Build Your Own Solar-Powered Scooter 181
An anonymous reader writes "CBC is reporting that the Biomod company in Montreal has released plans for building your own solar scooter for only $1600 (in Canadian funds, no less!) Hopefully the engineering community will take an interest, and add brakes to the blueprints..."
Hey (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hey (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hey (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Hey (Score:2)
Or sneeze [slashdot.org].
Re:Hey (Score:3, Funny)
I can't think of anything that wouldn't spontaneously combust at the site [reference.com] of the sun.
Re:Hey (Score:4, Funny)
HA! (Score:3, Funny)
Scooter? (Score:1, Offtopic)
(That means it leaks oil)
Very important that it doesn't go fast (Score:2)
No methane? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No methane? (Score:5, Funny)
Add chicks (Score:4, Interesting)
Everything is better with hot chicks, but somethings are just cool on their own [wheelman.com.au].
Re:Add chicks (Score:1, Funny)
A. They're both fun to ride - but you wouldn't want your friends to see you on one!
Bah (Score:5, Funny)
Comic Book Guy (Score:2, Funny)
CBG: A cynicism powered scooter? I really doubt that will ever-
[KA-BOOM!]
Re:Bah (Score:2)
Does it come with. . . (Score:5, Funny)
penguins...? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:penguins...? (Score:1, Informative)
No, those aren't... (Score:2)
Re:penguins...? (Score:2)
After many unsuccessful attempts, finally adding the Tux penguins eventually got the article submission accepted by the unbiased slashdot editors.
are the cells homebrewed? (Score:2)
Re:are the cells homebrewed? (Score:2)
Re:are the cells homebrewed? (Score:2)
Re:are the cells homebrewed? (Score:2)
Like Fred Flintstone... (Score:4, Funny)
If it's solar powered, maybe your feet will be enough to stop.
Re:Like Fred Flintstone... (Score:2)
asking the hard questions: (Score:4, Funny)
from their message board:
Well BioModers' - Yesterday we did it! - For the first time on Earth (as far as we know), a SOLAR ELECTRONIC VEHICLE traveled over 100 kilometers in one day - on the streets and roads of this planet!
... A Black family took offense at our efforts to hook up with a neighbors' socket after a deserted factories outlet had suspiciously failed. Earlier, an African electrician cab driver had examined the vehicle during a brief stop, and rushed away vibrating with revealed inspiration, a Chinese family as well. After a short hop, we got permission from a factory gardener to use his outlet, with a good sun exposure - and then the cops showed up! They claimed that someone had hopped over a nearby fence! But the rattled OIL OCCUPATION ARMY was no match for the assembled prayers of native circles meeting yesterday around the world!
...So there we were, in the gathering darkness, BLINDED by the oncoming lights of S.U.V.s', going the WRONG WAY down a one-way highway - right through the RED LIGHTS of major urban cross-highways, wiggling through and between oncoming traffic of the acursed MOTOR CARS and TRUCKS - to their complete SHOCK! ....I wouldn't have had it any other way! (emphasis mine)
link to the post quoted [msn.com]
also, it looks like you have to log in to access the "files" part of their site.
Re:asking the hard questions: (Score:1)
Re:asking the hard questions: (Score:2)
My god! Needless caps, bolding for no reason, semicoherent sentences... do you know what this means? This scooter is certified safe by none other than Steve Gibson!
Re:asking the hard questions: (Score:2)
Why not just bike? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why not just bike? (Score:4, Funny)
Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2, Insightful)
If you really want to change the world, devise an efficient hydrogen-powered fuel cell. That would be practical and would change the automotive industrial and the dynamics of geopolitics. In one fell sweep, the hydogren cell would (1) clean the environment, (2) end American dependence on the Middle East, and (3) spark a re
neon case lights (Score:2, Interesting)
With that said, and as a solar proponent and owner, and in the alpha design stages (that means I'm committed in me pea brane to do it) of my own little solar powered buggy*, this thing is ridiculous looking, and I agree, a normal human pedaled bike is a better idea. But... I'm not one to rain on any hardware
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:5, Insightful)
But the truth of the matter is, oil isn't a renewable resource. Hydrogen isn't either (do you see any natural generators lying around?). Sun-based mechanisms might be the answer (a la the pig fart/methane of Mad Max). But, that's where the real "solution" begins. Even a rather utterly inefficient engine with a limitless fuel source (well, reasonably limitless) is better than very efficient engine with a limited fuel source, in the long run.
It sounds like you're just focusing on the short-term solution to get people interested in finding a long-term energy source. The thing is, without a cheap long-term energy source, the current inefficient engines and their cheap short-term source will continue to look more attractive. I think this counts as the cart before the horse.
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
Wahahahahaaaa
Be sure to let me know when we've run out of hydrogen!
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
Be sure to let me know when we run out of carbon and oxygen. So if you say we can't run out of hydrogen, you're saying we can't run out of oil. The thing is, we already did run out of hydrogen. Except for methane-splitting perhaps, you could argue that counts since it is so cheap to do. But methane is not a renewable resource.
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
Making oil just isn't as simple as combining carbon and oxygen, as you make it sound.
HOWEVER, getting hydrogen out of water IS as simple as applying electric current to water.
Until the oceans dry up, extracting hydrogen is just a matter of having enough electricity.
That's not true, it's just a matter of nobody attempting
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
Anyway, in the context of energy sources, "running out" means that we're unable to get any more energy from that source. Since the amount of free hydrogen is negligible on Earth, we ran out.
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
"free hydrogen"?
You don't drill a hydrogen well, you have to extract it from something. Until the oceans run dry, we have an easy source of hydrogen, making it a very useful energy storage medium.
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
The problem then becomes one of finding enough electricity to split the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. Then the question is, is it more efficient to use the electricity to produce hydrogen which then acts as the primary power source, or bypass the hydrogen producing process and just use the electricity to power the d
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
Until we have incredibly high capacity batteries, hydrogen will be a much more appealing option.
Re:Renewable resources... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
I agree with you though, as it is, we're still dependant on fossil fuels and combustion engines. I think stuff like BioDiesel will be vastly more common in the near future than H-Cells.
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
A vehicle with solar as it's only source of power is impractical, indeed. However, as a method of recharging the batteries in an electric car, they would do quite a good job.
Just imagine less frequently used vehicles. If you only go, say, 10 miles per day, a solar panel on your car, recharging the batteries while it's sitting around, would be all you would need.
Run out of fuel in the middle of the desert? Don't bother walking to t
Re:Interesting Diversion but Totally Impractical (Score:2)
The UMaine Solar Vehicle Team [maine.edu] has it right. The site's outdated, but the truck is still running - I see it around town periodically.
$1600 CDN? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:$1600 CDN? (Score:2)
Re:$1600 CDN? (Score:3, Funny)
What I want (Score:4, Interesting)
As an alternative, the device could be charged at home all night. It wouldn't need too much capacity, since it would be just used to assist me on hills. I can pedal normally on flat road.
Re:What I want (Score:2)
For a 'hill assist' you'd need a lot of torque from a motor - and electric motors with a lot of torque don't come cheap, and they don't resemble anything small enough to put on a bike.
Very neat idea though - I bet it'll happen eventually!
Re:What I want (Score:2)
Re:What I want (Score:3, Informative)
Also, I would be willing to bet that the starter from a small 4-cylinder car would provide the torque that you need for something like this. They run on 12v DC, and usually have an internal flywheel that spin up for a second before engagin
You'll be glad to know such a thing exists (sorta) (Score:3, Informative)
I don't know if I've seen anything that stores energy from pedaling (b/c when you're riding you really don't want something dragging on the wheel & slowing you up). There were some kits that, I think recharged during breaking, but from what I remember because of the light weight of bikes (?), the amount of energy gained from this wasn't too g
Re:What I want (Score:2)
And why is it that you can't down-shift? You said you're on a Mountain Bike.
You need very little strength, just the ability to move your legs around faster. It takes very very little energy if your bike is geared well.
Re:What I want (Score:2)
Re:What I want (Score:2)
I'm basically sitting on a mountain here, so I don't need a lecture on hills.
I'm also in the desert, so you don't need to lecture me on heat either.
If it's too much work for you to bike up a hill, you probably need to install a lower gear on your bike.
Re:What I want (Score:2)
As I said before, I can get up the hills no problem. That is not the issue, cocklicker. The problem is that unlike you, I want to be considerate to my colleagues and not be a sweaty pig after riding to work.
Asswipe. Learn to read.
Signed, Profane MuthaFucka.
Re:What I want (Score:3, Informative)
None of them actually store energy while you just pedal though, as far as I'm aware.
Re:What I want (Score:2)
It turns out that the pro
Re:What I want (Score:2)
Get a moped (Score:2)
Re:What I want (Score:2)
ahh.. yes in the future. The one with jet packs...
Cool site for girls?!!? (Score:2)
hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
So that's how much in US dollars? (Score:3, Funny)
(it's about $1255 according to xe.com's currency converter)
Re:So that's how much in US dollars? (Score:2)
Speed: The Slowmobile from Futurama (Score:4, Funny)
Bureaucrat: "Oh no, now you've got my slowmobile off course and I'm going to crash!"
Slowmobile moves very, very slowly into a pile of boxes over the next five seconds.
Bureaucrat (in mock fear): "Ahhhhhh."
Too slow (Score:3, Funny)
Um.... (Score:2, Funny)
Slightly OT. (Score:2, Offtopic)
I was looking into electric cars not long ago, and all I found were vehicles that could go maybe 30 miles on a charge. I wonder if anyone can explain why this is.
Fully electric cars like the EV1 can get over 100 miles per charge, and it's a quite large and heavy vehicle. But most importantly, it wasn't very high voltage... That small change would easily have increased it's range tremendously.
Why is it that all
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Still the city works for me and they have chargers at work....
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
The technology has been around for a few years and the costs are now down to the point where it's economically feasable. It's odd that the major car manufacturers have switched their research yet again to technologies which are another decade into the future.
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Okay, a quick lesson on electricity...
Energy is measured in WATTS. The ammount of work you can do is the wattage you can get.
Since wattage is a combination of voltage and amperage, increasing the voltage will increase the wattage. Doubling the voltage will double the wattage.
If you want to verify this, just take a look at the specs on your computer's power supply. At 240volts, your power supply wi
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
You can say you know what you're talking about all you want, but you continue to say plenty of stupid things to prove you don't know what you are talking about.
I don't need to "do" anything. Look up batteries, you will find plenty of examples.
Let's compare, say, truck batteries versus car batteri
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Hopefully you mean amp-hours; that's the interesting thing when it comes to batteries. If so, you're saying that a battery half the size stores half the energy. Not all that surprising, really.
By using two of the smaller batteries (wired in serial, but of course you knew that, right?), you get much more power out of the deal...
No, I get twice the voltage but the same number of amp-
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Since power is watts (not only AHs), that most certainly is "much more power".
As I said, double the voltage and you can nearly halve the current draw.
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Since power is watts (not only AHs), that most certainly is "much more power".
You cut away the rest. Let me repeat it then:It is twice the stored energy [in Wh or J] of the smaller battery from before, and exactly the same amount of stored energy [in Wh or J] as the full-size battery we started with.
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
No it isn't... It (nearly) the same current (AHs), with double the voltage
Let me quote your own post for you:
Exactly... Same AH with two smaller batteries, with double the voltage.
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
You are confusing yourself with selective reading again. Do I have to explicitly put "as the smaller battery" and "as the larger battery" into each sentence so you are unable to quotefuck? Not that it would stop you, probably.
373 miles on a charge (Score:3, Interesting)
Good electric cars have had 200+ mile ranges for a few years now. The car called the Solectria Sunrise did 373 miles on a single charge using NiMH batteries in 1997, well batteries have improved substantially since then and existing LiON batteries should be able to approximately double that, and coming Li-S batteries promise to double that again.
Home builds and conversions often use obsolete lead acid batteries and heavy steel shelled vehicle
Re:373 miles on a charge (Score:2)
So do the 100 mile range vehicles...
Yes, NiMH/Li-Ion can just about double that, but I don't think the extra cost is worth it, especially since just increasing the voltage in a Lead Acid battery-based vehicle (primarily by, let's say, using twice as many batteries that are each half the size and half the AMPs).
Lead Acid batteries work just
Re:373 miles on a charge (Score:2)
I was once looking into the idea of using hub motors for an electric car - brand new, each motor (made by a company in Germany) would cost me $600.00. I found similar motors (which would be OK for a bike or electric motorcycle, maybe) surplus for $300.00 each.
So, it isn't just battery technology, but m
Re:373 miles on a charge (Score:2)
NiMH would double the 100 miles for a lead acid powered vehicle, LiON would triple/quadruple it. In terms of cost, Thunder Sky sell LiON batteries which are comparable in price to Lead Acid batteries but 1/4 the size/weight.
"Lead Acid batteries work just fine thank you."
No, they don't. 100 miles isn't remotely enough. A 400 mile range is required for a viable electric vehicle. Hence the retirement of the EV1.
Re:373 miles on a charge (Score:2)
Doubling that with standard lead acid batteries is easily done.
Wow... You're 100% certain that a 300 mile range electric vehicle that is dirt cheap and can be recharged in seconds won't sell, but a more expensive vehicle with that extra 100 miles per 16-hour charge will be successful... Amazing insight you have. Why aren't you working for the auto industry?
Now that's not true
Re:373 miles on a charge (Score:2)
They can't do that if your vehicle is purely battery powered, you can charge it at home or work.
Unless you can cheaply generate electricity locally at home or work, then the power companies still have some slack in which to charge you money.
MyElectricMonopoly charges about US$0.10/kW-hr, while solar PV panels, IIRC, come out several times that much. I think they are economical in remote areas with lots of sunshine.
Given the homeland security issues associated with a centralized electrical generating pl
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
Because the major car manufacturer's haven't figured out how to make a commercially viable electric car yet. The closest things to "real" cars were GM's EV1 and Ford's Th!nk. Both were limited experiments which have since ended. Both companies appear to have decided that the market did not have enough critical mass yet. The cars were thought to be too expensive for the mass market. Both companies have withdrawn f
Re:Slightly OT. (Score:2)
You can't use their actions as proof of lack of a market. I don't know Ford's story well, but I do know plenty about the EV1. GM never made them available for sale, only limited leasing, a
Cool plans available here: (Score:3, Informative)
$1600? (Score:3, Interesting)
Surplus parts are priced low due to the seller wanting to get something instead of have to pay to have the junk hauled off. Furthermore, once the supply runs out, there won't be anymore since people tend to get smarter the second time around. Not to take anything away from the guy (who is not an entrepeneur as the article suggest, but is an awesome geek), but saying that you can throw something together for cheap from junk parts does not mean you have an economically viable product. What would the real cost be if all the parts have to be purchased new?
He does DESERVE an honored position on the next Junkyard Wars episode, however.
No brakes? (Score:2)
Re:I find Slashdot's "quote" at the bottom offensi (Score:2)
Bigot (Score:2, Funny)
I'll have you know some of us pot-smokers proactively trash the environment, you insentive clod!
Re:More hippes... (Score:2)
[pause]