https://thedriven.io/2018/11/23/bitten-by-electric-bug-it-started-with-a-1964-vw-beetle-ev-conversion/
Bitten by electric Bug: It started with a 1964 VW Beetle EV conversion
November 23, 2018  Giles Parkinson

[images  
https://thedriven.io/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/VWbeetle1.jpg
Red electric beetle

https://thedriven.io/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/VWbeetle2.jpg
]

At the recent Australian Electric Vehicle Association exhibition in Brisbane
you could barely miss it; in-between the glamorous Jaguar I-Pace and a Tesla
Model S was a bright red VW beetle – a 1964 version, and fully electric.

Australians have been struggling to get their hands on an affordable
electric vehicles. The Tesla and BMWs have been pricey, and to get hold of a
new Nissan Leaf has virtually meant having to get the sales person into a
headlock to convince him or her to sell it to you.

As a result, many enthusiasts have taken matters into their own hands.
Conversions are a rapidly growing trend (and for some an emerging business),
and EV enthusiast and clean energy entrepreneur Nick Lake has been bitten by
the bug.

He was in Shanghai, reading the Wall Street Journal of all things, and saw a
story about a guy who had converted an old VW. He decided he wanted to do
the same, got hold of a bright red Volkswagen Beetle, and set about the
task.

Lake lives in the Northern Rivers region of NSW, with plenty of acres,
13.5kW of rooftop solar and 60kWh of battery storage. He’s not (yet) off
grid, but is largely self-sufficient.

“Transport is a big carbon emitter,” says Lake, who has also helped pioneer
the EnergyLab program that is nurturing clean-tech ideas, including some
relating to EVs and new mobility business models.

“I thought about it for years. I believe we need to have fossil free
transport and I wanted to go electric. But outside of Tesla there were not
many options.

“So “I thought ‘why not do a bug?’. I bought one, took the motor out,
imported some batteries from China and put in a new electric motor.”

Well, it wasn’t quite as easy as that.  But it was mostly fun, doing it in
his spare time, on the weekend with friends, and occasionally getting some
help from experienced conversion experts, such as James Pauly from Traction
EV in Brisbane.

After spending about $30,000, the electric red bug is complete. It has a
22kWh battery and a range of 130km – about the same range as the first
Nissan Leaf.

And it is an unbelievably good drive. (Lake drove me and The Driven
contributor Bridie Schmidt to the EV conference from the Tweed. We got there
with a few kilometers to spare!)

“It’s got everything but the noise. Better speed, better acceleration, lower
maintenance,” Lake says.

“And the kids love it. I take them to school, all their friends gather
around and I feel like it’s an education piece.

“It’s an awesome conversation starter. The look of it attracts attention,
and there’s no dak dak dak of the engine.

“For me, this is giving a classic car a new lease of life. It retains its
embodied energy and will carry it for another 50 years.

“The whole beauty of converting an old car is that it becomes essentially
maintenance free, it’s more fun to drive, there’s more power, greater
acceleration, and it’s cheaper to run.”

Lake uses the car mostly to run around the Northern Rivers, to the office in
Byron, to the school near Lismore, and shopping and sporting runs.

He charges it every second day – the charging is slow, but he can do it
overnight, and it’s emissions free given the amount of solar and battery
storage he has at his home.

Any shortfalls?

Yes, once. Lake was driving back from Brisbane and his gauge was not
properly synchronised. He came to a stop 7km short of home in the middle of
the night, and had no choice but to walk the rest of the way.

“You only do that once,” he says.

But Lake won’t stop with a bright red electric bug. His next project is
converting a 1950s-era Porsche 356 – the model made famous by James Dean.

“It’s super cool. It has a similar engine to the VW, and you can use exactly
the same EV motor,” Lake says. “But they are as cute as.”

Postscript: The electric red bug is for sale! You can either come through
his Mr 10%, which is us, or contact him directly at Energy Lab.

You can also listen to my interview with Lake, in situ in the EV, in the
latest episode of The Driven podcast.

And here’s a video featuring EV Traction’s James Pauly and some more details
about this electric red bug that also may interest
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2JK9mwcdLQ .
[© thedriven.io]


+
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Delhi government aims for 25% electric vehicles in 5 years to combat rising
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Nov 28, 2018  Officials from Delhi government’s transport department ...
seeks to put in place measures that address key hurdles in that direction. 
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...
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Electric Vehicles In Delhi — New 2018 EV Policy Proposed By Delhi Government
November 28, 2018  The Delhi government has released a draft version of
their 'Electric Vehicle Policy 2018', which will ensure 25 percent of new...
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