6786 Miles Per Gallon Car And Some More Awesome Vehicles

by golbguru on December 10, 2006

6786 Miles Per Gallon

First about the car that does 6786 miles per gallon (oh yeah !!). This record was set by the “Microjoule”, an ethanol-powered car for the 2006 Shell eco-marathon. The image of the car is shown below. If you are thinking “Oh yeah, it’s ethanol..gasoline will never give that much” then read on.

microjoule

The record for a gasoline (petrol)-powered vehicle in the eco-marathon was not far behind at 6009 miles per gallon (my Nissan does 23 miles per gallon). There are some more extraordinary numbers from the eco-marathon on this website.

Now, look at the image below:

shelleco

Hey, that looks like some toy car race,doesn’t it? ..Oh yeah, it’s just that some of these toys are doing 6000 miles per gallon :). That’s an image from the 2006 Shell eco-marathon race.

Other Awesome Vehicles

TIME magazine recently published the best inventions list in it’s November issue. The list spans categories like: transportation, home equipment, clothing, toys, medicine, etc. Here are some vehicles from the list. I would have liked to put in my own text, but TIME does an excellent job at describing these things and I will just stick to quoting them where appropriate.

1. H-racer, the hydrogen powered toy car

H-racer

…Shanghai-based Horizon Fuel Cell Technologies decided to design and market the H-racer, a 6-in.-long toy car that does what Detroit still can’t. It runs on hydrogen extracted from plain tap water using the solar-powered Hydrogen Station, below, and can travel more than 300 ft. in a single fuel-up…

Horizon Fuel Cell is selling it under the title “H-racer and Hydrogen Station” for $115. My engineering insticts are almost compelling me to buy this toy. Scroll to the end to see how the hydrogen concept is being put into some practical use by Honda and Chevy.
2. Tesla Roadster, the all electric sports car

tesla

tesla1

…What goes from zero to 60 in 4 sec., tops out at more than 130 m.p.h. and appears to be missing a gas tank? The Tesla Roadster 100. It’s pure California: a hot sports car that doubles as a statement against pollution and oil dependence…

This thing looks hot..almost like a Ferrari and is not a toy like the H-racer above. From the information on Tesla’s website, this car charges in about 3.5 hours on a home-based charging system. The website claims that they are out-of-stock for 2007 model year units, but puts the tag on the 2008 model at $92,000. Here is a another screenshot of what the website says about the Tesla Roadster:

tesla2

3. The Compact Low Emission VEhicle for uRban transport (CLEVER)

CLEVER

…the low-emission Clever car runs on compressed natural gas stored in two cylinders behind the passenger’s seat and gets a dizzying 108 m.p.g. The three-wheeled, aluminum-framed Clever turns like a dream thanks to computer-controlled cornering and hydraulics. And even though its engine is good for the earth, this two-seater has plenty of pep; it can cruise at speeds up to 80 m.p.h.

CLEVER is a joint project between some French, British, and German engineering firms (including BMW) and universities. The aim of this project is to design an innovative urban transport vehicle to fit certain power, weight and fuel emissions specifications. It has an awesome tilting system (based on how motorcycles tilt while cornering) to keep it from rolling over on turns and corners. CLEVER is not yet for sale in the open market. Click here to read more about the CLEVER project.

4. The “Supermileage” Project Car

supermileage1

…A team of Canadian engineering students won the annual Supermileage race in Michigan with its 80-lb. carbon-fiber Mark V, which can travel 3,145 miles on a single gallon of gas. That’s thanks to details like a curved underbody, an ultra-fuel-efficient 54-cc engine and a driver who understands why the turtle beat the hare. The catch? You have to drive lying down, and the windows don’t open.

Here is an image of a driver dude in the “driving” position in this car.

supermileage2

The project is an initiative of The University of British Columbia Supermileage Team. Click here to learn more about the Supermileage project.

Below are a couple of cars that deserve a mention, though they are not on the TIME list. They are a reflection of what the automobile industry has in store for us in the next few years.
5. The Honda FCX Concept.

hondafcx1

The FCX concept vehicle made it’s public debut during the 2006 LA auto show (which, by the way, is ending today - Dec 10th). The FCX is based on hydrogen fuel cell technology and though it’s still a “concept”, Honda is expected to roll out a fully functional fleet by 2008 for US. It is rumored that the production version will not differ much from the concept design. Sweet…I would like to drive something like that. :)
6. The Chevy Equinox Fuel Cell

Generally, Chevy doesn’t rhyme with “awesome cars”, but this stuff is cool. It’s the Fuel Cell Chevy Equinox based on the Chevy Sequel hydrogen fuel cell concept that recently generated a lot of interest. This Equinox is just around the corner..perhaps available to the general public in early 2008. Read more about it here.

equinox

Check if you are eligible for test driving a hydrogen powered Chevy Equinox. Chevy says this on it’s website:

If you live in metropolitan New York City; Washington, D.C.; or southern California, you may be eligible to test-drive an Equinox Fuel Cell vehicle in the fall of 2007. You must be 21 years of age, a U.S. citizen and have a valid driver’s license.

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{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

1 3 Things About Money 12.10.06 at 2:15 pm

I looove me some Tesla car…wow. But I would “settle” for a CLEVER car, very cool. Thanks so much for this post, I have been a big fan of vintage microcars and all sorts of alterna-transport. Really nice to see what is on the drawing board.

2 MoneyFwd 12.11.06 at 7:39 am

I’m still waiting for a plug-in hybrid which seems to make the most sense right now.

Also, they sell a hydorgen powered toy rocket at the Sharper Image. Costs about $40 and you use water to make hyrdogen which fuels the rocket to about 150 feet or something.

3 Golbguru 12.11.06 at 9:08 am

3 things about money: yeah…would love the Tesla…but I don’t think I can afford one …ever. So mostly I will settle for the Honda FCX :) ..(like I am going to afford that or something)

MoneyFwd: I have been hearing about that plug-in hybrid for years, but no one is really putting any efforts into it…as far as I can tell. Also, if the hydrogen powered vehicles really show some promise..car companies will be more interested in pumping money into hydrogen technology than the plug-in hybrid thing.
I don’t know how they are pricing the hydrogen vehicles, but if the price difference between the hybrid and hydrogen technology is not much…there is absolutely no question in my mind about which technology will dominate in the coming years.
Btw, the rocket thing sounds kewl :)

4 MoneyFwd 12.11.06 at 10:57 am

There’s a company in california that’s making a kit to convert the toyota prius into a plug-in hybrid, although the cost is about $12k. Also, there’s a company in Italy that builds special cars that makes Mini Coopers into plug-in hybrids.

5 arjun 12.11.06 at 9:51 pm

yes i see where you are going with the alternate fuel theory. I myself believe that the future is in alternate sources and hope that internal combustion engine should die. having said that, I feel that one must look at the special issue of newsweek on oil that was released recently. the most startling fact about the issue is that the very first article tries (very hard) that fuek shortages or that oil is NOT a limited resource and that dooms day theory of empty oil wells is just a popular myth. As long as articles like this get prmier coverage on international magazines, convincing people to truely understand oil deficiency and the politics ( economics) assosiated with it will remain an uphill task….

6 guillermo mallo 09.28.07 at 9:42 am

When will we get cheap (as they need to be and would be if they didn’t have foolish frills and knick knacks) cars that get 100 and more miles to the gallon?
Electric cars make sense if high capacity LiMH, Li-ion, zinc air, aluminum air, silver zinc or etc. batteries become affordable.
another alternative are cars that are small square footprint (or collapsible to that size so that they can be carried by a common carrier such as the standard 10 foot wide by 60 foot long rail car in rapid transit or long distance train as passenger compartment in such rail cars.
E-mail or call me me if any of you have any ideas.

My phone is 352-486-6665. I prefer the phone.

MY e-mail is centralsoledad@yahoo.com;

it’s named after the Central Soledad in Cuba near the city of Cienfuegos and the botanical garden next to it, if this rings any bells.

7 Fluke 12.29.08 at 3:12 am

I like Electric sports car the most and its looking good regarding its designing and efficiency.

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