      my guess would be so they don't have to pass all the crash and safety laws and regulations. much like kit airplanes, kit cars do not have to pass the same safety standards (which I understand involves destroying many cars = bad for the environment)
      I am sure their are lots of other savings as well (shipping, licensing, financing, etc.) Also lots less warranty, because it will be on average years before many make any use of their cars.

    14. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by n3tcat · · Score: 4, Funny

      wait a second... did you just figure out Step 3)???

    15. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Shotgun · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Having nearly completed building a one-off airplane, I can attest to the fact that a one-off greatly increases the amount of 'stuff' going into the waste stream. It seems that each part made for the airplane requires a mold, jig or custom clamp to hold it in place. Buy the time I finish, I will have built the equivalent of 2.5 airplanes, and none of those molds, jigs or clamps will be useful to anyone else.

      Let there be no doubt. Massive manufacturing operations really do decrease the waste-stream volume on a per unit basis.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    16. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by 74nova · · Score: 1

      well, I have no mod points right now, but I certainly thought this was funny

      --
      use your turn signal! you people act like it's divulging information to the enemy
    17. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      Ding ding ding! Give Qzukk a medal for bringing that up. The latest Scientific American Mind edition has an article about the benefits of tinkering with your hands, and the long term costs of not doing so, which may include clinical-grade depression.

      The article's gated, but the summary gives most of the important stuff. Basically, by having so much stuff automated, we miss out on chances to use our bodies (especially hands) and see the progress that results. This cycle that we're missing out on, is what our human psychology was adapted for in the ancestral environment, so when you don't get it somehow today, your body can become, in a sense, convinced it's useless and start to shut down.

      Upon reading that article in a bookstore, it occurred to me that this is exactly where video games get their appeal: they get you to use your hands to work toward something, and give you constant feedback indicating that you're making progress. (World of Warcraft, anyone?) But then, they don't do a lot to stave off depression, do they? Hm.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    18. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      Only if your time is worth zero dollars.

      Or the entertainment you receive from putting together your own toys is greater than the cost of your time, in which case you might even "profit".

      The moral of the story is, don't conflate time with money. You can set a value to your time, but that's as far as you can go, because sometimes value isn't about money.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    19. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      If you enjoy doing that and it's your hobby, it's worth doing. If everyone did it I'm sure the carbon footprint of manufacturing all the tools necessary to assemble a vehicle would be more than having the factory do it and ship the cars. Even if a lot of people were sharing the tools.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    20. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Step 2 is ???, step 3 is profit.

    21. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Same goes for the zero pollution to manufacture; last time I checked, it takes food, shelter, diversions, etc. to "power" a human. I wouldn't be surprised if having people build things by hand polluted the environment more than by machine.

      And that same human requires those same things regardless of whether or not he's building a car from a kit, right?

      He could be doing something other than what a machine could do.

    22. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1

      So just like Open Source Software, then.

      Yeah, because when your domain controller goes down because of a fucked up Microsoft Service Pack (W2K SP4, I'm looking at you), they are SO bloody helpful when you phone them up.

      Face it, unless you're a major customer (we only had a 3000 seat license), you'll be doing a good deal of trouble-shooting on your own whether commercial or open source.

      --
      "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
    23. Re:"Zero dollars in manufacture" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or if you wouldn't be generating revenue with that time anyway.

  5. Motorcycle, not a car by MightyYar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Like so many of these things, it's a motorcycle - not a car. It only has 3 wheels so that they don't have to meet safety standards.

    Who knew you could lighten up a car if you stripped out all of the safety equipment?

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    1. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Who knew you could lighten up a car if you stripped out all of the safety equipment?

      That's pretty much what American car manufacturers do anyway, which is why they don't sell in the UK or EU. The insurance conditions are so onerous for some makes of American car that you're going to be taking the bus most days.

    2. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Rei · · Score: 1

      Not *having* to meet safety standards != Not meeting safety standards. There are about a dozen advantages to the tadpole trike design -- reduced wind resistance, lighter weight, lower construction cost, lower maintenance, drivetrain simplicity, and so on. Honestly, I'd love it if we:

      A) Ditched our classification system based on the number of wheels
      B) Came up with a set of environmental and safety classifications that vehicles could voluntarily choose to try to qualify for
      C) Required that their environmental and safety classifications be prominently listed on vehicles for sale
      D) Banned vehicles that don't meet given requirements from different kinds of operation -- for example, perhaps to drive on a public road at all, you must meet at least "silver" environmental standards, and to drive on a highway, you must meet at least "bronze" safety standards, while for a child to ride in a vehicle on any public road, it has to have at least a "silver" safety rating. Something to that nature.

      I don't see why those who want to innovate should be penalized for doing so. All that should matter is the net results: how safe it is and how clean it is. And furthermore, if I want to buy and drive a deathtrap, so long as it's not needlessly endangering *others*, that should be my choice and my choice alone.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    3. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Ummm.. Actually US safety requirements tend to be greater than EU requirements.
      The reason that US cars tend not to be sold in the UK is the UK is too small of a market to build for. That RHD thing. US cars are not designed to be easy to convert.
      You can buy a few US cars in the UK. The Corvette for one.
      For the rest of the EU there is no real need to sell US cars there except for a few like the Corvette. Ford has is in Europe as is GM. Probably the big reason that US cars cost so much to insure in the EU is that they cost so much to repair. There are not that many so parts are expensive. Same as in the US. I can buy 3 alternators for a Ford or even a Toyota for the cost of one for my old Saab 9000.

      For the longest time you didn't see many European cars in the US for the reasons you gave. The US for many years had much higher pollution and safety requirements than most of Europe.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    4. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Ummm.. Actually US safety requirements tend to be greater than EU requirements.

      That'll be why, for example, Hummer H2s often have conditions on the insurance that they can't be driven at night or in the rain. I think in terms of passenger safety they scored about the same as a Nissan Micra.

    5. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The safety standards are not more lax in the US, but pedestrian safety isn't taken into account.

      The main reason US cars aren't available in Europe is that most US automakers have specific European vehicles - the reverse is also true. The platforms are shared more and more these days, but the markets are significantly different. Gas, as high as it is, is cheaper in the US. Roads are larger. Emissions requirements tend to be higher in the US. Safety standards are different.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    6. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      1. The H2 isn't a car. It is considered a light duty truck.
      2. Light duty trucks do not have the same saftey requirements as cars in the US. "I do think that is a mistake since way to many light duty trucks are used as cars in the US".
      The original post said US cars. So I limited my comments to cars.
      Also isn't the Mica actually a pretty safe auto? The limits on the H2 probably have a lot more to do with the risk of hitting other cars than risk to the H2 drivers. Anyone that drives an H2 or for that matter a Range Rover in the UK is more than just a little nuts IMHO. The roads are too small and frankly what one out 5000 users would ever need to take them off road. Silly waste for most people.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    7. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm all for more information to the consumer, but what you just proposed would be MORE expensive and have even MORE of a penalty to small independent types. The whole reason that they go to three wheels is to skirt the CURRENT reporting and testing standards.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    8. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Also isn't the Mica actually a pretty safe auto?

      The new ones yes, the older ones not so much. In fact, the one and only time I've been in a Hummer H2 I was reminded of the mk. 1 Micra - acres of naff plastic and flimsy tinny bodywork. Maybe I'm unduly biased because of that.

    9. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Rei · · Score: 1

      And they could likewise choose to go through minimal or no safety qualifications. The key word is *choice*. Not "how many wheels you have", but "what you *choose* to do".

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    10. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly confident that if consumers would accept the 3-wheeled design, the major automakers wouldn't have stopped making them. It's a doomed design IMHO.

      That aside, I'm also fairly confident that all of these new 3-wheelers coming out are going to strangely "choose" not to do much non-required testing. There may be that one exception out in California - forget the name of the outfit - but they claim to be conducting voluntary crash tests.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    11. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be so, you can buy kit cars in the UK (a lot of them) which do have to pass a road test (called the SVA) before it can be ridden on the road.

      Take a Fisher Fury for instance, it runs with a bike engine (put a fireblade engine in it) and will do 1-60 in 4.5 seconds. With the corresponding fuel economy of a bike, but in a sportcars chassis.

      Sure, you don't get aircon, electric seats or airbags, but it would be roadworthy.

    12. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      The H2 isn't typical of US cars thank goodness.
      Hummers are great if you need one. The problem is way to many people buy them when they really don't need them.
      I have a friend that would love a Hummer. Of course she is a geologist that does a good amount of field work. For her it is not completely silly.
      I have no need of one. Now if you want to see totally whacked out take a look at the Hummer H1!
      But as I said they are as useless as most Range Rovers. Don't they call them Chelsee tractors or some such thing in the UK?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    13. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who knew? Everybody!
      Mod this guy up Funny.

    14. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      A road test is hardly as demanding as multiple crash tests. :)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    15. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Philip+Shaw · · Score: 1

      It would be Chelsea, not Chelsee, but possibly. In .au, especially .vic.au, they call them Toorak tractors, after one of the richest suburbs in Melbourne. I suspect other places they would use variations on this theme.

      --
      "A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject."- Winston Churchill
    16. Re:Motorcycle, not a car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the angle GM is trying to negotiate with the US govt atm.

      lift the safety standards for cars made in america so they can become more "fuel efficient" and get $50 billion of taxpayer money because no one's buying their cars anymore.

      they just want to build the cars as cheap as possible and pocket as much money as they can before the bottom falls out.

  6. Building anything harms the environment by Smidge204 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Building hybrids uses machinery that pollutes the environment. The solution? Don't build anything!

    That said, though, I looked up what would be required to build an all-electric vehicle and it was about $10k not including a vehicle to convert. Not a cheap hobby, unfortunately :/
    =Smidge=

    1. Re:Building anything harms the environment by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      yes but you make up for that at the first trip to the pump.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
  7. I disagree with what's written on the main page, by pecosdave · · Score: 2, Interesting

    By providing prints and the ability to build parts/put the damned thing together to begin with it's not to give smug yuppies something to be conceded about. It's to give hotrodders the ability to make supped up hybrid! Seriously, I would love to get most of one of these kits, put two kits into a car if possible for the extra kick, throw in a powerful V6 instead of a four (or even three) banger, then put it all in the body of a Dodge Charger.

    The electric part could actually take it off the line better than a gas engine, the gas engine would add the power, something like that should kick ass on the quarter mile then do a relatively slow victory lap without using any gas.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  8. Why stop there? by earthforce_1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why not design the car yourself - using bits and pieces found at your local junkyard? Better yet - smelt the metal in your garage and take up blacksmithing to make all the bits. Sort of like building your own computer from discrete transistors.

    --
    My rights don't need management.
    1. Re:Why stop there? by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why not design the car yourself - using bits and pieces found at your local junkyard? Better yet - smelt the metal in your garage and take up blacksmithing to make all the bits. Sort of like building your own computer from discrete transistors.

      If you haven't built a small computer from discrete components, I'd say that you may have some gaps in your understanding.

      It's a real pain, but there is a certain satisfaction of manually triggering the cycles and watching it read and write.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    2. Re:Why stop there? by IorDMUX · · Score: 1

      Sort of like building your own computer from discrete transistors.

      I was at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA, this past weekend. I saw a single 8-bit register that was the size of your average Dell laptop. Not bad for portable computing, as long as you can do some impressive programs with your byte.

      --
      >> Standing on head makes smile of frown, but rest of face also upside down.
  9. uh, no, that's not the reason by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 5, Informative

    Uh, building a hybrid at home probably makes more pollution than making it in a factory.

    The reason they sell it as a kit is to avoid all the federal vehicle rules. By passing on assembly to the end-user, it becomes THEIR problem to get the car licensed.

    Also I don't quite get the "zero dollars to manufacture". Lots of the steps involve lots of time, welding, painting, trips to the hardware store. That all costs many $$$.

    1. Re:uh, no, that's not the reason by thered2001 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree completely. The first part of this article makes an assumption which doesn't seem too solid: that automotive machinery pollutes. If this is a reference to the byproducts of the power generated to run the machines, then I fail to see how running smaller machines in your home will improve the situation. Plus, power (and pollution?) is still needed to make the parts for a car no matter who puts it together. Sounds like someone is just trying to appear 'green' and cash in on the hybrid craze with kit 'car' (actually a motorcycle as an astute reader notes above).

      --

      If your only tool is a hammer, every problem becomes a nail.

    2. Re:uh, no, that's not the reason by PPH · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The reason they sell it as a kit is to avoid all the federal vehicle rules. By passing on assembly to the end-user, it becomes THEIR problem to get the car licensed.

      Good point. But to be accurate, the licensing becomes a non-issue. You start with a car complete with license. Then you mod it. Once you have a license, you can do pretty much anything you want with a vehicle, so long as you leave the safety and emission equipment needed for inspections intact.

      The other advantage is that federal regs mandating manufacturer warranties don't apply. This is what killed GM's EV1. The requirement to provide spare parts for a few thousand cars would have cost GM millions (think batteries).

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re:uh, no, that's not the reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Running smaller machines in your home" improves the situation by a simple equation:

      the car maker doesn't make more cars than are ordered, so there are no factories using resources day and night to manufacture vehicles that they may or may not sell.

      this method doesn't appear green, it IS green(er) than the normal program car manufacturing process.

  10. Not a zero footprint solution by halcyon1234 · · Score: 1

    Building hybrids uses machinery that pollutes the environment. The solution? Ship the parts of a hybrid individually and get your customers to put the car together themselves.

    And you plan on shipping those parts using what exactly? I'm willing to be that the energy used to plant-machine the car then drive it to my house on hybrid power, and the energy used to fossil-fueled 18-wheeler ship a ton of crap to my house are at least on par-- if the latter is not even worse.

    And what about packaging? Because seriously, if this is what cmos batteries take to ship, I'd had to see how many Styrofoam peanuts go into shipping a car.

    1. Re:Not a zero footprint solution by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Probably not. Hybrids aren't magic. Those 18 wheelers are pretty efficient for what they do. Now, if you loaded a dozen of these assembled hybrids on an 18 wheeler and drove it to your town, you could very well do better than loading up two 18 wheelers with parts for a dozen of these things (extra space taken up by extra packaging).

    2. Re:Not a zero footprint solution by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      Those 18 wheelers are pretty efficient for what they do.

      I could coax 7 MPG (U.S. gallons) out of the ones I drove while hauling 40,000 lbs (18,144 kg). Not too bad when you consider that some big pickup trucks only get 12 MPG.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
  11. and good luck... by spookymonster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...getting it insured. Just ask anyone who's ever built one of those DIY motorcycle kits or a custom shop (like OCC).

    --
    - Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
  12. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by pragma_x · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "The electric part could actually take it off the line better than a gas engine,"

    THIS.

    The best part about that is you wouldn't need a bank of batteries to do the job. A large capacitor bank (or super-capacitors once they're available) would work great. Just enough juice to break the inertia of the car and lug it off the line is all you really need.

  13. Hybrids suck anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once you include the manufacture of the batteries, they emit more CO2 than most modern diesel cars. Once you include the cost of the batteries, they cost more than most modern diesel cars. Just buy a modern fuel-efficient diesel engine with a small body e.g. a VW Golf TDI.

    1. Re:Hybrids suck anyway by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      Several things wrong with this.

      1) The amount of energy needed to produce a modern battery generally only measures a few charge cycles worth. Virtually every peer-reviewed study of cars shows exactly what you'd expect: that far more energy is consumed during their lifetimes than during their construction. Your average car will burn a couple times it's own weight in fuel over its lifespan, and none of that is "recycled" like most of the car's body.

      2) Yes, EVs cost more to buy than diesel cars currently. They also consume electricity which averages $0.10/kWh in the US instead of diesel which averages, what, $4.30/gal? Your average 40mpg-diesel sedan would take about 250Wh/mi electric, which equates to 9.3 cents per mile diesel and 2.5 cents per mile electric. Assuming reasonable battery longevity (i.e., either NiMH, zebra, or automotive li-ions, not lead-acid or traditional li-ions), the total cost of ownership for EVs is very favorable to them over their lifespans. This allows all sorts of methods to work around sticker shock for those who are concerned, such as longer loans, leases, surcharges on electricity fillups or battery swaps, battery rental, or so forth -- all of which give you a normal up-front cost and monthly operations costs that are still lower than what the average driver would spend on gas or diesel. And this is just with current battery costs; they're falling fast. Ener1 (parent company of battery maker EnerDel), for example, expects their cell prices to be cut in half over the next few years. Most automotive li-ion aren't even close to being limited by raw material costs.

      3) Most diesel numbers are quite distorted to boot. Yes, diesel engines are more efficient than gasoline engines. No, they're not *that* much more efficient. Most people will look at some european diesel and lament that they're getting 50mpg or so and we can't get it here.

      A) Diesel is simply a more dense fuel -- about 15% denser. Gasoline mpg != diesel mpg. Just ethanol mpgs are going to be inherently lower than gasoline due to its lower density, diesel is inherently going to get an artificial 15% boost that isn't representative of, say, it's CO2 footprint or how much oil it represents.
      B) The european drive cycle is more lax than the revised EPA drivecycle, and is more similar to the old EPA drivecycle. Remember how much nicer the official numbers used to look in the US? Remember how they worked out in the real world? Same issue.
      C) Sometimes the "gallons" you see on mpg numbers for european cars are imperial gallons, not US gallons. Imperial gallons are larger.

      In general, a diesel car will emit around 80% as much CO2 per mile and consume about 80% as much oil chemical energy. It's a difference, and even a relevant one, but not as big of a difference as it at first appears.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    2. Re:Hybrids suck anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have any facts to back that up, or are you just another neo-con spouting crap?

    3. Re:Hybrids suck anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not only talking about construction energy for the battery. There's the entire processing cycle for the nickel, which puts a hybrid at a profound disadvantage compared to a diesel from day one.

      I'm also not assuming what you call "reasonable" battery life. I doubt they last more than five years without significant loss of capacity. A good diesel engine will last at least fifteen.

      "Most people will look at some european diesel and lament that they're getting 50mpg or so and we can't get it here."

      I'm getting 50-60mpg depending on conditions. I'm European. I pay a lot more for diesel than you would in the states. It's still cheaper to run than a Prius (electricity is correspondingly more expensive too, of course).

      Why can't you "get that here" (i.e. in the US)? You can't ship cars from Europe but you can from Asia? Or is your diesel of lower quality? I don't understand that at all.

      It's possible that a hybrid makes sense if you live in LA and do nothing but commute on the 10. A bicycle would make sense in those conditions. I bet you don't see many Prius's on the interstate though.

    4. Re:Hybrids suck anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not only talking about construction energy for the battery. There's the entire processing cycle for the nickel, which puts a hybrid at a profound disadvantage compared to a diesel from day one.

      I dispute that this can be measured as a few recharges worth.

      I'm also not assuming what you call "reasonable" battery life. I doubt they last more than five years without significant loss of capacity. A good diesel engine will last at least fifteen. So take the battery construction cost and triple it.

      "Most people will look at some european diesel and lament that they're getting 50mpg or so and we can't get it here."

      I'm getting 50-60mpg depending on conditions.

      A) Fuel type is irrelevant for engines that only accept one type of fuel. mpg = miles / gallons. It's how far you can go per gallon of fuel.
      B) I also have a lower emissions class than a hybrid.
      C) All the mpg figures are in imperial gallons. I'm European, you insensitive clod. km/l would be easier to compare.

      It's possible that a hybrid makes sense if you live in LA and do nothing but commute on the 10. A bicycle would make sense in those conditions. Perhaps the Prius only works in the US.

      [BTW I may have already posted an earlier version of this comment - I just put Vista on my work machine and it's got new mouse button mappings I wasn't expecting on mouse buttons I didn't know I had.]

    5. Re:Hybrids suck anyway by Rei · · Score: 1

      You did; I'll only respond to this one ;)

      I'm not only talking about construction energy for the battery. There's the entire processing cycle for the nickel, which puts a hybrid at a profound disadvantage compared to a diesel from day one.

      No, it does not. Just stop and think about this for a second. A new hybrid battery costs about $3k these days. Just assuming that everything else was *free*, and that the *only* cost in making it was was dirt-cheap electricity (i.e., maximizing the amount of energy possibly spent manufacturing it), and that there was *no* profit margin, *no* shipping costs, *no* labor, etc. That'd be about 30,000kWh, or 108 GJ, or about 800 gallons of diesel, or about the energy you can turn to torque from 200 gallons of diesel after losses, which, assuming 38mpg and the average 12,000 miles a year, works out to just over 1 1/2 years of fuel. This is assuming that the *only* costs are electricity, the cheapest form of bulk energy, and ignores that the nickel gets *recovered* by recycling. I mean, the concept doesn't even withstand the laugh test.

      I'm also not assuming what you call "reasonable" battery life. I doubt they last more than five years without significant loss of capacity.

      Then you doubt reality. NiMH RAV4EVs have been on the road since the late 90s, and they're still working great. Hybrids stress their packs a lot more than EVs (more charge/discharge cycles at a higher rate), and the packs for most hybrids have an 8 or so year warranty. In testing, the automotive variants of li-ions are even more durable than NiMHs. There's this widespread myth that you seem to have fallen for that somehow batteries must inherently die in short order. This is simply false; it's all dependant on the stability of the battery chemistry. Jay Leno owns an early 1900s Baker Electric that still runs on its original nickel-iron batteries.

      I'm getting 50-60mpg depending on conditions.

      Yeay, a data-free unsupported anecdote!

      A) Fuel type is irrelevant for engines that only accept one type of fuel. mpg = miles / gallons. It's how far you can go per gallon of fuel.

      If you're an idiot. Who only cares about the *number* of gallons that they burn? Most people care about how much oil they're consuming (15% more in a gallon of diesel), how much CO2 they're emitting (15% more per gallon of diesel burned), how much they're paying (diesel is more expensive per gallon), and so on. Heck, by your argument, we should all buy cars that run on a beryllium slurry, if all you care about is how many miles you go per gallon burned.

      B) I also have a lower emissions class than a hybrid.

      And you'll be more specific when...?

      C) All the mpg figures are in imperial gallons. I'm European, you insensitive clod. km/l would be easier to compare.

      Then comparing your numbers to US figures is, as you know, pure BS, as 1 imperial gallon is 1.2 US gallons.

      You need to deal with the fact that the revised EPA drivecycle is a tougher drivecycle than the European (NEDC) drivecycle. Our standardized testing actually involves things like air conditioning, aggressive acceleration, higher speeds, etc. Yours does not. Deal with the fact that whatever your subjective experience, your rated vehicle numbers are laxer than our rated vehicle numbers. Whenever a European car makes it to the US, its mileage figures decrease. Example:

      -----
      2009 Ford Fiesta ECOnetic -- Estimated at 54 + mpgUS combined on the 08 EPA test cycles.

      Cologne - Ford of Europe?s new Fiesta ECOnetic leads the Fiesta models at this year?s Paris Auto Show.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  14. We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by Brigadier · · Score: 3, Interesting

    most hybrids (GM) at least basically have a motor wedged between the engine and transmission. The engine and drive line are exactly the same as the non hybrid versions.

    This being said I recently purchased a trusty 92 Corolla which after a little tweaking and cleaning up gives me over 40 mpg. how hard would it be to mfg a adapter kit between the transmission and engine similar to what GM does.

    a big part of the problem is we keep building unnecessary crap. I know in our economy this is not beneficial but why not take cars we already have and update them.

    1. Re:We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      a big part of the problem is we keep building unnecessary crap.

      I agree with you on most things, but cars are actually very highly-recycled. Advances in automotive technology reduce pollution and increase safety. Plus, old cars do simply wear out.

      I'm actually fairly glad that the road isn't full of '92 Corollas :)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    2. Re:We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Most any of the old Honda CRX models, especially before '99, deliver excellent mileage, near equal to a Prius on the highway. Seems a shame the ricers gut them thinking they will ever drive like FnF. Especially when the driver tops 250lb...

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    3. Re:We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      An adapter kit as you describe would involve a clutch of some sort (to decouple the ICE) and essentially an oversize starer motor. not really THAT difficult but space might be an issue on some vehicles. The spur tooth of the flywheel is not intended for serious power transmission and would have to be swapped out for something that is. Don't forget lubrication either! Power transmission in constant-contact gears will need a recycling oiling system separate from the engine's.

      I have seen some kits that essentially mount an electric motor in place of the alternator (with appropriate electronics to charge the battery). The idea behind them is that, during periods of high load such as accelerating of hill climbing, these motors kick in to provide a little extra umph from a dedicated (but standard) battery. Not really a hybrid in the common sense of the word but not a bad option either depending on your driving habits... advantage here is you only need a pulley upgrade and an extra belt or two. They wear out but don't need lube.

      One thing I've thought about is a kit that replaces a portion of the drive shaft (rear wheel drive only, obviously). Electric motors do just fine at high RPMs and mounting one AFTER the transmission would improve efficiency, especially if it's an automatic. You also have more room to play with compared to the gap between engine and transmission.
      =Smidge=

    4. Re:We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by Brigadier · · Score: 1

      The system I had in mind is similar to the picture below (see link) I'm sure it wouldn't be hard to mfg something lass than 6" wide. The motor wouldn't' need a clutch per say as it would always be engaged either generating electricity or providing power. You eliminate the battery, alternator, and starter. Then throw some batteries in recesses along the frame.

      http://www.cleangreencar.co.nz/p/vibrantplanet.com/cleangreencar/1119228919_24429.jpg

    5. Re:We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      This would be too easy, and our lives depend on hard and difficult options.

    6. Re:We need to stop manufacturing uneccessary cars. by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Well part of the problem is that you don't understand what a hybrid car is. It's not your fault, though because the manufacturers have been deliberately marketingy.

      Pop the electric drive out of a hybrid car and you might even see the fuel economy increase, depending on how you drive. The electric drive is really a "performance assist" to make what many would consider to be an underpowered engine acceptable.

      So it's really no surprise that you can get the same results by simply accepting a bit less performance (i.e. lower acceleration.)

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  15. Buying a Prius is cheaper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    At $25000 for the parts alone, what idiot is going to buy this separately? Its cheaper to buy a pre-built vehicle like Prius or a Honda hybrid.

    1. Re:Buying a Prius is cheaper by RandoX · · Score: 1

      Prius isn't advertised at 225 MPG.

    2. Re:Buying a Prius is cheaper by thedonger · · Score: 3, Funny

      My wife has a Prius, and she gets about 225 MPG because most of the time she makes me drive her around in my car.

      --
      Help fight poverty: Punch a poor person.
  16. Safety by HalAtWork · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So has this thing been crash tested? Do you have to get the car certified after you build it, so that you can drive it on the road? Are you any more liable if anything happens to a passenger, motorist, or pedestrian, in such a car?

    1. Re:Safety by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This vehicle is classified as a motorcycle, hence no crash test is required. Most of the high fuel economy vehicles of the future will we tricycles, because they are not required to meet the safety standards for cars. Isn't it wonderful how government regulation warps the appropriate use of technology?

  17. Just so there's no misunderstanding by Nymz · · Score: 1
    • Building you own car is cool.
    • Minimizing pollution is cool.
    • Using pseudo-science to scare people, promote your carbon-tax moneymaking scams, and further turn governments into over reaching big-brother nanny-states is uncool.
  18. Re:Is this a first post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey! I shave everyday thank you very much.

  19. Registration? by superdave80 · · Score: 4, Funny

    So, what happens when I build this thing, and try to get it registered at my local DMV?

    DMV Drone: Make?
    Me: Me
    DMV Drone: No, who is the manufacturer?
    Me: Me
    DMV Drone: (sigh). Model?
    Me: Mostly done in Solidworks.
    DMV Drone: NEXT!

    1. Re:Registration? by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Funny

      Dude, you've got it all wrong. Let me help you fix it:

      Me: *walks into DMV office*
      DMV Drone #1: (on personal phone call) Yeah, like whatever!
      DMV Drone #1: Yeah, totally!
      DMV Drone #1: Oh, she needs to dump that loser!
      DMV Drone #2: (just finishing up with guy ahead of you in line) Well, it's about lunch time! I'll be back in two hours. (puts up "next window" sign with an arrow pointing to drone #1)
      Me: Can you help me?
      DMV Drone #1: Ugh, can you hang on a minute? WHAT?!?!?!

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    2. Re:Registration? by Migraineman · · Score: 4, Informative

      First, it's a motorcycle in the US, so that eliminates most of the headaches. Second, it's a lot like registering a self-built trailer from a kit. You put it together, grab all your receipts, and head down to the State Sherrif's office for a safety inspection. Some states allow third-party inspections, so you might go that route. As you're not a "vehicle manufacturer," you aren't permitted to issue VIN numbers, and you don't have a title yet, so you use something called a "certificate of origin" to get your local DMV to create a title for you. AFAIK, the certificate of origin allows the DMV to tax you appropriately ... how else would they know how to value your custom-built creation? I built a trailer from a kit (Haulin' flatbed from the local Home Despot.) It came with a certificate of origin. I took that, the purchase receipt, and a gas-station inspection to the local DMV, and all was well.

      Cars are a completely different matter, as the auto manufacturers have lobbied to make sure it's illegal for you to make your own car. Think of the children, etc. There are special categories for Antique and Street Rod cars, but there are restrictions against using them as daily drivers. However, trailers and motorcycles are still viable.

    3. Re:Registration? by kaizokuace · · Score: 1

      You can register (at least in california) a special construction vehicle SCV. This is what all the guys who build old Cobra kits and Super 7's do. The issues lie in choice of powerplants that are of a certain age and pass emissions. If you are lucky you can get a CA exempt registration where you dont have to pass emissions. The state only allows 500 cars per year this exempt status. They have to be SCV and cant be made from an existing car frame. To get this you have to be at the dmv doorstep with all your paperwork when they open on january 2nd! I know this as I am building a custom car.

      --
      Balderdash!
    4. Re:Registration? by despisethesun · · Score: 1

      Most states/provinces have regulations regarding kit cars and similar machines. The front line drone at the DMV may not be familiar with those regulations, but there is probably someone there who is. It may be tougher to get registered than a regular car, but unless you live somewhere where these sorts of things are outlawed outright, it's not impossible.

      --
      This poo is cold.
    5. Re:Registration? by tgd · · Score: 1

      Every state lets you register custom cars.

      Special categories like street rods and antique cars are used to keep from having to meet certain emissions and safety requirements that are not hard to meet but not necessarily aesthetic for the cars people tend to custom build. (Things like needing wipers for cars without a top, or catalytic converters on "hot rods" with straight pipes)

      Its not hard -- people do it every day. I know literally dozens of people running entirely custom home-built cars on standard plates, and in many cases with mainstream insurance providers.

      I'm not sure where you got your information, but its quite incorrect. If anything, guys I know who have done both custom cars and bikes have said the bikes are more of a pain in the neck to get VIN numbers for.

    6. Re:Registration? by bingo+fuel · · Score: 1

      So, what happens when I build this thing, and try to get it registered at my local DMV?

      DMV Drone: Make? Me: Me DMV Drone: No, who is the manufacturer? Me: Me DMV Drone: (sigh). Model? Me: Mostly done in Solidworks. DMV Drone: NEXT!

      happens all the time Building sports cars, from scratch, at home is a growing hobby. Probably the most popular example is the Locost concept http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locost http://www.cheapsportscar.net/

    7. Re:Registration? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to try this:
      Me: sudo "Can you help me?"

    8. Re:Registration? by nasor · · Score: 1

      Cars are a completely different matter, as the auto manufacturers have lobbied to make sure it's illegal for you to make your own car.

      Most states have procedures for licensing home-built vehicles. Usually it just involves having the vehicle inspected by the state police, who give you a certificate that you take to the DMV, who will create a VIN and title for you. The DMV will usually even issue you a temporary tag for your home-built car so that you can drive it to wherever the state police do their inspections. You generally need to show a receipt for the engine that you put in the car or a bill of sale/title for the car that you took it out of, unless your car is powered by an electric motor or something more exotic that has never had a VIN associated with it.

      Considering the tiny number of people who would be interested in building their own car from scratch (much less actually willing and able to do it) it would make little sense for car companies to bother stopping them. We're probably only talking about dozens of vehicles/year.

    9. Re:Registration? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...as the auto manufacturers have lobbied to make sure it's illegal for you to make your own car."

      Do you seriously believe this? Do you really think the auto manufacturers, who sell in the ballpark of 15 million cars a year, give a crap about the 1000 or so people a year who might have the time, money, and expertise to build their own car? A typical mainstream car is considered a loser if it's under 100,000 UPA, excepting the higher-priced vehicles.

      No, if there is any legislation out there preventing people from making their own cars, you can thank the lawyers that manage to convince your average jury that any failure mode is a design flaw and not a normal consequence of physics. Before long you have IIHS and NTSA coming in with all kinds of new crash tests (40mph deformable barrier offset, anyone?) and airbag requirements.

  20. Hard Numbers by overtly_demure · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can someone point us to hard data comparing overall carbon footprint, actual mileage, monetary cost to the consumer, environmental impact, etc. comparing hybrids and conventional cars? I am wondering specifically if the Prius beats a Corolla over a five-year span as a commute car. I suspect it does not, but do not have the facts.

    1. Re:Hard Numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consumer Reports talks about some of the cost differences between hybrids and non-hybrids.

    2. Re:Hard Numbers by magus_melchior · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The thing is, hard numbers are easy, drawing conclusions isn't.

      What data should you examine to compare the "TCO" of the Prius over 5 years versus a same model-year vehicle? Which vehicle would you compare it to-- a mid-size Matrix or Mazda3, since the Prius is classified as a mid-size liftback, or a Corolla-- a compact sedan-- to push cost and efficiency numbers in the ICE model's favor*? Would you take different financing plans into account in your analysis? Would you include maintenance (if any) of the electric component of the hybrid drivetrain?

      Some of the "analysis" I've seen in Slashdot comments were either armchair analysis (with no references or actual logic), or oversimplified cherry-picks of data that factored in things like battery replacement after 11 years, most with the general aim of encouraging people to continue to buy small cars because they're cheaper now. It's the same mentality, IMO, that fuels the credit and financial industries-- don't worry about a few years down the road when you're effectively paying an arm and a leg more for a glorified limited rental today.

      * I'd love to see why you would want a Prius/Corolla comparison if it's not for this reason.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    3. Re:Hard Numbers by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Why just five years? The average life of a car is around 9 years now.

      http://www.autospies.com/news/Can-You-Guess-the-Average-Life-Of-Vehicle-12646/

      I thought they usually ran longer than that, but there it is.

    4. Re:Hard Numbers by jvin248 · · Score: 1

      A general indicator of costs are to look at the actual dollar costs(!)..

      -cost of buying an old high mileage car (1993-5 Saturn "SL" MANUAL trans = 40mpg, same age Honda CRX=45mpg-55mpg, GM Metro from mid 1990's=50+mpg), maybe $500-$1000?

      -cost of buying new Prius/other hybrid maybe $20,000+?

      Amount of energy, mining raw materials, smelting recycled scrap into "new steel" to make the new hybrid, transportation, etc are about 20x the cost and environmental impact of extending the use of that old car.

      A quick read on a Prius board shows most real-world drivers are getting 48-55mpg - still fancy technology that barely beats 15 year old technology from real-world driving.

      Biggest gains will be made in trading your 10-20mpg SUV for a sedan getting 25-30mpg or going small sedan into the 30-35mpg range. Cost/benefit ratios beyond that get hard to justify.

  21. RTFA by Ritchie70 · · Score: 3, Informative

    From the web site:

    Although the XR-3 can be built just as the prototype was built, kits are on the agenda. Information will appear on this page as it becomes available. But the XR3 can be constructed using the same techniques used to build Tri-Magnum. Click on FRP/foam composite for a document that shows the composite system used to build the body for the XR3.
                        A knocked-down body kit consisting of pre-molded panels provides the greatest benefit at the least cost. So body kits will be supplied as unassembled panels that builders can bond together. In addition to enabling the lowest price, this type of kit also reduces packaging and shipping costs. Frame kits will consist of a welded-together assembly, which turns the project into mostly a bolt-together operation. The goal is to deliver the greatest benefit at the lowest possible price, and avoid supplying parts that you can purchase locally.
                        The price of kits has not been established.

    So the $25,000 is a guess at what you might be able to buy parts to build it for. It isn't an offer to sell a kit.

    --
    The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
  22. Orkmobile, Ew by acon1modm · · Score: 4, Funny

    All I want is a light, very efficient hybrid/electric vehicle, that doesn't look ridiculous. Even if its stripped down for weight, add a plastic body that has the same rough shape as a "real" car. I hope every innovation doesn't have to look like something brought here by Mork from Ork.

    1. Re:Orkmobile, Ew by schlick · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking abou thtis too. Why doesn't some one make a car that looks like carmen gia's or old little porches that are composite bodies around alternative powerplants?

      --
      "It's because they're stupid, that's why. That's why everybody does everything." -Homer Simpson
    2. Re:Orkmobile, Ew by jvin248 · · Score: 1

      Because a "real car" is a bad shape to push through the air - think "aggressive grill" designs on most pickups and trucks done for "style".

      Most efficient aerodynamic shape is a tear drop - bulb at the front and a narrow tail in the rear. If you look at a lot of cars they are reversed, with small pointy noses and bulbous rear ends.

      Many car shoppers are looking for something "big", for "safety" or storage space or to impress friends. Car designers then just build what might sell.

  23. or import Ford's 65mpg nice looking car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take a look at this car:
    http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_37/b4099060491065.htm

    Either make that a hybrid or import it as is.

  24. "Smug" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see another idiot has drunk the "no, really, we're libertarian, not Republican" South Park koolaid.

    But go ahead, keep believing that they poke fun of everybody equally, while Stone and Parker take their ad bucks and sink them into McBush's re-election campaign.

    1. Re:"Smug" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the immortal words of Wikipedia: [citation needed]

    2. Re:"Smug" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just bought a copy of each season on DVD.

      Thanks for the tip!

  25. And this changes...what? by davmoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't see how this eliminates the carbon footprint of building the car. It only moves it. Unless all of your tools are alternative energy powered, and the vehicles used to deliver the parts to you are likewise alternative energy powered, nothing has been accomplished here except moving where the carbon has been emitted. I fail to see how this helps the planet.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
    1. Re:And this changes...what? by Jock+Kodimar · · Score: 0

      It doesn't. Like another poster said earlier it just moves the "carbon footprint" to the person building it.

      Carbon credits for the win!

      That being said I think it would be a neat project.

    2. Re:And this changes...what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More importantly, the pollution endemic to the creation of the parts-batteries, electric motor, and all that jazz--is still created. Moving the parts down the assembly line and inserting bolts is a relatively contributor to the environmental impact of manufacturing.

    3. Re:And this changes...what? by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how this helps the planet.

      Hush you! You are spoiling the wonderful green vibe that we are all getting from doing something useless in the name of saving the environment.

    4. Re:And this changes...what? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maybe, but I don't think so.

      The point of a hybrid is two fold, one is that energy wasted during braking is recovered and reused, and the charging is done at an RPM where the engine at its most efficient. It can be a smaller engine with less gas to produce a certain amount of energy.

      A plug-in hybrid can use a more efficient power source on the grid. Even if it's from a coal plant, it's still considerably more efficient than an internal combustion engine.

      The tools, welding and so on, are really a pittance compared to the amount of energy consumed in a gas engine. Think of it this way, one horsepower is about 3/4ths of a kilowatt. If you're getting 100hp on a car engine, that's 75 kilowatts. And a lot of people drive an hour a day, 20 days a month, 1,500 kWhr of energy produced in a month.

  26. It's probably slow... by Ritchie70 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The "tractor engine" spec'd for the diesel propulsion is the Kubota D902. Here's some information about that, from http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-3241283/Three-new-models-for-Kubota.html

    The D902, a three-cylinder version of the Z602, has a displacement of 0.898 L and an output of 20.6 hp at 3200 rpm. A 3600 rpm version, due for introduction next year, will be rated 23.5 hp.

    I also looked for a price on this engine. The first I saw was about $2800 for a remanufactured unit, with a $700 core charge. It's used in bobcats and similar. If you're building this "car," you won't have a core, so it's going to cost you $3500.

    --
    The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
  27. At some point, Tesla may consider doign this. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    I figure that if they are selling the frame, drive train, and batteries, then they can allow companies or individuals to put their own cars together. The idea of a kit makes sense. It would be extremely interesting, if Tesla's next car is built to allow for an energy generator to be added. i.e. a plugable system. That way, it encourages new add-ons.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  28. Humans are machines that emit CO2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make sure you hold your breath while building your hybrid.

    In fact, for the love of Gaia, keep holding your breath after you put the hybrid together.

  29. This would be a waste of time in Ontario, Canada by bogaboga · · Score: 2, Informative

    I submit that this project, though good in itself, would be of no use and therefore a waste of time in Ontario, Canada because the government over there will not license a similar project from a local manufacturer, Zenn http://www.zenncars.com/.

    You wonder who these folks in government are working for. I suspect that they are protecting big oil.

    Their argument is that these cars have not been proven to be safe on [Canadian] roads, though these same cars are available in the USA where they have not caused any trouble.

    Has anyone used these cars? How do they perform?

  30. Re:Lifetime of Beetle parts... by zmollusc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Crimeny, having had a VW Beetle I would estimate that you would have to factor in the cost of a barn to keep enough spare exhausts, wings, sills, filler, primer, welding rods etc to keep 10 of the damn things operative (at least in the UK).

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  31. Genious! by spectro · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think this guy is pure genius.

    Instead of creating his own auto factory and taking years of research, development, marketing, and infrastructure, he just sells out the blueprints so you can build it yourself.

    He doesn't have to worry about competing with other auto manufacturers, pressure from Oil companies or ambulance chasers suing him because of some manufacturing flaw.

    How long until somebody else takes his design and builds something much better? I would love to see the mythbusters guys building one of these.

    --
    HTML is obsolete. It's time for a new, simpler and richer markup language.
  32. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Just enough juice to break the inertia of the car and lug it off the line is all you really need.

    Until it gets hilly!

    A lot of people forget about hills - even mild ones. That tiny little gas engine won't climb hills very well, so you'd better have enough battery power to go up the largest grade you are likely to encounter - and then recharge fast enough for you to tackle the next one.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  33. Actually you can do it for about $5k including car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually you can do it for about $5k including the vehicle:

    http://www.evconvert.com/

  34. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No, the real reason for selling kits is to avoid safety and pollution controls. A manufacturer has to deal with those, but a kit maker doesn't, at least to some degree. I don't know all the ins and outs of it. Maybe kit makers avoid those problems only if the kit modifies an existing car. But I bet this guy avoids them too since he is not selling a car. Maybe the catch is that the builder (the kit buyer) will have to deal with safety and pollution controls, and probably not be able to register it.

  35. "and performance like a conventional automobile." by Ngarrang · · Score: 1

    "...and performance like a conventional automobile."

    With a top speed of 80, I don't think so. Except maybe during LA at crunch time, this car would get run over on pretty much another highway system going as slow as 80 MPH.

    If you only intent to use it to commute to work and you don't need the highways, then maybe this is the car for you. But at $25k, you would have to commute to work for many years to recoup the investment.

    Now, if you buy it for the ego factor, well then! $25k is cheap. But, I gotta say...when are these specialty car makers going to figure out that if they really want to impact the market, they are gonna have to offer up a price of $12k to attract the people who could really benefit from a 125 MPG vehicle? The average factory worker making $10/hr could really use this car, that is, if they can even afford a second car. This car ain't exactly family friendly, so maybe even Joe Bob Factory worker would never buy this car.

    --
    Bearded Dragon
  36. Green Gimmicks by fm6 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Building hybrids uses machinery that pollutes the environment. The solution? Ship the parts of a hybrid individually and get your customers to put the car together themselves.

    And shipping stuff doesn't pollute the environment? You ship a bunch of parts to somebody, and it's going to go by diesel truck, diesel-powered ship, and jet airplane, all notorious polluters. Plus all the boxes and packing materials are going to go into the trash bin and/or recycling bin, where they will be hauled away by still more diesel trucks.

    I'm getting a little tired of these green gimmicks. People think they can spend a little money or put up with a little inconvenience and Save the Planet. They're fooling themselves — and supplying material to those Nuke the Whales assholes who think the solution to all environmental issues is to poke fun at environmentalists.

    If you really want to StP, agitate for real measures. Unfortunately, real measures hurt: taxes on non-renewable resources, taxes on pollution, putting up with slow and inconvenient public transit instead of convenient private vehicles, using less convenient forms of distribution that don't rely on monumental use of packaging.

    As any athlete will tell you, change hurts. People who want to be green without making real sacrifices are as much in denial as any global warming "skeptic".

    1. Re:Green Gimmicks by Rob_Bryerton · · Score: 1

      >>People who want to be green without making real sacrifices are as much in denial as any global warming "skeptic". Skeptic??? "Global warming" is a myth, plain & simple. There's no skepticism here, because it's all bullshit...

    2. Re:Green Gimmicks by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Gee, how can I disagree with your when your arguments are so persuasive?

  37. 3 wheels don't necessarily mean motorcycle. by DigitalReverend · · Score: 3, Informative

    It depends upon the regulations of the state or province. In British Columbia, Canada, a three-wheeled vehicle with an enclosed passenger compartment is considered an automobile. Some states call vehicles with 2 front wheels and 1 rear wheel cars, while others call the motorcycles. Some places it's a matter of engine displacement, body styles, etc.

    --
    I read Slashdot for the headlines, because the headlines, unlike the articles, are usually original and never duplicated
  38. Underwhelmed by Unit3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Great idea, too bad it's fugly, more expensive than Honda's new hybrid at $25k, and basically just a motorcycle.

    Call me when they make a Prius kit, or a drop in electric engine replacement for the Civic. ;)

    --
    -- sudo.ca
  39. Yawn, not them again.... by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Informative

    rqriley has been selling "plans" for decades. they have been trying to get people to build the tri-magnum for 30 years without success...

    http://www.rqriley.com/tri-mag.html

    anyone with an ounce of mechnaical skill can do that without the "plans" and a regular car in less time with less cost.

    Hell go get a smashed prius, a light car you want to make a hybrid and simply put the drivetrain in the car. All done, really easy and not rocket science.

    Hell it's not hard to replace the ECM for the prius with something that is more hackable if you really wanted to.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  40. Spare time by phorm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, if you enjoy tinkering with stuff and would otherwise have the time free anyhow, then it might even be that the time is of a negative cost.

    That is to say, if you spend $25k for the unit, but spend 200 hours being rather entertained by putting it together, then you've just spend $25k on the parts and saved $x on whatever else you might have spend that money on (movies, video games, trips, etc).

    I do a lot of the additions/repairs around the house. If might cost *more* than a plumber/carpenter/etc if you count what my day job's hourly rate is, but for me the cost of supplies is paying for both the renos and the entertainment of doing them.

    One man's burden is another man's leisure, I'd rather be working on neat projects around the house than baking under a hot sun swinging a stick at a dimpled white ball.

    1. Re:Spare time by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I do a lot of the additions/repairs around the house. If might cost *more* than a plumber/carpenter/etc if you count what my day job's hourly rate is, but for me the cost of supplies is paying for both the renos and the entertainment of doing them.

      Especially since the comparison between your hourly wage and the time you spent doing the plumbing, carpentry, whatever is probably specious.

      I mean, I might be able to make say $40/hr as a freelance contract programmer, but I'd be lucky to get paid at all to do plumbing or carpentry or automobile assembly/modification. Hell, I'd be lucky not to end up negative if I was doing work on someone else's stuff after they got done suing me for the damage I did. So how can I say that doing any of those things in my spare time is "costing" me $40/hr?

      So to Mr. "Only if your time has zero value" OP, well yeah it probably does have zero value! How much do you get paid to sit on your ass and watch TV? Just don't spend so much time working on your kit-car that it cuts into your paid work hours, and yes it really has cost you nothing. And, like phrom here says, if you actually enjoy doing this kind of thing, you may end up being ahead of the game by some metrics.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    2. Re:Spare time by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      The claim that your time is 'worth' $40/hr is based on the (poor) assumption that you can just work some more hours if you want to. You work two hours to make $80, pay the plumber $40 for his two hours and come out $40 ahead. It also assumes that you gain no benefit yourself from mucking around with the plumbing relative to doing some more stressful coding during your weekend.

      I agree with you. Lately I've been cooking a lot - doing things like making bread or pasta or soup from scratch that nobody really does themselves in this day and age. Even counting up the ingredients cost and ignoring the time I spend I think it's cheaper to just buy even a decent quality packet of whatever from the supermarket, but I find it relaxing and fun. Each meal is like a mini coding project, except it has a well defined end point, I am the customer so I can set whatever requirements I like and feature creep results in tastiness.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    3. Re:Spare time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also the issue of hanging onto your hard earned said dollars, rather than paying someone to do the work for you.

      If I had someone do all the work that I need done around the house, I probably would have no money...but I sure would have plenty of time!

  41. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pffft, the power to weight ratio of batteries sucks. That's all there is to it.

    Sure you might get great torque from a dead stop but even a regular gas engine can easily break the tires loose. That's not going to make you go fast down the track though. The weight of the batteries negates everything positive about the electric drive.

  42. Limits by phorm · · Score: 1

    Well for those that would have the money to buy something like this, and the time to put it together, doing the above (or at least some of the above) might actually be a fun hobby.

    It's not like people don't invest a lot of time and cash into restoring old cars or modding their own vehicles, after all.

    Personally I want a Delorian with a flux capacitor...

  43. Building it? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

    Allow them to brag about having built the damn cars themselves and we might be entering obscenely smug territory."

    Yeah, but by then their smugness is pretty much warranted.

  44. Re:Lifetime of Beetle parts... by gnick · · Score: 4, Funny

    You don't keep all 10 operative. You keep 2 operative and put your 8 organ donors in the barn. 4-to-1 seems like about the right ratio to keep an old Beetle together.

    --
    He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
  45. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by uberdilligaff · · Score: 3, Insightful

    AMEN. I had a 79 diesel Volkswagen Jetta (52 whole HP!) It got 45-48 mpg all the time, with my foot to the floor most of the time, but it couldn't maintain 50 mph when driving on the hilly Interstates in West Virginia and Tennessee. Just move to the far right and hope not to get run over.

    So new hybrids must have enough battery storage capacity to get over those hills, more than just to get going after a stop light.

    --
    Against stupidity, the Gods themselves contend in vain. --Friederich Schiller
  46. Smug eh? by heteromonomer · · Score: 1

    Who's to blame for accidents if some poorly owner-assembled cars fall apart on the highways?

  47. Re:This would be a waste of time in Ontario, Canad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You wonder who these folks in government are working for. I suspect that they are protecting big oil.

    Maybe they're working for the Canadian citizens that don't want one of these things crashing into them because the brakes failed. Occasionally, governments do work for their constituents.

    Their argument is that these cars have not been proven to be safe on [Canadian] roads, though these same cars are available in the USA where they have not caused any trouble.

    Lack of a track record should not imply safety. And it's not like US government agencies haven't been compromised before. Second opinions are good.

  48. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

    Drag racing generally isn't done on hills...

    =Smidge=

  49. Re:Motorcycle, not a car; Agreed, but... by hAckz0r · · Score: 1
    While I agree with your assessment, there are some things to consider as well.

    First, its design is far safer than a motorcycle. In fact its safer than a trike, because most all three wheelers to date are made backwards, in that they are completely unstable while decelerating on a turn. This one is the right way around so it is much more stable during the evasive manoeuvres that count. I don't care a whole hill of beans how fast a vehicle accelerates, but its got to stop fast without flipping over or its just not safe enough to drive. If you added an active stability control system to this machine you would have a safer machine than most inexpensive cars on the street.

    Second, loosing a wheel (4->3) does shed a lot of weight, and gives a major boost to the power weight ratio which directly translates to MPG. There is no 4 wheeled EV that is capable of making my home-to-work round trip, or I'd have bought it in a heart beat. By my own calculations I believe a three wheeled EV/Hybrid could do it easily. My poor Prius just broke 100K last week, and its less than 3 years old. I had played with the idea of designing and building something very close to this vehicle myself but I don't have nearly the kind of time needed to actually build one, and like many others have noted here, how do you get permission to actually put one on the road? If it does qualify as a motorcycle that would be a good thing. A kit would be nice, but I'd much rather buy one off the lot, which due to availability won't be happening any time soon.

    If I could buy this off the lot I'd probably do it in a heartbeat.

  50. You can get almost 100 miles from an S10 by StCredZero · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you sacrifice the bed, you can get a 92 mile range commuter vehicle out of an old S10.

    http://www.austinev.org/evinfo/build/eva-selectingavehicle.html
    http://www.evalbum.com/037

    That may be much more than what you need, but the less you draw down your batteries, the longer your batteries will last. If you never let your batteries drain below 95%, they will last much, much longer than if you're draining them halfway down every day. In the long run, this may save you a lot of money, as battery replacement is the majority of the cost per mile for running an electric vehicle.

    1. Re:You can get almost 100 miles from an S10 by rhpenguin · · Score: 1

      You make a very valid point about dumping the box.. However, I've chosen to hand fabricate a fiberglass box to get weight down and still have a way to keep the batteries sheltered.

      It's a lot more work than most want to do, But my new box weighs less than 1/3rd the weight of the original and bolts up to the OEM mounting points. My next plan is to make a solar panel tonneau cover. :D

    2. Re:You can get almost 100 miles from an S10 by domatic · · Score: 1

      Since you have an entire truck bed to play with, why not chuck one of those home AC generators back there? You'd have a parallel hybrid that you could risk exceeding your nominal range with and you would only have to start that motor if you needed to recharge in an out of the way place.

      Such a genny wouldn't have the grunt to propel the truck I expect but it would still be good for recharging if you had to drive to an out of the way place.

      Of course the additional weight is a concern.

    3. Re:You can get almost 100 miles from an S10 by Roblimo · · Score: 1

      I've thought about adding a generator to a golf cart, since I'm in Florida where they're all over the place -- and can now be licensed for limited street use if they have lights and seat belts. Used golf carts go for a thou or so... generator is maybe $600 (and nice for post-hurricane backup power), and.... umm.... that's it. Not something I'd want to take across Alligator Alley, but cool for putting around Bradenton or going to the beach.

      - Robin

    4. Re:You can get almost 100 miles from an S10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesnt short charging your battery (95% then topping it off) kill the overall charge capacity over time? At least thats what happens to my AA rechargeables, my cell phone battery, and my laptop batteries.

    5. Re:You can get almost 100 miles from an S10 by Cecil · · Score: 1

      There are different kinds of batteries. You are talking about Lithium-Ion or Nickel Metal Hydride. He is talking about Lead-acid. They are very different things.

  51. A victory for lawyers by XantheKnight · · Score: 1
    So a bunch of penny pinchers putting together their own cars, eh? Maybe a few mistakes made here and there during assembly... maybe a few substituted cheaper parts...

    Sounds like a smorgasbord for lawyers all over the world. Bring on the personal injury and negligence claims! w00t!!

  52. Re:Lifetime of Beetle parts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The intent is to only keep one operative using whatever you can strip off the other 9.

  53. completed... but by floatingrunner · · Score: 0

    DONE! wait, why are there 3 extra bolts on the floor? oh shi.. *your car esplode*

  54. WTF is it about the "smug" label? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could some wise slashdotter explain to me why hybrid drivers are the only car owners considered "smug"? Couldn't people who drive conspicuously wasteful SUV's or sports cars also be considered smug? Why is it okay for some asshole in a BMW or a Mustang to be smug in their choice of vehicle but noone else?

    1. Re:WTF is it about the "smug" label? by GTRacer · · Score: 1

      The answer to your question may be this South Park episode. It's all about the hybrid hype.

      People in sports cars *are* smug, but then again, we don't spend all day trying to prove to the world how much we love the world.

      In fact, can a few more of you order this kit / buy hybrids / take public transportation and balance me out? Despite displacing only 1.3 litres, my motor's motor is still pretty fuel-hungry, especially when pushed hard. Thank you!

      --
      Defending IP by destroying access to it? That makes sense, RIAA/MPAA. Go to the corner until you can play nice!
  55. Do we really want... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the average person driving around in a car they assembled themselves? Most folks are too dumb to assemble their Ikea furniture correctly. The last thing I need is some mouth-breather plowing me down in a cross walk because he threw away an "extra" bolt that was left over.

  56. Obscenely smug territory by hobbit · · Score: 0, Troll

    Allow them to brag about having built the damn cars themselves and we might be entering obscenely smug territory.

    If so, please post the story under http://apple.slashdot.org/ ;)

    --
    "Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools, because they have to say something" - Plato
    1. Re:Obscenely smug territory by hobbit · · Score: 1

      Call it trolling if you like: as a Mac fanatic (I've got 4 Macs and an iPhone, my wife has 2 Macs and an iPod) I think of it more as what we call a "joke".

      --
      "Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools, because they have to say something" - Plato
  57. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

    No, the POWER/Weight ratio of an electric system is amazing compared to all but the most high-end gasoline engines (read: high-strung racing engines that get completely rebuilt after every use).

    It's the ENERGY/Weight ratio of batteries that pales compared to gasoline:

    Gasoline: 47 MJ/kg
    Pb-Acid Batt: 0.10 MJ/kg
    NiCd Batt: 0.20 MJ/kg
    Li-Ion Batt: 0.65 Mj/kg

    All values are approximate, of course.

    I other words, you can release stored energy from a battery at a much faster rate than you can from gasoline, but you can't store as much. There exists electric drag racers than can and do get under 12 seconds for the 1/4 - very much on par for gas engines.
    =Smidge=

  58. Re:Motorcycle, not a car; Agreed, but... by Rakishi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The way I understand it a motorcycle really has one and only one safety feature, maneuverability. You don't ever want to get hit and if you're careful you can often avoid getting hit when a car wouldn't be able to. A car on the other hand has size, crumple zones, mass, multiple airbags, decently strong building materials and so on which let it it take a hit without killing the occupants. This thing seems to fail under both criteria.

  59. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Exactly. You need to have a kilowatt hour or two of reserve charge to "average out" the hills. Optimally, your motor should be sized to haul you up an interstate at 5-6% grade (6% = legal max) at what you consider a reasonable speed, while your engine should be sized to manage a 1-2% grade (you generally won't surpass that as a running average of slopes on an interstate). Smaller mountain roads may be steeper and have higher average grades, but you won't be climbing them at nearly as high of a speed, either.

    --
    Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  60. ahaha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the gentoo of cars.

  61. Exactly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just the same as Costco/Sams Club can potentially crow about reduced output of solid waste....

    They give you boxes to carry out your stuff, which YOU then have to dispose. They simply move the waste off their books to your un-monitored household garbage/recycling.

    As an environmental manager for a manufacturing company, I've always thought this was BRILLIANT. Costco "minimizes their waste output" and the customer gets a need for a carryout container met. It probably never occurs to the customer that they're transporting Costco's waste to the landfill for free!

    Looking at it from a less cynical standpoint, I suppose that it does remove the need for paper or plastic bags for carryout...by finding a new use for the boxes that would be used for product shipment anyway.

  62. Re:This would be a waste of time in Ontario, Canad by networkconsultant · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually there's a legal Motor Vehicle Saftey Standard (MVSS) requirement from Transport Canada stating that they must meet crash requirements before they may be certified as road legal. Having pursued interest in Factory Five kit cars myself, they had to prove crash-worthiness (destroy 3 of them) before they could sell kits in Canada. These include things like airbags, disc brakes, braking distance, bumper size and momentum absorbed into the bumper....you get the picture. http://www.tc.gc.ca/roadsafety/menu.htm

  63. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by Rei · · Score: 1

    No, the *energy* to weight ratio of batteries sucks. The *power* to weight ratio of modern automotive li-ions is incredible. AltairNano's can deliver as much as 4-5kW/kg. If you have something like the LightningCar with a range of 180 miles, and let's assume 200Wh/mi, that's 36kWh, divide by 90Wh/kg, that's 400kg, so about 1.8MW of power = 2,400 horsepower. The batteries aren't the limiting factor; the motor is (and electric motors are pretty light). Even if you assume 100kg, the weight of a typical non-sports-car ICE drivetrain, that's around 600 horsepower. And factor in that ICEs only deliver a fraction of their horsepower at most RPMs/torque requirements, while electric motors are at full power across most of the curve, so you really need to significantly increase those electric numbers.

    Even with their low state of maturity, EVs are already challenging gasoline records. The eight-wheeled Eliica is trying to beat gasoline speed records, while Wrightspeed is convinced that the production version of their 0-60 in 2.5 second X1, known as the SR-71, will be able to beat a Veyron at 0-60.

    As for energy to weight, comparing the raw energy in batteries to the raw energy in gasoline, and yeah, you'll come to the conclusion that they're atrocious. However, there are a few things to note. 1) Gasoline engines only get a small (~20%) fraction of the energy of the fuel out as torque; EVs get ~80-90% of the energy in their batteries out as torque. 2) Gas tanks are light, but internal combustion engines are heavy. Electric motors are light but batteries are heavy. The paradigms are reversed; batteries aren't competing against a gas tank for weight and space, but against the *engine*. Currently, for a vehicle of range comparable to that of your typical gasoline vehicle, yes, batteries lose -- however, not by a margin of nearly 100:1 as it may appear just by comparing energy densities, but only by a margin of about 3:1. And, quite honestly, some next-gen batteries may be able to give a three-fold or greater increase in energy density (silicon nanowires, silicon nanoparticles, tin nanoparticles, etc for the anode, and things like nanoscale-layered or fluorinated metal oxides for the cathode).

    --
    Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  64. The only people I know who build their own cars... by deepgrey · · Score: 1

    are gearheads who don't care too much about hybrids, although I'm sure there are some out there. Interesting idea, but not sure I'd go for it. A kit car is not my idea of a great daily driver, which is all I would use a hybrid for. Given the suggested price, I'd have a Toyota hybrid.
    Also, I should point out that making the parts pollutes a whole heck of a lot more than putting them together.

  65. Use vegetable oil by Tweenk · · Score: 1

    Over here diesel is about 4.75 PLN and cheap vegetable oil in 3L bottles is 3.65 PLN per liter. I just hope there will be no en masse transition so that I can convert my future Diesel car to SVO and feel smug about it.

    --
    Those who would give up liberty to obtain working drivers, deserve neither liberty nor working drivers.
    1. Re:Use vegetable oil by GiMP · · Score: 1

      That is still $6/gallon... when I was in Poland a year ago, prices were under 4PLN/l, what are your unleaded prices now? By the way, in the US, we're not even paying $4/gallon (2.39PLN/l) for old-fashioned regular unleaded.

    2. Re:Use vegetable oil by Tweenk · · Score: 1

      Unleaded is slightly cheaper at about 4.45 - 4.55 PLN per liter IIRC (I don't own a car). The fact that SVO is cheaper is mainly due to taxation. Additionally the price of oil products is announced to drop a bit in the following months.

      --
      Those who would give up liberty to obtain working drivers, deserve neither liberty nor working drivers.
  66. It was never a problem... by QZTR · · Score: 2, Informative

    Foy my brother. He was a custom fabricator, and he said the only problem was with bikes that actually had the frame fabbed. Most custom shops (OCC for example) use pre-fabbed frames, and those are no problem to insure.

    --
    To quote LongNoi "QZTR was right and won't leave me alone because I called him a moron when I was wrong" FYS
  67. Ugly.. Hybrid.. Motorcycle.. with Safety Issues.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a nutshell, the subject line says it all.

    Looks like something designed by a first year Industrial Arts graduate.
      -Crappy rear visibility
      -Side-by-side seat motorcycle with next to no protection for occupants.
      -For crying out loud it uses glassed-over foam core for its body structure!

    So, you can build one of these and look like a complete dork driving something that is unsafe, or you can do a real conversion for about the same amount of money and get better fuel economy. (Google Open Source EV Kit)

    If you are going to go through the effort of building a reverse trike hybrid here's some ideas:
    - Small shaft drive motorcycle IC engine.
    - CVT transmission with a regenerative clutch.
    - Transverse mount electric motor driving the front wheels using modified T/FWD COTS running gear.
    - All wheel 2 stage regenerative braking backed up with all wheel disk brakes.
    - Solar trickle charging via a conformal body panel.
    - Hydraulic suspension with 'trimming' capability to adjust aerodynamics.
    - Integrated roll-cage/space frame under your body panels.
    - Locate your loaded braking CG behind the front wheels.

  68. None of the advantages you listed deal with safety by QZTR · · Score: 1

    So why were you bringing up non-safety related advantages as though they demonstrated anything?

    --
    To quote LongNoi "QZTR was right and won't leave me alone because I called him a moron when I was wrong" FYS
  69. Stick to car analogies by phreakhead · · Score: 2, Funny

    This is Slashdot. Please stick to car analogies so we can understand.

    Oh wait...

  70. Brilliant by need4mospd · · Score: 1

    He thinks that will reduce pollution? Let's take a look at all the polluting steps he's just added to the car production process.

    50+ trips to the hardware/autoparts store for the extra parts and tools you either break, lose, or just want because they're cool

    30+ trips to the strip club because you're up til midnight in the garage and wife won't notice you're gone because she's asleep on the couch

    You'd need to purchase a large assortment of tools

    You'd need to talk to a large assortment of tools working in the hardware store.

    Extra packing material used to ship this thing and the tools you'll have to buy

    Karate chopping styrofoam blocks that come in the boxes thus scattering tiny pieces everywhere

    Power to run the tools, A/C, lights, etc... for the countless hours you'll spend in the garage

    Power to cool down the extra fridge you'll add in the garage so you won't have to walk so far to get a beer

    Minimum 2 trips to the emergency room, see above point for reasoning

    Minimum 1 trip to jail for DWI

    Towing the car home after filling it the very first time with E85

  71. So what? by QZTR · · Score: 1

    Nothing you posted there has anything to do with safety requirements.

    Do you even have an idea WTF is being discussed? You statement about the Nissan Micra makes it pretty clear you don't, as a cars performance on safety tests has NOTHING to do with the stringency of the requirements that governing bodies put in place.

    You're trying to say one steak tastes better than another because it meets FDA standards, even though they both meet the standard and it doesn't measure flavor anyway.

    --
    To quote LongNoi "QZTR was right and won't leave me alone because I called him a moron when I was wrong" FYS
    1. Re:So what? by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      as a cars performance on safety tests has NOTHING to do with the stringency of the requirements that governing bodies put in place

      Actually, it does. You can construct a bunch of "safety tests" that no car would ever pass, and yet they'd have no relevance to real world accidents. For a long time, crash safety was assessed on the basis of ramming the car headfirst into a solid concrete wall, which almost never happens. It took quite a while for people to realise that actually hitting the corner of the car on a deformable barrier more accurately reflected accidents that people really have - ie. hitting another car nearside-front-to-nearside-front.

    2. Re:So what? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      http://www.projo.com/projocars/content/ca_safetyconflict_08-31-08_SRBCU5F_v9.207b3f9.html

      Here is a link about the differences.
      Frankly the US and EU requirements are very close. The US frontal crash test is at a higher speed with a ridged barrier. It is a tougher test.
      The US lacks the pole test but is going to add it.
      The EU doesn't test without seat belts.
      The US has a higher speed for side impacts.
      The EU has a test for child safety seats in cars which the US lacks.
      So simply put the tests are different some US tests are harder and some EU tests are harder.
      They probably now work out about the same for cars.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  72. Re:Ugly.. Hybrid.. Motorcycle.. with Safety Issues by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    - Small shaft drive motorcycle IC engine.

    Very good ideas, but are you sure of this one? My impression was that the real fuel economy of a hybrid is the use of an Atkinson cycle engine. I'm thinking a motorcycle engine will significantly cut into your fuel economy. It (Otto engines in general) provides power you don't need at a cost the design can't afford.

    (But the rest is brilliant.)

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  73. certificate of origin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought a trailer kit and assembled it, and took it to DMV for registry. I did not have a "certificate of origin" so I was not allowed to register.

    Went to a different DMV and said "what choo talkin bout Willis? Origin is I BUILT IT MYSELF out of old junk with these two hands. Now test my homemade trailer to see if it meets your standards and gimme my registration!"

    No problem. Been towing it for years now...

  74. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by R2.0 · · Score: 1

    "AMEN. I had a 79 diesel Volkswagen Jetta (52 whole HP!) It got 45-48 mpg all the time, with my foot to the floor most of the time, but it couldn't maintain 50 mph when driving on the hilly Interstates in West Virginia and Tennessee. Just move to the far right and hope not to get run over."

    You must have had worn injectors or bad timing. I had an 86 Jetta, same engine and heavier body, and could do 80 all day long. It would occasionally complain on a steep incline, but a downshift to 4th generally took care of that.

    Now, ACCELERATION was a different matter - 0-60 timed with an hourglass.

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  75. You call that smug? by 2short · · Score: 1

    "Allow them to brag about having built the damn cars themselves and we might be entering obscenely smug territory."

    I don't drive; I built my own bicycle.

  76. Re:Motorcycle, not a car; Agreed, but... by MythoBeast · · Score: 1

    If these things are even vaguely successful, someone will eventually start up a build-and-delivery service. If my commute didn't involve delivering the children to school, I'd seriously consider one myself.

    --
    Wake up - the future is arriving faster than you think.
  77. Insurance? by peter303 · · Score: 1

    You'd probably go through similar set of hurdles to insure the thing. Who would insure an unknown design with unknown QC of manufacture?

    1. Re:Insurance? by Migraineman · · Score: 1

      I'm certain the insurance guys have an actuarial table for such an event. They've been doing this sort of thing for centuries. Unknown quantities go into the "risk" column, and raise the rates accordingly. They may offer you a liability policy, but not a comprehensive one. Beyond that, there are agencies that specialize in Historic and Street Rod insurance - Condon and Skelly, for example. Yes, I am a customer. A satisfied one, too.

  78. Not your fault, but vapor cars aren't useful. by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the list of upcoming EVs and PHEVs. It looks like not many are available now and some of the cars available now are only for the wealthy (anything from Tesla Motors). I'd hardly say that debunks "the most common criticism of electric vehicles": "there's so little out there!" as that list says it does. That list seems to support that criticism quite well. None of this is your fault, as you didn't write the list or the intro hype found on that page as far as I can tell.

    Furthermore, the list doesn't contend with on-the-ground realities: plans can be scuttled before or after a fleet of vehicles have been built. I think the movie "Who Killed the Electric Car?" shows this quite well with a couple of examples (GM's EV1 and the Toyota RAV4EV). Regardless of the reasons why those automakers offered then pulled their cars, consumers don't need their cars taken from them.

    Unless the car is available now it's vapor and history shows that if it's not available to own the car can become vapor again even after someone drives it.

    1. Re:Not your fault, but vapor cars aren't useful. by Rei · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Right, only two are available today. But the rest are coming out in the next couple years. Even if some (or even a large chunk of them) were cancelled or delayed, that'd still be a huge number of vehicles. And while perhaps a third of them are luxury or performance machines well beyond an ordinary person's price range, most are not. More expensive than a gasoline car, sure, but nothing that you can't make up in reduced operations costs.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
    2. Re:Not your fault, but vapor cars aren't useful. by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Funny

      When McCain allows off shore drilling they'll all go away again. Electric bullet dodged by auto companies... again.

    3. Re:Not your fault, but vapor cars aren't useful. by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      They pulled the EV1 because the batteries were about to die, and they wanted to a) save the money it would've cost to replace the batteries which amounted to most of the price of the car (they were all 2 year leased so presumably GM would have to pay) and b) ward off the bad karma that might have come with the public realization that their car lasted all of two years before extremely expensive repairs.

    4. Re:Not your fault, but vapor cars aren't useful. by Rei · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Toyota RAV4EVs with the same type of batteries still work fine.

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  79. "Smug", huh? by Goaway · · Score: 1

    A slashdotter is calling others "smug" now?

    Oh wait, I forgot, Slashdotters are right, that makes it not count as smugness!

  80. FTA: This is what I am, this is what I do. by zullnero · · Score: 2, Funny

    I put together and drive cars that look like 1950's alien spaceships. It's just my thing, you know.

  81. the diesel sounds sufficient by cellurl · · Score: 1

    Forget the batteries. For the next 5years, I would be happy to buy a cool car for $10k that got 100mpg on diesel. Forget batteries. Thats like baking your own bread, yummy, but gets old quick.

  82. how is this really better? by Spacepup · · Score: 1

    Shipping all the parts on trucks that visibly spew tons of pollution just so the manufacturer doesn't put out as much? All this is doing is shifting who does the polluting. And in all probability, this maneuvering will cause more pollution. Lets look at this for what it is, a way for the manufacturer to save money by cutting out expensive laborer jobs.

  83. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by BlackPignouf · · Score: 1

    Kind of remove the environmental benefits, though.

    When we have the possibility to produce less, better & more efficient, why on hell do we produce more and as dirty as before???

  84. Pious by Bryansix · · Score: 1

    4 a: marked by sham or hypocrisy b: marked by self-conscious virtue

  85. This is already being done - diyelectriccar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone mentioned DIY Electric Car?

    Lots of EV conversions. Folks have been building hybrids themselves but not as many as pure EVs.

  86. Re:Registration? What if you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Build your own car and before going to the DMV to register it, you pick any car from any era that is about the same size, buy one that's been totaled, put the vin plate on the car you built and give the totaled car to the junk yard. Just tell the dmv drone that you replaced the body with a custom one, same engine/frame/etc... There's a 95% chance the dmv employee will no nothing about the insides of a car or could recognize it. Wallah, you have a car that you "didn't make" that you can register as a customized antique/whatever.

  87. Big Pimpin by hraefn · · Score: 1

    Why the ridiculous chrome wheels? Those donkers probably weigh 25lbs each.

  88. Re:None of the advantages you listed deal with saf by Rei · · Score: 1

    Because you implied that because it was a three wheeler, that inherently means that it has no safety features. All that it means is that if it's a three wheeler, it *can* have less safety features. But there are plenty of reasons to build a three wheeler apart from that.

    --
    Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  89. Cost vs. Time by Tracking+Device · · Score: 1

    Do you think the cost would justify the time investment to build your own vehicle? I doubt it.

    --
    Eliminate the unknown with a tracking device
  90. Park a gun-boat off the shore of Venezuela by harrie_o · · Score: 0

    Park a gun-boat off the shore of Venezuela.

    Instant cheap gas again. Al Gore's head explodes in a puff of smoke from my Vortech Supercharger.

    Remember folks, its an election year. Expensive gas makes for great FEAR UNCERTAINTY and DOUBT.

    Think that our president is an OIL MAN. He is not doing what our country wants. He is doing his best to protect the US OIL COMPANIES since he will shortly go back and be one of them again.

    Fear is a great tool. It makes people risk their lives (a friend just had his new motorcycle fall over on him breaking his toe to save gasoline).

    The fuel cell Honda Insight next spring looks very promising. Charge from plug-in at night makes Hydrogen and Oxygen, runs all day using it up. Batteries are expensive, heavy, and toxic.

  91. Re:Incorrect? by Migraineman · · Score: 1
    Incorrect? I believe you just said the same thing I did. You can register your custom vehicle as a Street Rod (or equivalent,) but there are restrictions on doing so. I have a Historic-registered car in my driveway. I get to skip the emissions requirements, but I'm restricted to driving it less than 2500 miles per year. Same thing goes for the Street Rod. Here's some typical wording (from Maryland's MVA:)

    Vehicles classified as historic or street rod certify the vehicle will be maintained for use in exhibitions, club activities, parades, tours, occasional transportation and similar uses. The vehicle owner further certifies the vehicle will not be used for general daily transportation or primarily for the transportation of passengers or property on highways. You will need to fill out the Application for Historic or Street Rod Registration (form # VR-096) and supply all necessary documentation.

    While you can register a home-built car as a Street Rod, there's strong opposition to you using it as a daily driver ... which was what I stated.

  92. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by crispin_bollocks · · Score: 1

    That's what the deal was with the Honda Accord hybrid - more power and acceleration than the normal Accord V6, and better mileage. No appeal whatsoever to the smug hybrid types, and the people who liked it complained that it didn't have a sun roof, and bought regular V6 models. Oh well.

  93. So no, you do not know WTF is being discussed by QZTR · · Score: 1

    When you said "Actually it does" then proceeded to post a reply that has nothing to do with the difference between mandated safety requirements, you demonstrated that you clearly do not know WTF is being discussed.

    And no, your post has nothing to do with the difference between safety requirements of the US and EU, which is WTF is being discussed.

    --
    To quote LongNoi "QZTR was right and won't leave me alone because I called him a moron when I was wrong" FYS
  94. The gotchas of plug-in microcars by dontmakemethink · · Score: 2, Informative

    1. Microcars are so short that any non-professional driver of any vehicle with an elevated driving position is not going to see them, and you do not want to be hit by a large vehicle in a Microcar.

    2. They're pretty much useless in snow or mud.

    3. Without adequate alternative electricity sources, plug-in cars run on coal. The energy per unit of pollution is better than gasoline, but when people drive more because they don't have to pay for gas...

    --

    War as we knew it was obsolete
    Nothing could beat complete denial
    - Emily Haines
  95. WOW, ONLY 25K!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I cannot believe it! what a bargain! I mean, where are you gonna find a car for such a low price and to be able to "put it together yourself" so satisfying! I would never feel good going to a dealership and picking up say....a Toyota Yaris for 17000 and have it already built and ready to drive....where is the value?!?! where is the challenge? and what would you do with the $8000 you had left over, buy gas? another car, that is just crazy! :P

  96. Re:This would be a waste of time in Ontario, Canad by mollymoo · · Score: 1

    Don't you have anything like low-volume type approval or Single Vehicle Approval in Canada? They're the more relaxed (eg no crash testing) regulations for low-volume and one-off vehicles in the UK. Not having such laws must be a highly effective way to destroy a car industry before it's even born.

    --
    Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
  97. The solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is better public transport in urban centres and better town planning. Plain and simple. The solution's actually been around longer than the car - trains and trams.

    Yeah, you live in the country, need the 4x4 blah blah blah.. but By 2050 at least 50% of the world's population is going to be living in cities, if not more. Most citizens in NY, Tokyo, London, Paris et al make do without a car...

    Car's are (should be) obsolete for most people soon. Order your grocery shopping via Internet... and take the metro to the office. It's SO 19th century. Funny how our ancestor's were so prescient.

  98. Re:buy an old S10 and convert it to HYBRID by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

    Or convert your S-10 to hybrid, with a system from guys who have been doing EV engines for years...

    http://www.go-ev.com/EMIS.html

    --
    Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
  99. Re:Lifetime of Beetle parts... by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    For a lifetime? Are you unwell?

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  100. Re:Motorcycle, not a car; Agreed, but... by hAckz0r · · Score: 1
    Sorry, but I can not quite equate manoeuvrability to "safety". I have, or should I say had, several friends who would tell you today that their extra manoeuvrability didn't quite help enough. That's one major reason I don't ride any more. You would be making a big mistake to rely on manoeuvrability as any kind of safety feature.

    As far as the crumple zones and structure, the vehicle pretty much has that via the epoxy glass laminated foam core. That stuff can take a real pounding and adsorb a lot of force for its weight. Ever check out what a crash helmet is made from? I can tell you its not steel! Crash tests would be necessary to ensure that the proper thickness and shape is used for maximum protection. The lighter weight also is more susceptible to wind and high speed ground effects, but with the proper trim and airflow testing it could be made reasonably safe there too. There is also no reason the vehicle could not have air bags, stability control, and other safety features yet still remain light in weight. It would be high tech and perhaps quite expensive, but very possible. It is likely that any 'production' vehicle will have to have such devices. A kit like this one on the other hand is likely a bad idea for the average experimenter, because they would not opt to add the extra safety gear that would make it equivalent to a normal production car.

  101. crash tests by damage1nc · · Score: 1

    what they didn't tell you is you'll have to build 10 of them in order for the NHTSA to crash test your particular version

  102. Smug? by Trogre · · Score: 1

    What's this stigma with hybrid owners being considered smug holier-than-thou sods?

    You mean like most Linux users? Or people who light their homes with Compact Fluorescents? Or avoid overpackaged items? Bike to work when possible?

    I fit all those categories, but I do them because they seem the right thing to do. Smugness doesn't come into it.

    Okay so Hybrid tech doesn't seem quite "there" yet (hell I get 38mpg from my 2.0L station wagon so would expect a lot more from a hybrid), but these are still early days right?

    Or is the hybrid what the cell phone/CD player were in the early '90s.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  103. and when it's your day in court? by westlake · · Score: 1
    He doesn't have to worry about competing with other auto manufacturers, pressure from Oil companies or ambulance chasers suing him because of some manufacturing flaw.
    .

    Will anyone insure your work?

    When the wheels fall off your little red wagon, what is your legal and financial exposure?

  104. Re:Motorcycle, not a car; Agreed, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    motorbikes have several major safety features: high power, effective brakes, and maneuverability. Some also count LOUD PIPES :)
     
    Chances are, one of those will do the trick to get you out of trouble. In a car your main options to avoid an accident are braking and/or swerving. On an average bike you have 10x the braking and 3x the acceleration of a car at your command.
     
    OTOH 9 out of 10 bike accidents are single-vehicle collisions.

  105. Smug and Pious by A440Hz · · Score: 1

    There's a reason that the South Park episode [toolazytolookitup.com] about hybrids causing 'smug' (instead of smog, clever guys) in South Park had people driving cars called 'Pious' (instead of Prius).

  106. Re:Incorrect? by tgd · · Score: 1

    My point was that you can register a custom car as a normal car.

    If you want the benefits of registering it with a special plate or designation, you can, but in every state you can register a custom car as a normal use street legal vehicle.

  107. green wash in a kit. by Teriblows · · Score: 0

    25k= 5000 gallons of gas at $5 gallon and 150,000 miles range at 30mpg. basically you'll never break even on this environmentally or financially.

  108. Lazy bastard! by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1

    Make yer own transistors!

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:Lazy bastard! by wkitchen · · Score: 1
  109. I guess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    smug territory is better than smog territory.

  110. There's a lot of small print with EVs too by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    I recently attended an EV conference where one of the speakers had done a conversion of a standard pickup. He was telling the people how it cost approx 2c per mile to run.

    Then I asked him what his amortized battery cost was and he reckoned it would be approx 15c per mile (cost of battery/battery lifetime in miles).

    That's a lot more than it costs me to run a standard diesel SUV.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:There's a lot of small print with EVs too by Rei · · Score: 1

      Yep -- that's lead-acid for ya :P

      --
      Do you work at Taco Bell? The guy at the drive-through said that to me last night.
  111. Is it legal to drive this thing around? by AlphaZeta · · Score: 1

    I mean, does this self-assembled car pass any government mandated crash tests? Is it actually legal to drive it around?

  112. Re:Lifetime of Beetle parts... by narcberry · · Score: 1

    I don't think he meant the old Beetle

    --
    Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
  113. Diesel by ritzer · · Score: 1

    The litres of fuel consumed per hundred kilometers are similar between say, the Camry and the Jetta TDI (2009) -- and this is partly due to the fact that diesel has more energy per litre than gasoline. (See wikipedia for a good explanation, if this isn't obvious.) However, the clean diesel has far lower emissions that gasoline hybrid engines in nearly every category, except CO2 -- CO2 tonnes over the life cycle of the vehicle is still expected to be somewhat higher than the hybrid gas. However, in my mind the effects of high amounts of CO are often much more directly felt than CO2. I recently built emissions models for both those vehicles, the results unfortunately on my hard drive at work, not here at my finger tips. Given the low emissions of a modern clean diesel engine, the motivation to go with a hybrid isn't at all clear.

  114. Gosh... by WeeBit · · Score: 1

    I just can't help to think that one day we might have several hundred of these on our highways... on every other stretch of 25 miles of the highway one in every 7 was put together by some idiot that ALWAYS has a few nuts and bolts left over after the assembly of the car. They do the same with everything else they have ever put together. Slapping a build-it-yourself hybrid car together will be no different.

    um... New rule for road maybe is in order?

    Do not drive in front of, or behind one of these wanna be cars in your SUV. It could get messy.

  115. Re:Registration? What if you... by Paul+Carver · · Score: 1

    Wallah, you have a car that you "didn't make" that you can register as a customized antique/whatever.

    Who is this Wallah person to whom you speak?

  116. Re:Lifetime of Beetle parts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    In my experience, the part that breaks on the one you are using is already broken or worn out on the donor vehicles.

    I suspect they design them that way.

  117. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by suggsjc · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of this?

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    When I have a kid, I want to put him in one of those strollers for twins and then run around the mall looking frantic.
  118. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

    V6? IL6 is much better for torque stability and vibrations, and if you are space constrained get a 180 degree defased crank (opposed to the regular 90) 4-cyl and GET A DAMN TURBOCHARGER! Or three!

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    I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  119. Vehicle width problem by jeephistorian · · Score: 1

    On any given ICE vehicle that has inline drivetrains, this isn't an issue. Unfortunately, the Corolla is transverse mounted ICE, which means the engine and drive train sit across the front of your vehicle rather than running down it. To fit a motor between the ICE and tranny would widen the drive train (and front of the car).

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    Huh?
  120. Who is smug and who is redirecting guilt? by stpatrickjr · · Score: 1

    I would guess, by this writer's ending comments, that the author owns a Ford F150 or an equivalent. I have yet to meet a "smug" hybrid owner. (For the record, I own a Subaru Forester.)

  121. Re:I disagree with what's written on the main page by guruevi · · Score: 1

    You have to watch out if you do it yourself. I built things powered by electric motors (not cars) and the main problem is that if you need lots of force in an instant, the engine can deliver it (electric motors are very powerful) but the rest of the mechanics might not be able to stand the force or move it that quick and you'll end up twisting or breaking something down the line. A lot of constructions where electric motors power a driveshaft use special gearboxes for that.

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    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com