September 27, 2016 Volume 12 Issue 36
 

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Wheels:
All-electric Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3 sets new landspeed record

Venturi Buckeye Bullet team ready to roll.[Photo credit: Venturi 2016 Shivraj Gohil/Spacesuit Media]

 

 

After three years of battling difficult weather conditions at the Wendover, UT, Bonneville Salt Flats track, the Ohio State University's Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3 student team and driver Roger Schroer rallied to push their electric streamline vehicle to a world-record two-way average top speed of 341.4 mph (549.4 kph) on Monday, Sept. 19, 2016.

The Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3 (VBB-3) shattered the previous world record of 307.6 mph (495 kph), set by the Ohio State-Venturi team in 2010. The new world record is pending certification by the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), the worldwide motorsports governing body, in Category A Group VIII Class 8.

In the middle of this season's first record-attempt run, the VBB-3 reached a top speed of 358 mph (576 kph). However, FIA certification is based on the average speed of two runs, made in opposite directions and within 60 minutes.

One thing that makes this record attempt so unique is that much of the fate of the vehicle design and build is in the hands of students.

A core group of 10 undergraduate and graduate students at The Ohio State University Center for Automotive Research, in partnership with Monaco-based electric vehicle manufacturer, Venturi Automobiles, spent the last six years designing and building the electric streamliner. Venturi lends its expertise in electric vehicles and significant sponsorship funding to the students.

VBB-3 racing on the Salt Flats. [Photo credit: Venturi 2016 Shivraj Gohil/Spacesuit Media]

 

 

"The students taking part in this land speed project are incredibly motivated," said David Cooke, staff team liaison and previous leader of the team, who has dedicated the past 10 years to making history with electric racing. "On top of full class schedules and homework, they often spend over 40 hours per week working on the vehicle. It's that perseverance that continues to lead the team on the road to success."

Eleven miles of pristine track -- a dry, compact layer of salt -- and clear, sunny weather produced the perfect setting for this year's record-setting runs.

The car is propelled by two custom electric motors developed by Venturi Automobiles, and is powered by over 2 MW of lithium-ion batteries produced by A123 Systems. The vehicle was piloted by Roger Schroer, veteran team driver from the Ohio State affiliated Transportation Research Center, a leading independent automotive proving ground and vehicle testing organization in East Liberty, OH.


VIDEO: This video from Fox Sports is from earlier this year, before the newest record, but has some very good information.

The team's faculty advisor and Center for Automotive Research Director Giorgio Rizzoni said the VBB-3 boasts significant advances in power electronic systems and automated transmission. "The progress made this year is a very important step in the quest to reach the 400 miles-per-hour goal," said Rizzoni.

The Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3 is the latest iteration in a series of electric racing vehicles built at Ohio State's Center for Automotive Research, which has a 22-year history of electric racing. In 2004, Buckeye Bullet 1, which ran on nickel-metal-hydride batteries, set a national land speed record with an average time of 315 mph (506.9 kph). Venturi Buckeye Bullet 2, the world's first hydrogen fuel cell-powered land speed electric vehicle, set the international record of 303 mph (487.6 kph) in 2009.

A little more about the Venturi Buckeye Bullet team
Since 2000, VENTURI and its president Gildo Pallanca Pastor have been pursuing a sustained electric vehicle innovation policy. Venturi is a pioneer in electric sports cars and develops the most advanced technologies available that are just as relevant to urban vehicles as they are to very high-performance cars.

The mission of the Buckeye Bullet team is to provide unique engineering challenges for students. The team strives to provide valuable, hands-on experience, creating some of the best young engineers in the world. The goal is to promote and represent sponsors professionally and with integrity, aiming to bring together great minds and new technologies to overcome the most difficult challenges.

This student team, located at the Center for Automotive Research, pushes the envelope of electric vehicle technology and in so doing hope to change public perception of electric vehicles. Mission: Prove that green technologies of the future will be both fun to drive and fast.

Source: Ohio State University

Published September 2016

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