http://www.bbc.com/autos/story/20150928-from-south-sudan-the-worlds-most-important-suv
From South Sudan, the world's most important SUV
By David K Gibson  28 September 2015

[images  
http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033snj5.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033snhr.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033snjl.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033snhf.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033snhk.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033sngf.jpg

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/wwfeatures/976_549/images/live/p0/33/sn/p033sngk.jpg
Chris Low's Solar Utility Vehicle  / Chris Low / hackaday.io
]

In South Sudan, per capita GDP hovers around $1,000. There is no postal
system, and roads are muddy ruts. There is ongoing military conflict.

This doesn’t seem like the best place to invent a new automobile.

But that’s what Chris Low is doing. The American expat first visited South
Sudan (then part of Sudan) in 2008, when he helped build a center for
orphans in a town called Yei, and he’s lived there off-and-on since. He’s
had a difficult time with cars there.

“I’ve spent a lot of time fixing vehicles for different organizations I’ve
worked with, and it is often an exercise in frustration because spare parts
can be very difficult to source and proper mechanics are few and far
between.” Amid the SUVs, the vehicle he found most useful was a small 150cc
motorised tricycle with a utility bed in the back. But it required repeated
rebuilds of the clutch, and was tough going on the rutted roads.

So Low reconsidered the problem. “I am a big believer of the idea of
irreducible simplicity,” he says. “I wanted to build something that had the
absolute minimum number of parts, especially parts that can't be sourced
locally.”

“I love working in local African metal workshops and seeing the way they can
build anything from standard steel sections and scrap,” says Low. True to
that vision, he began building a prototype out of angle iron scrapped from a
fence. He figured that if he hit upon a basic design that could be locally
manufactured, it could also be locally serviced and customized for anything
from agricultural work to hauling construction materials to taking the sick
to the hospital.

His creation is a four-wheeled vehicle on an articulating frame, an idea
inspired by PUG off-road vehicles that have been around since the 1960s. A
joint in the middle keeps all four wheels on the ground for traction and
stability. But where PUGs and their ilk used an internal combustion engine
and complicated drive shafts, Low’s chariot is all-electric, with a motor
driving each wheel and a bank of solar panels suspended overhead.

An electric approach has other advantages. Though it’s rich in oil, South
Sudan has no refineries, and gasoline supplies are limited. Low and his
wife, a doctor in a hospital for women and children, were recently at a
refugee camp near the Sudanese border, where gasoline prices approached $30
per gallon. “Other more remote places have no access to petrol at all,” says
Low. “Fortunately, the sun is much more reliable than the distribution chain
here.” Living off the grid — because the grid is unreliable — means that Low
has plenty of experience installing and repairing photovoltaic panels.

Those batteries — lithium ion if available, but the weight of lead-acid
boxes will help with traction — power 650W motors which were ordered from
China, shipped to Uganda, and then delivered to Low in a small airplane. The
wheels are Chinese and Indian motorcycle parts, which are widely available
and have built-in bearings, brakes, and sprockets, and cost only $65
including chain. By using them in an axle-free design, Low notes, “I have
much greater ground clearance than on our Land Cruiser.”

Steering is accomplished by varying the speed of the wheels, through a
differential motor control system that’s still in development. And like the
finest jet aircraft, Low’s vehicle is 100% fly-by-wire, steered by way of an
old Nunchuk controller for a Nintendo Wii gaming console. The first
prototype actually used a six-channel transmitter for a radio-controlled
model airplane. “This offers me a lot of flexibility, is cheap, and I like
the idea of remote control for some of the agricultural applications I am
thinking of,” he wrote in his build notes on hackaday.oi. “This area still
has a lot of unexploded land mines.”

Low estimates the vehicle has cost him about $3,500 to build — with solar
panels and batteries accounting for about $2,000 of that sum. Once the
design is fully vetted, he plans to release step-by-step build instructions,
including cut lists and photographic guides to make the vehicle accessible
to people without a technical background.

In 130 years of innovation, automotive designers have bested sand pits,
boulders, swamps, snow, trenches, ice, mud, and the inscrutable terrain of
other planets. The one obstacle none seem to be able to conquer is poverty.

If that’s a hurdle Chris Low can get his passengers over, then he’ll have
designed the world’s most useful utility vehicle.
[© 2015 BBC]



http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/09/29/safrica-solar-automotive-idINL5N11X0B920150929
Solar-powered cars spark South Africans' interest in clean tech
By Munyaradzi Makoni  Sep 29, 2015
 
CAPE TOWN, South Africa, Sept 29 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - T eams from
two South African universities have taken solar-powered cars to Australia to
compete in an international rally and showcase their government's efforts to
inspire green technology at home.
The Hulamin and the Sirius X25 ...
...
http://www.voanews.com/content/reu-solar-powered-cars-spark-south-africans-interest-in-clean-tech/2983865.html
Solar-powered Cars Spark South Africans' Interest in Clean Tech
Reuters  September 29, 2015 ... the Hulamin Solar Car ...
http://gdb.voanews.com/2D0D1126-EA81-4A1B-8D67-FCCBAF1E85CD_w640_r1_s_cx0_cy8_cw0.jpg
...
http://www.timeslive.co.za/sundaytimes/stnews/2015/09/29/Solar-powered-cars-spark-interest-in-clean-tech
By Munyaradzi Makoni, 2015-09-29 ... The UKZN Solar Car team unveils the
solar powered car they will be racing in Australia in October ...



http://www.tyrepress.com/2015/09/bridgestone-tyres-for-worlds-fastest-solar-sports-car/
Bridgestone tyres for ‘world’s fastest’ solar sports Sunswift eVe
28th September 2015
http://www.timeslive.co.za/Feeds/ipad_images/2015/09/29/ttp2solar16-15-07-2015-17-07-04-588-.jpg/ALTERNATES/crop_973x480/TTP2SOLAR16-15-07-2015-17-07-04-588-.jpg




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-3-5k-Low-s-PV-Util-Vehicle-w-Nunchuk-wheel-spd-steering-cntlr-tp4677883.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
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to