Aussie Team Smashes Land Speed Record For Solar-Powered Cars 82
snowdon writes "A record which has stood since 1987, set by General Motors, has been broken (YouTube video) by a university team. The land speed record for a solar powered car was 78km/h, and now stands at 88km/h despite the cloudy conditions... If only Doc Brown had used the metric system!"
Whats more amazing is... (Score:5, Funny)
that it was only making about one point twenty one kilowatts.
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Great Scot!
The engines will no take it Captain.
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Landspeed record for disabled cars? (Score:3, Interesting)
This seems rather low, and certainly not a record. Unless they compete in a "differently abled" class?
The Nuna 2 solar powered car that won the World Solar Challenge in 2003 had the following stats for the race:
Total race time: 31 hr 5 mins.
Average speed: 97,02 Km/h
Topspeed: 130 km/h
Top speed they had during Adante tour in 2004: 145 km/h
Link: http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMCCBZO4HD_Benefits_2.html [esa.int]
See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuna_5 [wikipedia.org] for the stats of the Nuna 5.
Theoretical max speed: 175 km/h
Keep in mind that this was done by a (Dutch) university team as well.
Considering the fact that the sunswift team wants to compete in the WSC as well - I think they either need to get up to 188 km/h, or throw in the towel. Or perhaps I'm missing something but I did RTA and nothing suggests they really set a new speedrecord, except their own propaganda.
Re:Landspeed record for disabled cars? (Score:5, Informative)
The car in TFA didn't have a battery. The solar panels are connected directly to the drive train/motor(s).
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The production model will use a beer battery [howstuffworks.com].
If you want a few "travellers" for the trip though I'd recommend using something different to Fosters.
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The car in TFA didn't have a battery. The solar panels are connected directly to the drive train/motor(s).
Also from TFA (or associated news reports), the lack of battery was to raise, not lower, final speed.
I also found the low speed pretty iffy given that in past races, racers have happily exceeded 120-130km/h. I'm assuming it was either an average over a long distance, or otherwise subject to criteria not mentioned to slow it down.
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Read the spec sheet- it does. (Score:2)
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And my bike has a set of training wheels. Which I remove whenever I don't wnat to carry the extra weight or enter competitions that require 2 wheel vehicles :-) So what?
Re:Landspeed record for disabled cars? (Score:5, Informative)
The difference is the WSC cars are allowed to use a battery - the rules for the Guinness World Record specify solar power only.
In the 2009 WSC the UNSW car reached 103km/h with a LiPol battery, but that was removed for this attempt to comply with the Guinness rules.
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Which, of course, is only useful for setting records, since you need a battery to keep you running when you're not directly under the midday sun. Then they'll only need to increase the speed by at least another 50%. And then maintain that when the full weight of a real car. And its passengers. And cargo. And then figure out some way to keep the solar receivers from being damaged by things like regular road debris (rocks, etc) and hail. Or from just losing their efficiency rather quickly over time.
Give us an
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Did you even look at the video? You wont be taking their car to the local supermarket at all.
Getting a car going that fast when its batteries are flat is quite a feat. Imagine a Telsa that could do that. Useful no?
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I don't know, they've made a lot of progress in only 15 years, going from 66 km/h in 1987 to 102 in 2005. [wikipedia.org] They got so fast that the support vehicles could not keep up without breaking the speed limit, [wikipedia.org] so new rules were put in place that forced teams to reduce the number of solar panels, require a steering wheel and even add safety equipment.
At the rate things are going someday they might require a car with
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No, the record is completely valid.
If the other guys could break it, then they just have to remove their batteries and do two laps. They could break it again right now if they wanted.
Because they averaged that is irrelevant. Thats not what this world record is for so it doesnt count.
Nuna was using its battery (Score:4, Informative)
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no one was intrested ? (Score:1)
Surely powertrains can do better than this ?
can it not use a battery ?
this is not much use unless there is a context...
I mean if the driver weighs little surely they can achieve a higher speed.... so what are the rules ??
regards
John Jones
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I think the issue is more the power/drag ratio of the photovoltaic cells.
Re:no one was intrested ? (Score:5, Informative)
I can tell you the World Solar Challenge rules. (The SunSwift car depicted looks like it follows WSC Challenge class rules.) There are safety requirements for roll cage, braking, steering, wiring, circuit breakers. The driver's eye-line must be at least 70cm above the road. There's a maximum angle the driver is allowed to lay back at. There's a max of 6 square meters of solar cells. The battery is a max of 5kW.h. (This is a trivial amount of energy compared to the energy budget over the whole challenge, but is tactically useful for hill climbing, clouds, etc.)
It looks like the only change they made for this Guinness challenge was to remove the battery pack.
Yes, it looks like the 2003, 2005, 2009 WSC challenge winners (Nuna, Nuna, Tokai) could have knocked this record over, just by removing the battery pack and getting Guinness certification. Doing some rough maths, UNSW's pace is still pretty competitive: the speeds you see listed for WSC course competition do not figure in the time the cars spent charging their batteries each dawn and dusk, after racing ends at 5pm for the day and before it begins at 8am the next day.
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Nuna, Tokai, and most of the other top cars from the last decade use GaAs solar cells. The Guinness record requires the use of silicon cells.
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fastest? (Score:2)
It's only allowed to run with power straight from. (Score:1)
The article do not mention that car is only allowed to run by direct solar power.
no batteries are allowed in this competition.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunswift
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The article do not mention that car is only allowed to run by direct solar power.
They say:
We smashed the Guinness World Record for fastest Solar-Powered vehicle by over 10 kmh.
It doesn't say Battery powered or Petrol powered.
Cheating by using the Australian sun.. (Score:2, Insightful)
which everyone who visits here assures me is so much brighter than their part of the world.
Re:Cheating by using the Australian sun.. (Score:5, Funny)
which everyone who visits here assures me is so much brighter than their part of the world.
Thanks to ozone depletion we get more energy out of the sun.
Seriously its the dry air. It absorbs less solar radiation so more hits the ground.
Re:Cheating by using the Australian sun.. (Score:5, Interesting)
There's quite a bit of truth to what they are telling you. As MichaelSmith alluded to, it's mostly because of the lack of airborne moisture, particulates and pollution cf. the comparatively wetter, more land-covered, more populated northern hemisphere.
In fact as an Australian that went overseas to the US and Europe for the first time as a 20 year old, it's one of the first things I noticed when I stepped off the plane. The sky is often a light, hazy blue, close to ~white~ near the horizon, even on a cloudless day. Put simply, it's the greater humidity in your atmosphere (with some contribution from both man-made pollution, and natural particulates such as pollen etc). OTOH as soon as you are >50km away from the coast in Australia, a sunny sky will be a deep, deep blue, with no discernable difference in colour between 'straight up' and 'at the horizon'. Not to say you can't get days like that elsewhere (desert regions would be like this world-wide), but this is the norm over most of Australia. Where I live (which is in the inland of Australia), I have never seen that 'white haze' that is common in the northern hemisphere sky.
Of course that viciously blue sky, although nice for solar power and photography, is a curse in many ways. Low average humidity makes us the driest inhabited continent, and we also have the highest UV irradiation on earth (and the highest rates of skin cancer as a consequence). The UV index used worldwide was obviously developed in the northern hemisphere since the highest category 'Extreme' starts at 11+ (and is supposed to represent the 'top few days' in a year). The scale is kinda useless in Australia since EVERY day is 'Extreme' (our normal summertime UV here is typically in the 13 to 15 range, and I've seen higher): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultraviolet_index [wikipedia.org]
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It would have been a bigger cheat to run in Western Australia at that time rather than Nowra. Hot, clear, clear, hot. If they got 88kmh under cloud in Nowra I would have a dollar that they would have got 100kmh here as it has been bright, clear sunshine even on the cooler days.
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Dude, pretty well the rest of the frigging world uses Metric. It is only the USofA that has its head in the sand wrt Imperial vs Metric.
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How about something useful like: cubits per epoch, spans per generation or paces per age.
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So why the airfoil shape? (Score:2)
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Maybe most of the cells are pointing into the sun. The panel can't be flat without losing energy collection efficiency.
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Re:So why the airfoil shape? (Score:4, Interesting)
I could be wrong, but usually the speed tests are done in both directions with the end speed being the average of the two values. This prevents people from taking advantage of things such as wind and/or angle to the sun.
Yes that is standard practice.
Re:So why the airfoil shape? (Score:4, Informative)
It would be awesome if we could have made it thinner -- the wing is there as the lowest-drag shape that we can put around the other components in the car -- suspension, steering, driver, etc. Its designed to be a lifting body because of the ground effect which would otherwise result in a negative lift. The cambered wing counters the negative lift generated by the ground effect.
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> If only Doc Brown had used the metric system!
You'd be 53.6km/h short.
I wonder if snowdon was on the team that sent the Climate Orbiter to Mars... it's not a 1:1 conversion dammit!
In addition to being 53.6km/h short, he'd also be approximately 1.21 jiggawatts short too. I'm not exactly sure what a jiggawatt is, but assuming it's a gigawatt or something bigger, whatever power the car does generate from the sun is an insignificant fraction of that.
Re:Doc (Score:5, Informative)
At the time the movie was made, the giga prefix wasn't in popular use except in certain scientific fields, and scientists disagreed whether it should be pronounced with a hard g or a j-sound. Jiggawatt was a perfectly correct pronunciation which simply went out of fashion.
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Seriously? (Score:2, Insightful)
This is wholly - as in, absolutely, completely - unimpressive. If I could be de-impressed, I would be.
It's been over 20 years since the 'original' record was set, and it's only now being broken? What the fuck have we been spending gobs of "government" money on green energy for, if this record is only now being broken?
And it's not even "the" record. It's the "electric" vehicle record! How is that even significant, when electric vehicles are trying to compete against traditional ICE vehicles? It's like being
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Take a look at PV cell efficiency 1990 to 2010 [wikipedia.org]. Gains are being made but they are not spectacular. I don't think the best cells are appropriate for mounting on a vehicle.
And if you want to compare electric vs ICE vehicles battery technology is the issue.
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Me thinks you have never heard of things like, greed and patents. The two things most holding up the development of better solar panels and better batteries. If governments were really serious are pollution, they would do what they did during wars, suspend patents in the affected technologies and directly sponsor development, after better technology has been developed (by consolidating different technological developments) they can sort out corporate greed.
Even worse money is being spent on blocking deve
You don't really believe that, do you? (Score:1)
Companies the world over are trying to build better and cheaper solar panels. Many of them have received very significant government investment. Take a look at Emcore, Spectrolab, Sunpower, First Solar, Solyndra, Evergreen Solar, REC, etc etc. The list extends beyond the eye can see.
You do have a point, however. Our current patent and copyright system is an exercise in absurdity and needs to be fixed - somehow. But those systems are not a problem for the solar industry yet. The field is growing far too quic
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I don't know about carburetors, specifically, but it's certainly true that car companies have been building cars that are less efficient (in terms of mpg) than they could have been, for a long time.
Just to be clear: I am not stipulating the existence of any conspiracies here, just observing a fact.
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people want 7L V8 pole-magnets, not less sexy 1.2L 4cyl things with room for passengers and luggage but no boat or caravan.
efficiency went right up in the late 70s as fuel got more expensive. God knows why they're dragging their feet on efficiency now, but bear in mind it's only really american cars that are this crap.
Re:Seriously? (Score:5, Insightful)
My point is solar power usage in situations like this has a definite upper limit of efficiency, which we're not *that* far away from.
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Power is proportional to velocity cubed for air resistance actually (and velocity for rolling resistance). On 200 watts the car will go 50km/h (we did this on the day when the sun went away), at the 1100 we got we hit 88, over 5 times the power for less than double the speed. Likewise between 88 and 100 you get ~ 1.4x as much aero drag.
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Take a deeper look (Score:1)
Water powered.. (Score:1)
It's too bad they didn't have a water powered car... it would be going like crazy.. if not for all the flooding.
Still slower than humans (Score:3)
Fastest Indian (Score:3)
To whomever tagged this 'fastestindian'. The moniker refers to Burt Munro who was a New Zealander.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World's_Fastest_Indian [wikipedia.org]
This was performed by The University of New South Wales, which is in Australia.
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Land speed in Australia... (Score:2)
comment (Score:1)
Metric? (Score:2)