Australia's first electric MX5!
Moderators: timk, Stu, zombie, Andrew, The American, Lokiel, -alex, miata, StanTheMan, greenMachine, ManiacLachy, Daffy
-
- Driver
- Posts: 95
- Joined: Tue Jan 10, 2006 2:28 pm
- Vehicle: ND - 2
- Location: Melbourne
i've been keeping an eye on this project. glad to hear it's drivable!
Please if you don't end up mass converting miatas around the globe yourself, keep notes and the information you've gained available (via website/forum etc). I know if the price of the equipment comes down enough in the next 10 years converting the na to electric will be very enticing.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/web/crowd ... 07920.html
interesting article. definitely need a site like this in english. also i agree that they should be using 10 yo plus cars.
Please if you don't end up mass converting miatas around the globe yourself, keep notes and the information you've gained available (via website/forum etc). I know if the price of the equipment comes down enough in the next 10 years converting the na to electric will be very enticing.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/web/crowd ... 07920.html
interesting article. definitely need a site like this in english. also i agree that they should be using 10 yo plus cars.
- 16bit
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 2346
- Joined: Wed Nov 29, 2006 1:51 pm
- Vehicle: NB8A - Supercharged
- Location: Brisbane Southside
with that amount of torque and maybe some slightly higher gearing electric cars should make the best drifters around - especially with how you have batteries front and rear which should give great weight distribution. a brilliant project and just shows that this kind of thing is easy to do compared to what the car makers would have you believe (not that it would be easy). If you wrote instructions and sold kits i would say you will be a rich man one day. Lets face it people who own mx5's would probably rather lose a leg then sell their car due to fuel costs so this will probably be a very popular conversion in a few years. I personally love the idea of electric cars.
98 evo gold - rotrexed and loving it.
This post has been printed using recycled pixels
This post has been printed using recycled pixels
- timk
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1928
- Joined: Fri Dec 31, 2004 3:16 pm
- Vehicle: NC
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
This is VERY cool! If I'm ever in Perth I'd love to check it out.
- ASE05
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 741
- Joined: Fri Jun 10, 2005 11:35 pm
- Vehicle: NB SE
- Location: Not from 'round these parts...
- Contact:
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
OK you win, this is the most X-Treme engine conversion I have ever seen
WOW is all I can say
WOW is all I can say
Sing that song, puff all night long.......
- bensale
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1984
- Joined: Tue Sep 11, 2007 7:38 pm
- Vehicle: NA6
- Location: Melbourne Australia
- Contact:
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
Amazing, that in my opinion is about as good as it can get, I would love to be able to do that
I cant wait until you take it around Australia, I would love to see it!
I cant wait until you take it around Australia, I would love to see it!
www.othersideproductions.com
NA6-Phillip Island 1:57.7, Winton 1:42.9, Winton Short 1:12.4, Sandown 1:35.2, Wakefield 1.15.9, Nurburgring 9:17.0
NA6-Phillip Island 1:57.7, Winton 1:42.9, Winton Short 1:12.4, Sandown 1:35.2, Wakefield 1.15.9, Nurburgring 9:17.0
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
Love it. Congratulations. I don't think I saw it mentioned anywhere, but how much did the conversion cost
Okay, just saw it. $25,000 is a lot, but you've gotta start somewhere. The pioneers of technology will always shoulder the cost burden.
Okay, just saw it. $25,000 is a lot, but you've gotta start somewhere. The pioneers of technology will always shoulder the cost burden.
- Caffeine
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1806
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2003 11:00 am
- Vehicle: NB8B
- Location: Sydney
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
What sort of range are you expecting from this?
Supreme Blue NB8B, 1:16.98 at Wakefield when stock, but it's not stock any more...
- Hoops
- Driver
- Posts: 27
- Joined: Fri Nov 09, 2007 10:11 pm
- Vehicle: ND - 2 GT
- Location: Perth, WA
- Contact:
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
Caffeine: It gets about 120-150km per charge, depending on speed/terrain/etc. So, still a lot less than a petrol car but plugging it in when you get home is a lot easier (and cheaper!) than visiting a petrol station.
fundles: Yeah you're right on the money (no pun intended!); converting vehicles to electric is very expensive at present but we've gotta start somewhere! Once people have seen that it's possible, hopefully the pressure on automakers to produce electrics will increase, and for them the economies of mass production would mean electic vehicles would be no more expensive than petrol vehicles.
fundles: Yeah you're right on the money (no pun intended!); converting vehicles to electric is very expensive at present but we've gotta start somewhere! Once people have seen that it's possible, hopefully the pressure on automakers to produce electrics will increase, and for them the economies of mass production would mean electic vehicles would be no more expensive than petrol vehicles.
Ian Hooper, Perth WA
Australia's first zero emission MX5!
Australia's first zero emission MX5!
- Caffeine
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 1806
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2003 11:00 am
- Vehicle: NB8B
- Location: Sydney
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
Hoops wrote:Caffeine: It gets about 120-150km per charge, depending on speed/terrain/etc. So, still a lot less than a petrol car but plugging it in when you get home is a lot easier (and cheaper!) than visiting a petrol station.
Nice! that would cover ~99% of the trips most of us make
Supreme Blue NB8B, 1:16.98 at Wakefield when stock, but it's not stock any more...
- TieNN89
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 2012
- Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2007 8:27 pm
- Vehicle: NC
- Location: Brisbane
- Contact:
Re: Australia's first electric MX5!
Hoops wrote:fundles: Yeah you're right on the money (no pun intended!); converting vehicles to electric is very expensive at present but we've gotta start somewhere! Once people have seen that it's possible, hopefully the pressure on automakers to produce electrics will increase, and for them the economies of mass production would mean electic vehicles would be no more expensive than petrol vehicles.
But the government will loose taxes as you won't be buying Petrol which is loaded with tax $$
So they'd add more taxes to electricity = increase electricity bill
- Stu
- Racing Driver
- Posts: 909
- Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2006 9:38 pm
- Vehicle: NB8B
- Location: Melbourne
- Contact:
Australia's first electric MX5!
Holy Cow
Amazing job.
Amazing job.
- marcusus
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 13, 2006 12:07 am
- Vehicle: NB8A
Australia's first electric MX5!
Well done
I'd love to do this on my own MX5 if I could get the (power and kilometre) range of the Tesla.
Will have a solid read of the articles on the weekend when I have some time.
I'd love to do this on my own MX5 if I could get the (power and kilometre) range of the Tesla.
Will have a solid read of the articles on the weekend when I have some time.
- Hoops
- Driver
- Posts: 27
- Joined: Fri Nov 09, 2007 10:11 pm
- Vehicle: ND - 2 GT
- Location: Perth, WA
- Contact:
Australia's first electric MX5!
It should be easy to get the performance of the Tesla - in fact I have a much more powerful battery pack and motor controller on order which should let this little car surpass the Tesla's acceleration. The Tesla also have a fairly bad weight balance by comparison so I doubt they'd keep up around a racetrack either. (Stage 1 of this project has been getting it converted and licensed. Stage 2 is making it the quickest electric car in the southern hemisphere.. Stay tuned!)
But it'd be pretty darn hard to achieve the same range as a Tesla with a backyard conversion. Since the Tesla was designed from the ground up as an electric, they've allowed for a very large battery pack (~400kg if I remember correctly, something like a third of the vehicle's total weight). They're also using a different chemistry (Lithium Cobalt) which offers higher energy density but are harder to work with - e.g you have to make sure the cells stay within a safe operating range or they can spontaneously combust!! Tesla have an incredibly high tech battery system which is beyond the reach of us backyard converters.
But it'd be pretty darn hard to achieve the same range as a Tesla with a backyard conversion. Since the Tesla was designed from the ground up as an electric, they've allowed for a very large battery pack (~400kg if I remember correctly, something like a third of the vehicle's total weight). They're also using a different chemistry (Lithium Cobalt) which offers higher energy density but are harder to work with - e.g you have to make sure the cells stay within a safe operating range or they can spontaneously combust!! Tesla have an incredibly high tech battery system which is beyond the reach of us backyard converters.
Ian Hooper, Perth WA
Australia's first zero emission MX5!
Australia's first zero emission MX5!
- marcusus
- Speed Racer
- Posts: 2919
- Joined: Thu Jul 13, 2006 12:07 am
- Vehicle: NB8A
Australia's first electric MX5!
Hoops wrote:Tesla have an incredibly high tech battery system which is beyond the reach of us backyard converters.
That's a shame for backyard converters, but well done on Tesla's part to develop the technology. I'd love to work for them if the opportunity arose. I just wonder how much I'd have to relinquish my computer engineering and coding knowhow and go back to basics with electronics and physics.
What do you think the maximum range is you could get out of your '5 if you stuck with the technology you're currently using?
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 25 guests