It's a notebook sketch that jumped onto IL roads through sheer gumption and
delusional optimism  
"Anything's for sale for the right price,"

http://gizmodo.com/riding-in-the-car-of-the-future-built-in-an-illinois-b-1502614663/1505986697/@dXtRs
Riding in the Car of the Future, Built in an Illinois Barn
[2014/01/21]

[images  
http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cnifvyo3wyajpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cngw5c072uzjpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cnttetj0s13jpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cqakhj7xqr6jpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cof3wcpbp9rjpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19compxr8xl31jpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cq2xgm67ewpjpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cq5beejjoe9jpg/original.jpg
Kevin Smith at the wheel of his invention

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cq56un4mtn4jpg/original.jpg

http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/19cq7ax9yztvijpg/original.jpg
]

At first glance, this rockabilly Batmobile looks like a retro-fetishist's
pet project. It's not. In fact, this freak machine, hand-built by a ragtag
team in an Illinois town of 1,200, is the deepest look into the future of
cars you've ever clapped eyes on. One frigid day in Brooklyn, Gizmodo
buckled in for a ride.

This suede-black torpedo is the Illuminati Motor Works Seven, a
battery-powered electric car built for the 2010 Progressive Automotive X
Prize, which offered $5 million to anyone who could build a 100 MPG car as
roomy, fast and sure-footed as a modern family sedan.

The Illuminati team didn't win the jackpot—a mechanical issue disqualified
the car in the final competition—but team leader Kevin Smith and his
shadetree crew have been improving their baby ever since. And when Kevin,
author Jason Fagone, and two Illuminati team members arrived in the Seven
for a Brooklyn book event—Ingenious: A True Story of Invention, Automotive
Daring, and the Race to Revive America, Jason's new book, is a compelling
look at the Automotive X Prize story—Gizmodo called shotgun.

The Seven is sweeping: as long as a full-size pickup truck, as slender as a
Toyota Prius, and low enough to rest my elbow on the roof. The arcing
fenders exaggerate the comic book proportions, while chrome headlight trim
from a 1937 Ford, spun aluminum wheel covers, and that sinister matte finish
nod to the early days of homebrew hotrodding.

The carbon fiber and kevlar body took shape in a sketchbook, the rise and
run of the curves guided by Kevin's imagination and pages he photocopied
from an ancient textbook on aerodynamics. It's draped over a frame of steel
tubes that were heated in a wood stove and bent to shape by hand. "We'd just
grind and muscle it into shape," Kevin said. "One of the guys [from MIT's X
Prize team] said, 'they just beasted this thing together.' And that's what
we did."

The bizarre exterior gives way to a more familiar looking cockpit when you
climb through the gullwing door, a feature Kevin opted for simply because he
could. There's a climate control system, a radio with auxiliary input, even
cupholders for the front and backward-facing rear seats. Oh, that's right;
the rear seats face the cars behind you.

The grey felt-upholstered interior is about as roomy and well-appointed as a
ten-year-old family sedan, and a ten-second lesson on the rotary knob that
selects Reverse and Drive is all anyone would need to drive it.

Once we're rolling, though, the familiarity of 100 years of petrol-powered
automotion melts away. Crawling around double-parked cars on a cobblestone
street, the electric motor's note is nearly imperceptible, a faint whirring
underneath the slap of the tires against the crumbling road. Cruising
between stoplights, it makes a noise not unlike a quiet vacuum cleaner, if
vacuum cleaners could accelerate four grown men and 2,900 lbs of car down a
city street. It sounds similar to a Prius in electric-only mode, though
maybe a tad louder. Compared to the shuddering, coughing taxis around us,
the Seven's motor sounds downright pleasant.

Then traffic opens up, and Kevin drops the hammer. The Seven accelerates
with surprising authority, thrusting ahead on a wave of instantaneous
torque. Now the vacuum cleaner is pissed, emitting something approaching a
high-pitched growl despite not being powered by dead dinosaurs. Illuminati
Motor Works says the car will do zero-to-60 faster than Subaru's BR-Z sports
car. I believe it.

The acceleration is impressive, but not nearly as much as the environmental
bits and bob. In official EPA testing at a Chrysler facility, under the same
stringent conditions used by the major car manufacturers, the Illuminati
Motor Works Seven clocked in at 207.5 MPGe. That's right: this 200
horsepower jalopy, built by a group of amateurs in a pole barn, can travel
over 200 miles on the amount of electricity equivalent to a gallon of gas.
It also does a verified 130 mph, seats four six-footers, and can fit a golf
bag in its befinned trunk.

For comparison, Volkswagen's two-seater XL1, which Popular Science just
called "the most efficient car ever," smokes the Seven at 261 MPG. But it
tops out at just 99 mph, makes only 74 horsepower, and takes twice as long
to go from zero to 60. And it cost VW untold millions to engineer. The Seven
would show its LED taillights to an electric Nissan Leaf in a drag race, and
the Seven's 200 mile range towers over the Leaf's sub-100 rating. The only
thing in the same neighborhood is the Tesla Model S, which dusts the Seven
on acceleration and maybe, possibly equals it in driving range.

It's legitimately hard to believe. "When (Illuminati team leader) Kevin
first told me what the car could do, I thought he was full of shit," Jason
told me after my joyride. "But I thought it was interesting enough to follow
him, cause if he could do it, what would that mean? If a guy in a barn,
working with a couple of friends on the weekend, could make a 200 MPG car,
with a 200 mile range and 130 MPH top speed, then why couldn't the big auto
companies do it?"

The Illuminati Motor Works Seven isn't going to steal customers from the big
companies any time soon. Kevin has $200,000 of his own money wrapped up in
it—"two Teslas" in his terms—and while he jokingly told the constant stream
of curious onlookers that "anything's for sale for the right price," he's
probably not parting with it. Besides, one jerry-rigged wombat on wheels
isn't going to uproot the industry.

In truth, it's barely even a prototype; it's a notebook sketch that jumped
off the page and onto the rural roads of Illinois through sheer gumption and
delusional optimism. But the Illuminati Motor Works Seven shows us just how
much is possible beyond what manufacturers are offering us today.

Kevin Smith is convinced, obviously. So is his wife, who bought an electric
Mitsubishi i-MiEV to park next to the Seven. Jason Fagione, the author who
started this journey as a skeptical non-gearhead, tells me his next car will
be electric.

Looks like the future is headed our way. With swooping fenders and gullwing
doors.
[© gizmodo.com]
...
http://illuminatimotorworks.org/
Illuminati Motor Works Seven




For all EVLN posts use:
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=evln&sort=date

Here are today's archive-only EV posts:

EVLN: Toronto E-bike supporters want access to bicycle lanes
EVent: Plugin lecture @Green Mountain Center 5:30p Feb5 Rutland, VT
EVLN: Charging-Rage, EVSE-user's dark-side, !He stole my charge!
EVLN: Big-Apple Up's NYC Taxi Fleet to 30% Electric
+
EVLN: GM EV1s, 12 gen1-RAV4-EVs, & Berlingo EV in China


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Suede-black-Electric-Rockabilly-Batmobile-Retro-Freak-Machine-tp4667632.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to