Driving David Bernardo's ZelectricBug

http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1087660_zelectric-motors-1963-volkswagen-beetle-electric-car-driven
Zelectric Motors' 1963 Volkswagen Beetle Electric Car Driven
By Antony Ingram  Oct 18, 2013

[images  
http://www.greencarreports.com/pictures/1087660_zelectric-motors-1963-volkswagen-beetle-electric-car-driven_gallery-1
HI-RES GALLERY
]

There is a line of thinking, naturally not shared by many of our readers,
that engine noise is an integral part of the experience of driving a car.
Lack of it in electric cars is one of myriad reasons the average gearhead is
still skeptical of EVs.

You may think then that swapping the familiar chunter of a Volkswagen
Beetle's flat-four gasoline engine would be a recipe for disaster--removing
a characteristic that has remained with the car since its conception and
been a part of billions of Beetle miles over the decades.

Driving David Bernardo's ZelectricBug--a 1963 Volkswagen Beetle converted to
electric power--there is an element of truth in this.

But happily, the car still bristles with character in a way no modern
electric car--nor most modern internally-combusting vehicles--can hope to
match. It is still very much a classic vehicle: just one with a highly
modern propulsion system.

Under the skin

The ZelectricBug you see here is the first prototype from David's company,
Zelectric Motors. All Bugs converted by the company will be 58-66 models,
which for many offer the best mix of style and usability, even if they
aren't quite as sophisticated underneath as later Beetles.

Well, in terms of suspension design at least, since all converted Beetles
will be decades ahead in the engine bay.

The traditional flat four makes way--in the prototype--for an 80-horsepower,
110 lb-ft electric motor. That's around double what the standard engine
would have provided and a healthy chunk more than the most powerful 1600cc
factory cars VW produced during the Beetle's production run.

Unusually, at least if you're used to modern electric cars, the ZelectricBug
features a manual transmission, retaining the original car's four-speed
setup. More on this shortly.

Power comes from a 24 kWh (like the Nissan Leaf) collection of LiFePO4
batteries, split between the luggage compartment aft of the rear seats, and
under the front trunk where the gas tank previously lived. Despite the
batteries and motor adding around 250 lb to the Beetle's weight, it's still
a good 1,000 lb lighter than a Nissan Leaf. And despite its lack of
aerodynamic and rolling sophistication next to the Nissan, range is a
real-world 90-110 miles.

The devil is in the details

Approaching David's bright red bug, very little at all gives away its
21st-century powertrain.

The incredibly keen-eyed might note the absence of the familiar twin
pea-shooter tailpipes. Inside, only the small, chrome-rimmed digital battery
gauge gives it away, slotting neatly where the original square gas gauge
would have sat. In fact, the only real giveaways that the '63 has anything
different about it are the clever license plate and the large sticker across
the rear window. The rest just looks like--and is--a beautifully-restored
1960s Beetle.

Until you open the (rear mounted, naturally) hood. Then, you're presented
with the futuristic shapes of electronic controllers, cooling components,
brushed aluminum and the obligatory bright orange of electrical cables.

Weirdly, it looks at a glance like a highly-updated take on the Beetle's
normal engine, partly because it sits in the same longitudinal fashion
connected to the same gearbox. But it's a lot more sci-fi and the
presentation is first-rate.

Kudos here goes to performance electric vehicle specialists EV West, who
reside next door.

While EV West is best known for successsfully tackling the Pikes Peak hill
climb in their electric BMW M3 (which owner Michael Bream generously offered
me a highly entertaining ride in), the company also handles the drivetrain
side of the ZelectricBug. It's as professional an install as you'd expect
from a company so familiar with race car engineering--and usefully, retains
the option for conversion back to the original engine, should the prices of
Beetles really go through the roof.

Driving it

Good examples of Beetle engines fire with satisfying conviction on a turn of
the key and maybe a few pumps of the gas.

ZelectricBug doesn't "fire" at all. Nor is there an other-worldly "bong" or
jingle as with modern EVs. It's just "on" as you click the small VW
badge-shaped key one notch clockwise.

Then, as with a regular manual transmission vehicle, you must depress the
clutch and select (in this case), second gear. Forget the clutch first time
as I did and the electric motor thrums away unhappily at you as you apply
the floor-hinged accelerator. Correctly selected, you move off (now without
the clutch) in untypical-for-a-Beetle silence.

Untypical-for-a-Beetle speed, too. Second gear begins to get a bit noisy at
around 40-45 mph, but up to that speed performance is as brisk as you'd
expect from a 2,200 lb, 80-hp car with instant torque.

You can then change to third (remember the clutch again), trying to defeat
muscle memory that tells you to lift off the gas as you change: the
smoothest changes are had by maintaining revs at the motor as you shift. Or,
if this sounds like hard work, simply start off in third--it'll pull away
quite happily and not stop until it's doing over 80 mph.

In other words, it'll make mincemeat of all but highly-tuned regular Beetles
but won't drip oil all over your garage floor. Or need regular maintenance.
Or indeed, consume any fuel. With a J1772 charging port, you can pretty much
charge it anywhere, too.

That includes going down hills, as the ZelectricBug features regenerative
braking. Due to the choice of gears, the effect ranges from the expected to
the surprisingly swift. In second, you'd barely ever need to use the brakes.

In fact, retardation is so strong in second that David is considering a
system to illuminate the brake lights when decelerating. The brakes
themselves will be updated to rotors (currently, it's drums all around) to
ensure emergency braking is strong enough to deal with modern traffic.

All that aside, it feels like... well, like driving a Beetle. An old
swing-axle Beetle admittedly, and while we went fairly easy on the car on
our SoCal drive we'd imagine on-the-limit driving characteristics to be
similar to that of the original and therefore demanding of a little respect.

Final thoughts

But hey, practical and well-performing as it is, no electric car produced by
a major manufacturer has had styling as eye-catching as this. If ever you
wanted to travel slowly--to be seen--this is a car to do it in.

And if you wanted to carve corners, powertrain engineer EV West has a few
interesting projects on the go based on more traditional performance
vehicles.

But what if you wanted one of Zelectric Motors' Beetles?

If that were the case, you'll need a healthy $45,000. Sounds like a lot. And
we suppose it is a lot. David says more than a few people have stood aghast
when hearing the price. Many expect closer to $20,000, or less.

If you know anything about Beetles though, the price makes sense. Only an
optimist could expect to buy a regular, gasoline-slurping Beetle of this
vintage (in this condition) for $15K-20K, and when considering all the
engineering and research in the car--not to mention buying the donor and
restoring it--the price sounds fair to us.

It isn't for everyone, of course: you can pick up a Leaf or Volt for
significantly less than $45K. And a sixties Beetle doesn't quite match those
cars for equipment or safety, or even performance.

But it kicks their collective butts (and any other production EV) for
character, and as such a $45K electric Beetle built to such high standards
is highly attractive for some. Zelectric Motors' first customer car, in
black, is already nearing completion. And a gray '59 has just returned from
the paint shop ready for work to start. The trickle begins.

Back to the original question though: Is noise an integral part of driving
an old car?

Of course it is. It always will be. And true to form, ZelectricBug squeaks,
whines and rustles through the air with the best of them. But I didn't miss
the sound of an engine nearly as much as I expected.
[© Green Car Reports]



http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-50k-Zelectric-Classic-VW-Beetle-Conversion-EVs-video-tp4662846.html
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http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Meet-ZelectricBug-the-Zelectric-Motors-63-VW-tp4662441.html
EVLN: Meet ZelectricBug, the Zelectric Motors '63 VW
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