Steven Cole Smith came down from Orlando and wrote and great article for the
Orlando Sentinel on the BBB:

 

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/business/columnists/orl-ymscsmithcol-022809,0
,3504724.column 

 

Battery Beach Burnout may be auto show of the future

 

Steven Cole Smith | AUTOMOTIVE

    February 28, 2009

 

JUPITER

 

As you walk around the 80 or so electric and hybrid-powered vehicles here at
the Fourth Annual Battery Beach Burnout - the Southeast's largest
alternative-powered vehicle show - the selection is remarkable. There are
electric skateboards and minibikes, a half-dozen electric Porsches, a 1920
Milburn electric car and a plug-in hybrid aerial bucket truck operated by
Florida Power & Light. There's even the "world's fastest electric Delorean,"
which suggests that somewhere there may be other electric Deloreans, and
remarkably, there are.

 

And you think: Am I looking at the future, or am I looking at a hobby?

 

Both, says Dave Delman, owner of the electric Delorean, who brought the car
down from his home on Long Island, N.Y. "Just like some of the first
personal computers were built by tinkerers in the beginning, and finally
they caught on and manufacturers began making them," he says. "What starts
as a hobby can become the future."

 

Delman is a physician who also has an engineering degree. He and friend and
fellow engineer Tom Neiland converted the 1981 Delorean - that
stainless-steel-bodied sports car from the Back to the Future films - to
full electric power, using 13 batteries (12-volts each). It can go 40 miles
on a charge and hit speeds in excess of 85 mph. They bought the car for
$6,000 with a blown V-6 gasoline engine, junked it and spent another $10,000
and four months converting the car to electric power.

 

Why do it? "For the challenge," he says. "It was a labor of love."

 

You get that answer a lot at the Battery Beach Burnout. A handful of the
vehicles came from the factory with electric power, such as the gorgeous
Tesla sports car, but the vast majority were converted, either by
technically savvy owners or several of the conversion companies that
displayed their products.

 

There was an electric Fiat 1500 sports car, an electric Nissan 240SX, a
couple of Porsche 911s, several full-sized electric motorcycles and a
Volkswagen Rabbit-based pickup truck that scored the fastest time in the
autocross race - faster even than a conventional gasoline-powered Audi TT
sports car that was invited to participate as a benchmark.

 

The Florida Electric Auto Association, founded in 2004, hosted the Battery
Beach Burnout last weekend at Florida Atlantic University, with the stated
purpose being "to raise public and media awareness of the current state of
electric and hybrid vehicles and to educate people about 'green' alternative
fuel vehicles."

 

Show organizer Shawn Waggoner of Lake Worth, president of FLEAA, makes sure
each Battery Beach Burnout contains some high-performance electric vehicles
and some racing. "I was born in Daytona Beach and grew up around cars and
racing." In 2000, he got involved in an association that sponsors electric
drag racing, "and there was sort of a pioneering aspect, getting into the
performance side of electric cars."

 

He adds, "Talk to people, and you hear the typical myths: Electric vehicles
are all oversized golf carts that won't go very far or very fast, and
probably shouldn't even be allowed on the street. We tell them that when it
comes to gas cars, you have your daily drivers that are underwhelming in
performance, and you have your high-performance gas cars. Same thing in the
electric field - we have high-performance models, and we have models
designed to just get you back and forth to work."

 

One of the most interesting events at the Battery Beach Burnout was the
Electrathon race - light, frail-looking, three-wheel vehicles are allowed to
use one electric motor and two 12-volt batteries, and they race on a closed
course for an hour. The vehicle that completes the most laps wins.

 

Speed is important, but conserving battery power is critical: The fastest
car in the Electrathon, built by students at the University of South
Florida, started out traveling more than 30 mph, but was down to a walking
pace by the end of the event, and finished third.

 

The Electrathon was won by Team Rolling Thunder, driven by Miami private
detective Lance Barlow, in a car built by his father Dana, and Rex Hollinger
of Titusville.

 

Hollinger said their car was built from scratch for about $1,000, though you
can spend upwards of $5,000 if you purchase an Electrathon kit car and add
lots of features to it. Team Rolling Thunder completed 126 laps around the
quarter-mile track, two more than the second-place car.

 

Prize money? Forget it. "Just bragging rights," said Hollinger, who drives
his own gasoline-powered stock car at Orlando Speed World.

 

For information on upcoming events for the Boca Raton-based Florida Electric
Auto Association, log onto its Web site at FloridaEAA.org. Before the year
is out, Waggoner said, it will likely schedule an event in the Orlando area.

 

Sentinel Automotive Editor Steven Cole Smith can be reached at
scsm...@orlandosentinel.com, at 407-420-5699, and through his blog at
Enginehead.com.

 

 

--
Shawn M. Waggoner              
Florida Electric Auto Association

Mobile: (561) 543-9223
Fax: (561) 282-0693
Web: http://www.floridaeaa.org

 

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