The Buckeye Bullet is a series of experimental electric cars created by Ohio State University students as a joint project with Venturi. The cars are designed to break the land speed record on the Bonneville Speedway, a salt flat just outside Wendover, Utah, United States.
The VBB's have also been called the Venturi "Jamais Contente", referencing the electrically powered first vehicle to top 100 km/h.
Video Buckeye Bullet
Buckeye Bullet Team
The Buckeye Bullet team is composed of students from Ohio State University, primarily through the College of Engineering. Led by Dr. Giorgio Rizzoni, the team is provided research space from the Center of Automotive Research at the university.
Maps Buckeye Bullet
Vehicles
All Buckeye Bullet vehicles have been electrically powered, with power coming from either batteries or hydrogen fuel cells.
Buckeye Bullet 1
The Buckeye Bullet 1 is a battery electric powered land speed race car, and the first from the Buckeye Bullet team.
The Buckeye Bullet 1 held the record for the world's fastest electric car, from XX to XX, with a top recorded speed of 321.834 mph (517.942 km/h). It held the U.S. electric land speed record at 314.958 mph (508.485 km/h) (Class III/E). It set a BNI (non-FIA) recognized international record at 271.737 mph (437.318 km/h) on October 3, 2004.
Vehicle properties
- Power source: 10,000 rechargeable c-cell batteries
- Motor: Custom 400 horsepower (300 kW) 3-phase AC power motor
- Layout: rear-wheel drive
- Body material: carbon fiber
- Ride height/ground clearance: 1.5 in (38 mm)
- Curb weight: 4000 lb (1814 kg)
- Length: 31 ft (9.4 m)
- Suspension: 4 wheel independent
Buckeye Bullet 2
The Buckeye Bullet 2, or BB2, was the second-generation, student-built, alternative-fuel race car created by the Buckeye Bullet team. It is the first hydrogen fuel cell powered land speed streamliner. It is front-wheel drive. The Buckeye Bullet 2 ran for the first time at Speedweek 2007 and recorded a top speed of 223.334 mph (359.421 km/h) on Oct. 10, 2007. At Speedweek 2008, the BB2 eclipsed its previous mark by reaching 286.476 mph (461.038 km/h), the highest speed ever recorded by a hydrogen/fuel cell vehicle at that time.
On September 25, 2009, the Buckeye Bullet 2 set international land speed records both at 303.025 mph (487.672 km/h) in the flying kilometer and 302.877 mph (487.433 km/h) in the flying mile.
Buckeye Bullet 2.5
The Buckeye Bullet 2.5 was a battery electric version of the Buckeye Bullet 2. The BB2.5 uses the same frame and body as the Buckeye Bullet 2, but replaces the fuel cell power source with batteries. The BB2.5 raced for only one season in 2009. This vehicle was intended to be a testbed for several new technologies in consideration for use on the Buckeye Bullet 3. The most significant technology under consideration was the lithium ion batteries. The batteries used for the BB2.5 were A123 Systems 32113 cylindrical cells. The vehicle was able to set a FIA sanctioned world record at 307.666 mph
(495.140 km/h).
Buckeye Bullet 3
The Buckeye Bullet 3 is the final iteration of the project, building on the technology of the previous vehicles. It is 4-wheel drive and has a drag coefficient of 0.13. The car has separate powertrains for each axle, with the cockpit in the center. Each powertrain has two electric motors driving a 2-speed transmission, built by Hewland. 1st gear can be used up to 275mph. On September 19, 2016, the achieved a new world record with a speed of 341.4 mph (549.43 km/h), beating its own previous record of 308 mph (495.14 km/h). Roger Schroer was the pilot for the record breaking run.
See also
- List of vehicle speed records
References
External links
- Venturi Cars official website
- The Buckeye Bullet Homepage
- The Buckeye Bullet Blog
- The Ohio State University College of Engineering
- Video of the Buckeye Bullet
- Center for Automotive Research (CAR).
- About the VBB Program
Source of the article : Wikipedia