Pickup Gets A Makeover

Here’s an article that appeared in our local newspaper, the Daily News-Record, today 11/20/09. Three high school students at a local high school, Eastern Mennonite High School, are converting a Mazda pickup to electric power.  It looks like they have a good project going there.

Source: http://www.dnronline.com/news_details.php?AID=42535&CHID=1 a subscription may be required

Pickup Gets A Makeover Posted 2009-11-20
EMHS Students Turning Clunker Into All-Electric Marvel
By Jenny Jones

Stuart Bell (left) and Ashton Pease, seniors at Eastern Mennonite High School, paint the brackets Tuesday that will hold the batteries for the 1986 Mazda pickup they are converting into an electric vehicle.
Stuart Bell (left) and Ashton Pease, seniors at Eastern Mennonite High School, paint the brackets Tuesday that will hold the batteries for the 1986 Mazda pickup they are converting into an electric vehicle.

Photos by Pete Marovich

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HARRISONBURG - A group of students at Eastern Mennonite High School is getting charged up, literally.

Three senior students are turning a beat-up 1986 Mazda pickup truck into a modern marvel, swapping its fuel-powered internal combustion engine with an electric-powered motor.

The students - Drew Veenis, Ashton Pease and Stuart Bell - are working under the direction of technology teacher Dennis Brubaker. They say they took on the task to learn new skills and show others that electric vehicles aren’t just science fiction.

“I just really think it’s important …  that we start looking at ways to move away from fossil fuels,” said Veenis, 18. “Electric cars are definitely one of those ways.”

A Little Community Help

The idea for the project came after someone offered to donate an electric car to the school.

While EMHS passed up the offer, the students and Brubaker began talking about how neat it would be to build their own electric vehicle.

The guys started out by doing Internet research about what it would take to construct such a vehicle. Then, they began looking for a cheap ride.

They found the Mazda in Staunton for $300. It had a thrown piston and a bit of rust, but that didn’t matter because the students wouldn’t need the engine and they planned to rework the body to make it more lightweight.

From there, the students started contacting area businesses for donations. They need $2,400 for the 12 batteries it will take to power the vehicle, alone.

Several companies have pledged materials and funds, including one that will donate environmentally friendly water-based paint for the exterior finish.

“It’s become a big community kind of project,” Brubaker said.

A School Showpiece

For more than a month, the guys have worked on the truck practically every day.

They’ve removed the old engine, taken off the bed and stripped the interior. And soon, they’ll drop a 150-pound electric engine under the hood.

The batteries to power the engine will be secured to a bracket under the truck’s bed, which was shortened a foot to take weight off the truck. The vehicle will be 100 percent electric, Brubaker said.

Once all the mechanical elements are in place, the guys will put an old-style flatbed on the truck, using wood Brubaker salvaged from his deck.

They hope to enlist help to paint lightning bolts and possibly flames on the truck’s exterior in honor of the school’s mascot. They also dream of attaching solar panels to the truck, which would help provide additional energy to the engine.

“There’s just lots of ideas going around,” Pease said. “Not a lot of people get a chance to build a car, let alone an electric car. … [It's] awesome.”

When the truck is finished, it will likely be used to run errands for the school and, perhaps, be displayed at fairs and such to showcase the students’ work, Brubaker said.

Paul Leaman, the school’s principal, said the project is teaching the students valuable skills, and he would like to see it continue for years to come.

“We hope it can become kind of an icon for the school,” he said.

Contact Jenny Jones at 574-6286 or jjones@dnronline.com

Source: http://www.dnronline.com/news_details.php?AID=42535&CHID=1 a subscription may be required

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