Friday, June 24, 2011

Designline bus builders (USA based) claim superiority of electric buses, 750% better than diesel

Tranzwatching bus tech developments

Having cut the hawser to its NZ base and original foundation USA based bus builder Designline appears to be making a steady shift from hybrid variants to the "all electric" bus.

An investment of $30 million from the Guggenheim foundation and a new director on the board of Designline, Fouad Alaeddi (a senior figure in Ernst and Young, Middle East, established 1923) may have been a factor in this shift. The race for market share of this rapidly developing technology, brings Designline into competition with BYD,  China's most successful car manufacturer in 2010, working in conjunction (a MOU) with Germany's Daimler AG to put hundreds of electric buses on the road in China this coming year. The Chinese company has also  established footholds  in Los Angeles,  Abu Dhabi, Windsor (Canada) and Singapore, with trial's of BYD buses now planned by transit authorities in Rotterdam, Copenhagen and Frankfurt.

Big claims are being made for the effectiveness of electric buses, with (fully recyclable) batteries able to be recharged over and over again, as much as 30,000 times, and 80% recharging times as little as ten minutes being claimed by some systems.

In today's news from Tech News (TMC.net) a report states " Over 12 months ago DesignLine fielded a fleet of Eco-Smart I buses in one of the most demanding operating environments on the globe - the Middle East. While maintaining 100 percent up time through temperatures in excess of 125 degrees Fahrenheit and the other environmental challenges of desert operation, the Eco-Smart I traveled over 150 miles on a single charge. This is the diesel equivalent of 30 miles per gallon or fuel costs of $0.13 per mile representing over a 750 percent improvement over standard diesel buses".

Electric buses are likely to cost twice that of a normal buses  but traditionally electric buses (ie trolley buses) have less wear and tear and a longer life than diesel vehicles so the upshot may be very good value for urban transport operators and agencies.

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