http://www.barrheadleader.com/article/20141118/BAR0801/311189998/-1/bar0801
Look mom, no gasoline
Nov 18, 2014  By: Barry Kerton

[image  / Barry Kerton
http://www.barrheadleader.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=GR&Date=20141118&Category=BAR0801&ArtNo=311189998
Stoik poses beside his most recent project, a 1959 NSU Prinz
]

Local car buff uses an old classic to build an electric car

It looks like a conventional car and it even sounds like one, but on further
inspection there is one big difference.

However, upon further inspection, people will find there is one big
difference between Leonard Stoik’s latest project and a conventional car, it
has no motor. At least in the conventional sense.

Stoik is a retired farmer and part-time school bus driver and tow truck
driver, who in his spare time restores classic or unique automobiles.

His latest project is a 1955 NSU Prinz.

“The car is totally electric,” Stoik said.

When the car first rolled off the assembly line in West Germany, as part of
the now defunct NSU Motorenwerke company, it had a conventional gasoline
engine.

“The engine was air-cooled and in the back of the car, like the Volkswagen
Bug,” he said, adding that he believes Volkswagen may have taken over the
company.

Stoik bought the car in July from Fred Godberson’s wife.

“When he (Fredrick Godberson) bought the car at an auction,” Stoik said. “It
was just an empty shell, it was really in rough shape.”

Godberson who owned the car for a number of years, would work on the car in
his spare time in an effort to restore it to its former lustre.

“He (Godberson) had made a lot of progress,” Stoik said. “He built a frame
for the electric motor and put in a chain drive.”

Unfortunately, Godberson became ill and passed away before he could complete
the project, so Stoik decided he would complete the project.

After, buying the Prinz from Godberson’s widow, Stoik continued to work on
the car and has gotten it to the point where it is road worthy.

“I still have a lot of work to do on it, but by the spring I should have
everything completed,” Stoik said.

One of the things Stoik will work on during the winter is eliminating the
noise of the car.

“When an electric car runs it should be very quiet, but this one is very
loud,” Stoik said. A fact this reporter can attest to after being taken on a
drive around Beaver Brook Estates.

Stoik said the noise comes from the car’s chain drive. While he said the
chain drive is efficient and is capable of getting the Prinz up to highway
speeds, it is very noisy.

During the winter, he hopes to solve the problem by replacing the chain
drive with a differential from an ATV. In order to lessen road noise, Stoik
also plans to install a sound and temperature insulating material.

“Right now it is basically an empty shell,” he said, referring to the
interior of the car. “That is why you can hear it echo when you shut the
door.”

Another project Stoik plans to complete over the winter is to create a more
efficient charging system.

Currently, Stoik powers the car using conventional lead acid car batteries.

“Right now I have six, 12 volt batteries, making 72 volts,” Stoik said.
“Unfortunately, I have no real way of charging them yet.”

Most conventional car battery chargers are created for 12-volt batteries.
Stoik said if he were to try to use a regular battery charger, it would not
be safe and it would do serious damage to the car and the batteries.

To charge the batteries Stoik disconnects all the batteries, which are wired
in series, and hooks them up in parallel.

By charging the batteries in this fashion, besides being extra work, it also
takes extra time.

He said to fully charge the batteries it would take 24 hours, which is a
major time expenditure, especially considering the car only runs for about
40 minutes on a charge.

“It was really interesting getting it (Prinz) registered,” he said, adding
that even though there is still work to be done before the car is roadworthy
and legal.

After he had the car inspected, which is required by law before it is
registered, he went to the local registry office.

“On the inspection form the mechanic, checked off was no engine, no gas
tank, no transmission, and no exhaust. The registry office did not know what
to do with it,” he said, adding that eventually he was successful in getting
it insured and registered.

Although, Stoik said this is his first electric powered car, this is far
from his first restoration project.

He said he always had an interest in cars and when he was working on his
farm in Vega (about 30 kilometres north of Barrhead), he was continuously
building go-carts and dune buggies.

After he retired from the farm and moved to Barrhead, Stoik continued to
tinker with automobiles.

“My first big project was a 1926 Model T,” he said. “I took out every bolt
of that car, cleaned it up with acid dip and put everything back together,
upholstered it very nicely.”

In addition to the Prinz and the Model T, Stoik has restored a 1960 and 1970
Cadillac, 1977 Lincoln and a 1977 Ford Ranger pickup truck, which he uses to
pull his other vehicles to nearby car shows.
[© 2014 Great West Newspapers]




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