On one of these posts it seems to me I saw the statement that there were Electric cars that could run about 300 miles on a charge. I believe that premise is false. I am not unfamiliar with the electric car and had the chance to look at and drive the EV1 from General motors which was definitely a worth while experience however it had a few flaws the kept me from looking at it seriously at that time. http://www.evworld.com/archives/testdrives/gmev1.html December, 1996 the EV1 went on sale at selected Saturn dealerships in southern California and Arizona. The EV1 currently leases for between $350 and $499 a month for 36 months. The first flaw! GM says the car will do 80 miles with a little prudent driving. And the second! Note that here is Phoenix it is FLAT. It even makes Florida look hilly. However to go anywhere except Tucson it is up hill all the way once you get about 30 miles out side of Phoenix or about 80 miles from down town. A drive to Prescott is about 4000 feet up, and about 100 miles away and Flagstaff tops out over 7000 feet and about 135 miles from my driveway. Even a drive across Phoenix from East to West would exceed the estimated maximum prudent one way distance. This compared to state of art Electric Mobility of 1904 of aprox. 50 prudent miles. http://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z7404/Baker_Electric/default.aspx Although with the EV1 you would have (and would need) air conditioning I have not seen an electric car or a conversion that had a realistic claim of endurance much past 80 miles unless it was packed full of batteries to the point of being useless for anything other than being a novelty item. The EV1 had all the luggage carrying capability of a large fluffy pillow as I recall. The two biggest problems in dealing with an electric car is weight and range. Starting with an AMC anything is counter productive as AMC cars are heavy for their size even if it has a high novelty quota. Although I have many times thought of building an electric car that is loosely based on the early 30's Morgan trike using a swing arm shaft drive motor cycle rear wheel supported by two quarter elliptic springs, something on the order of a Beetle front suspension or a lightweight hot rod tube axle ala. prewar Ford style and a Roadster body negating much of the need for air conditioning The batteries would be hung outboard of the chassis which could be as simple as a ladder type frame but more better would be a tube type as used in Sprint cars and to solve the transmission problem either use a snow mobile variable speed belt drive or a chain drive system ala the Fraser Nash or some small race cars that are in use today. The batteries could be hung front to rear on both sides of the chassis making access for maintenance and replacement easy. A transmission is an important part of the equation as even though Frank pointed out, an Electric Motor develops maximum torque at stall, it also develops maximum current at the point too which is dissipated as heat so it would be beneficial to develop something that would match motor rpm and waste heat developed to the speed selected to optimize range. Range could also be enhanced by developing some form of a switching regulator which I am sure has already been developed. As this 3 wheel roadster could be the lightest of weight and the least practical body style it could be fun to drive and maybe even have a useful range and to keep it related to an AMC List I have a couple of spare Hornet badges that could be installed on appropriate places on the body. Anyway, the concept is fun. John . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20070427/f229e4e8/attachment.htm _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list