February 24, 2010

You are currently browsing the daily archive for February 24, 2010.

What’s it like to work with A123 batteries? How far can an EcoCAR go on a tank of gas? What’s the advantage of B20 fuel over E85? What’s the best and most challenging aspects of devoting three years to building a green car?

Join a special EcoCAR Web chat with the University of Wisconsin and North Carolina State University teams Thursday, February 25 at 3 p.m. ET right here on the Inside the Green Garage blog. Simply use the link below to join the chat and ask the teams your questions.

Click Here to Join the EcoCAR Web Chat beginning at 3 p.m. Thursday!

Earlier this month, the UVic EcoCAR team invited the Science Venture Girls Club to visit their shop to learn about the importance of advanced vehicle technologies. This was a special visit because there was one thing that was visibly missing—boys. For the first time in the UVic shop, females outnumbered males with a ratio of 16:1.

Engineering is a field historically dominated by males, making it easy for young females to form assumptions that they are not cut out for engineering related positions. To break through that barrier, the female UVic team members spent the afternoon with the Science Venture girls talking about different engineering roles and showcasing their EcoCAR work. The conversation started out by exploring the issue of climate change and the need for sustainable technologies and filtered down to what is being done today with advanced vehicle technologies to help alleviate the pressures human activity is placing on the environment.

The Science Venture girls were given the opportunity to come up with their own innovative vehicle solutions and draw a green vehicle of the future. They came up with an impressive range of creative ideas from magnet-powered vehicles to using waste as fuel. The UVic team then showed the girls what they are doing to their GM-donated vehicle to transform it into a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle and discussed what alternative fuel sources are becoming more widely available today.

The UVic team believes that educating today’s youth on the importance of engineering careers and sustainable practices is an essential step in ensuring a greener planet and will continue to do so throughout the EcoCAR competition. 

Tags: , , , ,

The second semester is well under way and has been very successful for the University of Wisconsin EcoCAR team. The team welcomed new members and got to work on their vehicle right away. Mechanical team member, Drew Kosmoski, led the re-packaging of a Delphi DU174 motor. Now that the motor meets the team’s needs, the next step will be installing a new output shaft.

Watch the process of recycling the motor below!

Tags: , ,