http://www.lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue0914/A-Real-DIY-Project-Saint-Marys-employee-designs-his-own-electric-car.html
A Real DIY Project
By Diane Claytor  September 9th, 2015

[image  / Diane Claytor
http://www.lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue0914/images/0914-02401.jpg
Carl Thelen points out the wiring under the hood

http://www.lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue0914/images/0914-02402.jpg
The view of the back of Thelen's 1976 Honda Civic with 11 of its 15
batteries

http://www.lamorindaweekly.com/archive/issue0914/images/0914-02403.jpg
Thelen sits in his converted-to-electric 1976 Honda Civic
]

Saint Mary's employee designs his own electric car

When Carl Thelen graduated from UC Berkeley almost 30 years ago, his family
gave him a graduation gift: their 10-year-old manual transmission Honda
Civic. He was thrilled. For the next 20 years, it was his daily mode of
transportation. "It was such a fun car to drive," said Thelen, who is the
director of instructional technology at Saint Mary's College. But then it
developed "the bad - and very expensive - habit of blowing head gaskets," he
noted. The car sat, unused, for several years. He couldn't find a
replacement engine. His auto mechanic tried rebuilding the engine, but the
head gaskets kept blowing. So Thelen, who said he was "fortunate enough to
go to school at a time when they still taught metal shop, wood shop and
electronics," came up with the bright idea to try converting his 1976 car,
which had 276,000 miles on it, to an electric vehicle. "I figured I had
learned all this stuff years earlier so I could do it," he said.

A self-described tinkerer, Thelen admits he had no idea where to begin. He
went to a local electric car club and learned that the Civic is an excellent
car to convert because it's small, lightweight and strong. He talked to
people, read books and slowly moved forward. Of course, like most projects,
this one took far longer and was considerably more involved than expected.
The "very part-time" conversion started in 2010; with the help of his
10-year-old daughter, it is now mostly completed. "At least it's finished
enough to be considered legal, with all the proper stickers," he proclaimed.

The car uses 15 eight volt lead acid golf cart batteries (a 120 volt
system): 11 in the back, four more in the front engine compartment; 120 volt
cables; and a 12 volt auxiliary battery that basically does the same thing
as the starter in a regular car. The engine and miscellaneous items were
removed and approximately 1,200 pounds of batteries and other items were
added. So this electric vehicle now weighs about 600 pounds more than its
pre-converted model. A can of "fix a flat" has replaced the spare tire "to
keep the weight down," he said. "The books I read said to have a fire
extinguisher on hand. I'm not sure why, but I have one." There is also a
circuit breaker that will shut everything down if something goes wrong.

While not thoroughly tested, when fully charged, the car has a range of
about 43 miles, depending on the number of stops, hills, speed, and
temperature, Thelen said. "I've calculated that I can go from home in San
Pablo, take my daughter to school, get to work and then, if my daughter got
sick, get back to her school and home again," he said. Of course, by then,
the battery would be "completely exhausted." There is a charging port - a
120-volt, grounded plug - where the gas tank opening used to be. And Thelen
knows - and has used - just about every parking spot on campus that's near
an outlet.

He fully charges the car at home every night; it takes about 15 hours. "So
I'm really not limited to 43 miles during the day," Thelen noted. "I just
have to be near an outlet and have the time to charge it. It's typically
fully charged again by the time I leave work. It really is the perfect
commuter car." Thelen also has a gas-driven car. "I drove it last week and
by the time I got home, it was pretty much 'sucking fumes.' I'm no longer
accustomed to looking at the gauge on a regular basis."

As for speed, Thelen said he's gotten up to 75 miles per hour. "But it's not
very happy going that fast. That speed really drains the battery. It's very
happy at 60 miles per hour. In first gear, it cruises along at 25 miles per
hour; in second gear, it's a happy camper at 40 miles per hour."

Before going for a quick ride, Thelen, a very animated speaker, described
all the sounds his passenger may hear. "There are going to be some strange
noises," he explained. "The doors creak, there will be a funny noise from
the vacuum pump, a clicking from the contactor (main switch), whirring from
the motor and squeaks and groans from the back." Every noise mentioned was,
indeed, heard.

The conversion likely cost between $5,000 to 7,000, Thelen said, "vastly
more than the car is worth." And he's really not sure how much time he's
spent on it over the past five years. But it doesn't matter. Thelen
explained that he did this because he wanted to challenge himself, practice
some of the skills he learned a long time ago and "just prove that I could.
Also, it's still a really fun car to drive."
[© Lamorinda Weekly]




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