Deutsche Welle, 18 Aug 2011
 |
The "Schluckspecht" has set a new record for distance on a single charge |
As Germany
drives forward on electric car promotion, one vehicle developed by German
researchers has set a new world record for distance traveled on single battery
charge.
In Germany,
the new experimental car, "Schluckspecht," broke previous world
records earlier this month when it traveled 1,631.5 kilometers (994 miles) on a
single battery charge.
Developed
by researchers at the Offenburg University of Applied Sciences, the drive took
just more than 36 hours, with four drivers taking shifts and traveling at about
45 kph.
Schluckspecht
is a slang word meaning "guzzler," or "heavy drinker" in
German.
"The
first car we built was really a heavy drinker, we ran out of fuel before the
finish line," Ulrich Hochberg, one of the project's leaders, told Deutsche
Welle.
Shattering
distance records
 |
The electric car set a record in South Africa in 2010 |
The team
had considered changing the name – but after setting several world records,
including by traveling 626.6 km on public roads in South Africa last year,
"it's really become now a brand name," Hochberg chuckled.
The
Offenburg team has been working on the "guzzler" since 1998.
The
previous record for electric car travel on a single charge, on a circuit track,
was 1,003 kilometers, set by the Japan Electric Vehicle Club in May last year.
The
Schluckspecht record was made at the German industrial company Bosch's circuit
track in Boxberg, southwestern Germany.
In October
2010, a German team drove an Audi A2 from Munich to Berlin on a single charge,
setting a new long-distance record on actual roads.
Promoting
electrical cars
The new
electrical vehicle distance record comes at a time when the German government
is pouring billions of euros into research and considering tax breaks for
electrical car owners.
In May
2011, at a summit hosted by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Berlin announced
that it was aiming for one million electric vehicles on German roads by 2020,
and would be doubling government spending on electric vehicle research to a
total of 2 billion euros ($2.87 billion) by 2013.
 |
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been pushing for more research into electric cars |
With this
new distance record, it seems possible that overcoming one of the major hurdles
to widespread adoption of electric cars – their small range of 200-300
kilometers – may now attract Germans who are used to driving great distances on
the autobahn at high speed before filling up again.
Earlier
this year, both BMW and Volkswagen announced that they intend to sell their
first electric cars in 2013. Meanwhile, eight regions around Germany are working
on building 2,500 charging stations to support the 2,800 test vehicles.
Mass
production
Ferdinand
Dudenhöffer, an automobile economist at the University of Duisburg-Essen, told
Deutsche Welle that he doesn't see the new world record as a great breakthrough.
"These
are individual items, prototypes," he said of such research projects.
"What we need is mass production, economies of scale," Dudenhöffer
said, adding that big steps have been made in this regard, including by
companies such as Nissan and Mitsubishi.
However,
despite what he sees as the limited usefulness of such research projects, he
thinks they could act as a stimulus.
Environmentalists
criticize electric cars as still requiring a charge from energy sources that
may involve the burning of fossil fuels.
Liquid fuel
will always give a longer ride than a battery-powered car, Hochberg explains,
since it takes oxygen from the air for combustion, returning it to the
atmosphere as carbon dioxide.
To him,
"the only sense is to use energy from renewable fuel sources" if
Germany wants to fulfil its goal of putting one million electric cars on the
road by 2020.
"This
is a political figure, used to promote investment," he added.
Super light
and aerodynamic
 |
The Schluckspecht chassis is based on the bowstring concept |
The
Schluckspecht's success largely lies in its ultralight chassis, which replaces
a base plate with a frame based on the bowstring concept, developed with the
Fraunhofer Institute in Freiburg.
The
vehicle, with a regular car seat for one driver, has motors integrated into the
wheels. Without the need for an engine or transmission, the researchers were
able to develop a particularly slim and aerodynamic shape.
There's
even a little extra room for equipment, or as Hochberg put it: "You can
put a case of beer into it."
Author: Sonya Angelica Diehn
Editor: Cyrus Farivar