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Sunday, November 21, 2004

Arotech tests electric bus with batteries using ordinary zinc 

Sunday, November 21, 2004

News from Globes [online], (Israel):

Arotech (Nasdaq:ARTX) has announced that a test drive conducted with its all-electric hybrid bus using commercially available zinc demonstrated performance similar to that achieved with the proprietary dendritic zinc used to date.

The company said that, corroborating lab results, the bus achieved a range of 133 miles on a simulated city-cycle drive, similar to the range achieved a year ago in a similar test with the proprietary zinc. The system's efficiency has been improved as well.

Arotech's Electric Vehicle Division has developed technology that will allow its zinc-air batteries to use commercially available zinc, eliminating the need for the special zinc used to date. Arotech's technological breakthrough for utilizing readily available zinc is expected to boost commercialization plans for the zinc-air hybrid bus, which until now required heavy investments in zinc producing infrastructure.

Read the full article...


Sunday, November 07, 2004

Speeding Bullet: OSU's electric car zips to forefront 

Sunday, November 07, 2004

News from Cleveland Plain Dealer:
by John Mangels

How fast did Ohio State University's Buckeye Bullet electric car skim across the flat Utah desert last week? Let's see how it stacks up against a couple of other notable projectiles.

It wasn't quite as fast as a speeding bullet a .38-caliber round would have nicked the OSU speedster by about 5 seconds in a timed mile. But it would have dusted Japan's famous Shinkansen bullet train, which pokes along at 277 mph compared to the Buckeye Bullet's eye-popping 315.

Not bad for a vehicle that runs on glorified flashlight batteries.

The Bullet, designed, built and maintained by OSU engineering students, set national and world land speed records last week on the ancient lake bed called the Bonneville Salt Flats.

On Wednesday, professional driver Roger Schroer cruised at an average of 272 mph, 27 mph faster than the old international electric-vehicle record set in 1999 by a California team called White Lightning.

Friday morning, the pencil-shaped scarlet and gray streamliner rocketed across the salty desert floor at 314.958 mph. That easily broke the national speed mark of 257 mph set by the Bullet itself last year. (The U.S. and international records have different qualifying rules).

Read the full article...


Wednesday, November 03, 2004

French Post Office to Test French Electric Vehicle 

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

News from Green Car Congress:

The French post office (La Poste) will test the Cleanova II—a series hybrid light delivery van manufactured by SVE (Société de Voitures Électriques, electric car company), a joint venture between specialist car body supplier Heuliez and the Dassault group.

Assuming the testing with La Poste—and presumably some others—goes well, SVE intends to commercialize the vehicle in the second half of 2006. A full electric version of the Cleanova II, also equipped with a TM4 drivetrain, will be commercialized concurrently. The target is fleet buyers in Europe and North America. Groups in China and India are also reportedly interested.

The Cleanova II—based on the Renault Kangoo—is the second-generation of electric vehicle from SVE, and made its debut at the Geneva Motor Show earlier this year.

Read the full article...



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