https://techreport.com/featured/3466321/upgrade-your-cars-motor-with-a-motor/
Upgrade your car’s motor with a motor
October 23, 2019  Aaron Vienot

[images  
https://cdn.techreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/not-an-engine.png
Not a combustion engine…but it fits where one used to be

https://cdn.techreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/swindon-crate-EV-768x527.png
Swindon’s concept render


video
https://youtu.be/IOLzpBzUXZs
The Teslonda in action - Tesla powered Honda Accord
]

‘sup dawg, I heard you like motors, so I put a motor in your motor so you
can motor with a motor.
The EV conversion: instructions not included

Battery EV conversions of former ICE-powered vehicles are nothing new.
Hobbyists with a tolerance for traveling low, slow, and local were doing it
with lead-acid batteries decades ago, and occasionally getting all the way
across town on a full charge.

Recently, things have improved dramatically. Modern hybrids and battery-EVs
are now salvageable in wrecking yards, and parts for same are listed in
vendor catalogs. Modern DIY EV enthusiasts also benefit from the
corresponding advantages in weight, efficiency, and charging infrastructure
compared to what was available 10 or 20 years back. There are countless DIY
EV conversions floating around to prove it. A famous one from early last
year was the conversion of a 1981 Honda Accord into a “gasser” style drag
race champion, using the motor and inverter from a Tesla Model S.

It looks, and runs, and sounds, like a competition RC car hopped up on
amphetamines:

The Teslonda, bane of Gaslandia.

Even with widespread parts availability, the required rump engineering is
formidable. The Teslonda project was rather extreme, given that a 2.7s 0-60
time from a nominally 1981 auto chassis is…ambitious. When the last bolt was
torqued, very little was left of the original Accord. Parts for the
conversion included not only the Tesla drivetrain, but also a Chevrolet Volt
battery pack and a range of supporting bits as diverse as an electric
coolant pump from an Audi S4 and random suspension components that would be
entirely familiar to the owner of a ’32 Ford.

Even at a more basic level, this kind of project means finding at least two
cars, one of which is a scrapped drivetrain donor. That gets you a pile of
parts somewhat like this, but with the possibility of hidden accident damage
or storage decay. Often the builder will need to dabble in an entire
community college’s worth of trade professions, starting with basic hobby
mechanic and ending with advanced electrical diagnostic technician. Some
commercial EV drivetrains will throw serious errors or refuse to operate if
the native ECU computers are re-used without reusing nearly all of the
original sensors and interface bits, requiring hacking or workaround
trickery to resolve.

Mainstreaming it: a drop-in, electric crate engine

Enter Electric GT, a California company made famous a few years back when
its cofounders pulled a lightly charred Ferrari 308 from a wrecking yard and
performed a battery-EV conversion, purportedly a world first. (The Ferrari
conversion, we mean, not the Ferrari fire.) The company has entertained
other projects along the way, and one day it had a bit of inspiration:
people routinely rebuild or convert vehicles by swapping one ICE for
another. Why not build a crate-style EV drivetrain that would swap out in
the same way?

Green Car Reports has several photos from Electric GT in their article last
month ...

Electric GT is attempting to provide a drop-in unit that combines both the
necessary motor and inverter components, and bolts up to the vehicle’s
original transmission. Not only is it intended to fit where an engine used
to be, it’s trying to look good while doing it. One challenge for an EV
conversion, especially if modifying a classic vehicle, is how to interface
to the existing driveline and populate the engine bay without taking away
from the vehicle’s show-worthiness. This might do the trick, if the company
can build it in volume.

Electric GT is currently in the process of converting an FJ40-series Land
Cruiser with a prototype crate motor build, retaining the original
transmission and 4WD drivetrain in the process. The design also includes
complete liquid cooling hardware and hoses, requiring only an external
radiator, and there is an integrated 6.6 kW battery charging circuit as
well.

If all goes to plan, they will offer both a 140 hp/240 lb-ft base option and
a dual-motor option producing 240 hp/340 lb-ft. Those might seem like rookie
numbers in an era when even a V6 Toyota Camry (of all things) can convert
dead dinosaurs into 300 hp. But in practice those are respectable outputs
considering the limits of the packaging, and will meet or exceed the needs
of nearly any classic vehicle that would be worth converting. Pricing is
still up in the air, but supposedly more information will be released by the
year’s end.
Me too, love

More recently, a UK company has announced a competing option. Swindon, a
powertrain specialist closing in on its golden anniversary, has announced
that they are also working on a concept crate motor scheduled for a 2020
release. Pricing is likewise yet to be announced.

Swindon’s concept, as recently discussed by Jalopnik, targets a slightly
smaller vehicle ...

The Swindon unit is notably more compact than Electric GT’s option and makes
a slightly less ambitious 110 hp, a byproduct of being based on a classic
Mini EV conversion the company already performs. In this case the preferred
application replaces both the engine and the transmission, bolting up
directly to the axles.

Swindon’s concept drawings additionally propose their unit as being compact
enough to convert off-road vehicles as small as ATVs. That would enable
options that are more accessible to a casual weekend wrench hobbyist than a
full road car conversion.
…and the battery?

Unfortunately, both of these options will still require a separate effort to
source and integrate a battery. Details are sparse on what options will work
with either package. But, as with any EV conversion, the gas tank is no
longer needed, so that opens up some space down below.

We look forward to hearing more once retail availability is at hand. In the
unlikely event Swindon is offering review samples, I’ve got a Kid Trax kit
in mind for a small upgrade.
[© techreport.com]


+ (Free ToU EV-charging from sse.co.uk utility)
https://www.current-news.co.uk/news/sse-targets-ev-drivers-with-new-free-overnight-charging-tariff
SSE targets EV drivers with new free overnight charging
tariff
SSE Energy Services has become the latest supplier to launch an electric
vehicle (EV) tariff, allowing drivers to charge for free. The '1 Year Fix
and Drive' tariff is, ...
https://www.current-news.co.uk/static/images/_1600x1000_crop_center-center/SSE-electric-vehicle-EV-tariff-edited.png




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