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Build your own Electric Car!

Step 6Batteries

Batteries
The motor won't do you any good, unless you have some batteries to power it with.

This car uses 6 x 12V batteries, for a 72V system.

These are Deka Dominator true Gel-Cell batteries. They can not leak or spill acid, nor do they require watering.

I was fortunate enough to be able to get these batteries, slightly used, for $12 each - essentially scrap metal prices!

One downside of these batteries is that they are picky about charging voltage. I was finally able to find a 72V charger designed for these batteries, and got it used for $200.

If I had used the more typical deep-cycle flooded batteries, I could have used a different charger, or even 6 12V chargers, one on each battery.

Four batteries are in the cargo compartment of the car, and two are in front, where the radiator used to be.

For the rear batteries, I cut two pieces of bed frame to lay across the spare tire well, and ran a bolt through the end of each piece down into the frame of the car.

For the front batteries, a few friends came over and helped me weld in a metal tray for the two batteries to sit on. Then I cut two short pieces of unistrut, and ran threaded rod through holes in the tray to bolt the batteries down. I then insulated the front batteries with rigid styrofoam and re-installed the front bumper.

I went to the boat store and bought a "battery charger power inlet". This is a male electrical connection with a rubber cover. Since the gas tank was already removed, I installed the power inlet where the gasoline used to go in.

I added an additional circuit in my garage, just for the car, and have a 25' 12 gauge yellow extension cord with power indicator light in the end, just for plugging the car in with.

Plug it in at night, and it's charged the next morning, automatically.



Update! I later played around with more batteries. With a motor controller that supports higher voltage, I was able to run up to 144V (12x 12V batteries.) At that voltage, the top speed of the car was at least 73 mph, but I really had no cargo space.
Just so you know, Ford Ranger front coil springs fit the back of a Geo Metro, but you have to shorten them.
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19 comments
Dec 2, 2011. 3:34 PMcgtone856 says:
I am doing a project on the feasibility of turning a 1952 ford f1 into an electric truck and have a couple questions. I am by no means an expert for please bear with me.

First, when you say the peak horsepower in 96.5 hp, this peak horsepower occurs when the gas peddle is fully compressed and not the constant horsepower correct?

Second, how can you be pulling 500 amps from the batteries when the capacity of the batteries is only 100 AH? Does the controller amplify the amps?

Third, how did you figure that your cars uses about 300 WH per mile? what calculations did you do? I am trying to understand all the calculations involved in this type of project.

Thank you
Dec 5, 2011. 4:02 PMcgtone856 says:
aren't power or horsepower of a motor independent of the weight of the car, acceleration and gear? The only thing gears affect are the torque at the wheels compared to what the motor puts out and the speed at which the wheels are turning. Because a 2:1 gear ratio increases the torque by a factor of two and decreases the RPM by a factor of two the power stays the same according to the formula for horsepower:
HP = torque x RPM / 5252.
The acceleration of the car then depends on the horsepower or watts produced by the engine, and the other forces on the car (drag and friction and gravity if going up or down a hill) which depend on the speed, the weight etc. Is this not correct?

For the batteries, I guess I worded in a bad way. 100 AH tells us that we can pull 100 amps for one hour or 1 amp for 100 hours correct? So pulling 500 amps would only allow the batteries to run for 12 min or 1/5 and hour if they were fully discharged, right? (500 amps X 1/5 hour = 100 AH)

Since I am doing a feasibility project, checking the possibility of turning a truck into an electric truck, I do not have any equipment to check the watt-hours per mile and need to do an estimate based off numbers and calculations. Do you happen to know how to do this?
Dec 7, 2011. 6:24 PMcgtone856 says:
oh yes absolutely. Thank you very much. So let me see if I understand this. Given a transmission with known gear ratios you can determine the speed of the car for each gear based off the RPM of the engine and the circumference of the wheel in inches by:
MPH = RPM *Circumference / gear ratio * 0.000947 for converting from inches per minute to miles per hour.
Using a motor performance graph you can then find the torque and amp at any rpm and thus any speed. Using the torque you are able to figure out acceleration and using the amps helps you determine the range. When engineering a car you determine the gear ratios based off what gives you the best performance. Since I already have a transmission the process I described allows you to estimate your performance. Is this correct?
Nov 17, 2011. 12:59 PMrcable2 says:
Would it be worth it to buy 12 Lithium car batteries. You'd get more power, and less weight, which might yield a 30 or 40 mile trip. But of course 12 of those is about $2000 if you get a deal on them.
Jun 6, 2011. 10:16 PMjimmerforpoy says:
Hey again what is the kWh on the batterypack?
Jun 8, 2011. 7:12 AMjimmerforpoy says:
Thanks, could you also tell me the HP of the motor
Sep 8, 2011. 3:17 PMautoalley says:
I though you said that you were using 6 batteries. This does not equal the numbers you show. You have to have 12 batteries. Is that right or did I miss something?
Sep 8, 2011. 10:14 PMautoalley says:
Thank you , I have one more question I found a junk yard for forklift motors and I can get all I want, but I need to know witch one I want. There is ever size and volt. He asked what do you want to do and I do not know what to say. Can you help?
Jun 6, 2011. 8:25 PMtinker234 says:
hey could i use a old gas pump for a casing just for laughs
Aug 25, 2011. 11:15 AMrwolkens says:
I love that idea for the battery charger, and I'm gonna steal it for the day I do my own ev project! 8^)
Dec 1, 2008. 11:23 PMSlohan says:
The 'unleaded fuel only' sticker adds a nice touch of irony...
Apr 11, 2011. 2:43 PMJustdoofus says:
He just said that in the video. (LOL I POSTED ON AN OLD POST!)
Aug 22, 2010. 2:26 PMjimmerforpoy says:
what is the amphour on these batteries?
Jan 18, 2009. 7:57 PMbrokengun says:
That is a nice price for those batteries! Good price hunting.
Dec 14, 2008. 7:50 PMluigi2999 says:
you know, if you put 6 12-volt battery chargers in series, you could charge them that way instaed of charging each one individually. but you got a 72-volt charger anyway, so, why bother?

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Author:bennelson(300MPG.org)
Ordinary guy with no special skills, just trying to change the world one backyard invention at a time. See more at: http://300mpg.org/ On Twitter - @300MPGBen and at Ecoprojecteer.net