The Uruguayan company teaching people how to turn regular cars into EVs.
The Uruguayan company teaching people how to turn regular cars into EVs.

The Uruguayan company teaching people how to turn regular cars into EVs

The Uruguayan company teaching people how to turn regular cars into EVs.
The Uruguayan company teaching people how to turn regular cars into EVs
Ev Resto-mods are where it's at
the ones ive seen are either hobbyist janky or crazy expensive. im surprised this isnt a bigger thing already, but i dont want to pay > $30K to end up with 100 mile range and zero reliability assurance.
Although safety is certainly a legitimate issue, I can almost guarantee that car manufacturers will use that as an excuse to kill this form of competition -- yet another way in which capitalism is dooming our species to extinction.
A company in my city created an EV conversion kit for any cars years ago. As they could not get certification for all models, they made a partnership with the constructor and managed to have certification for only 1 model (Renault Master, a utility truck) and now the company is controlled by Renault (the constructor).
They indeed killed the competition...
I test drove an electric conversion vw bug and vw gti 25 years ago. I saw but did not drive electric porsche 914s and fiat 124s 20 years ago. I remember seeing electric miata conversions. This is not new and it should continue
If I had the money and knew people who could do this type of stuff, you bet I'd wanna buy my favorite 90s vehicle and turn it into an EV
Edit:
Tried looking up the vehicle because I wanted to remember what it's called, but I can't for the life of me remember what it is, even after attempting to look it up. All I remember is that it was potentially a Chevrolet with 3 seats up front, 3 in the back, and a little divider thing in the middle of the back seats you could pull out.
I absolutely loved it and it was a sad day when we had to get rid of it. It may have been a safety hazard, with the back heating up and burning (thankfully it didn't actually reach the seats, just heated them up, or there could have been 3 burned minors, myself included), but I still love it since it was the family car.
I'm definitely gonna have to continue searching for the name, using my limited car knowledge.
Edit Edit:
I'm not a car person, so shoot me for this if you want, but it was actually a Chrysler Concord. Again, I'm not a car person, so I don't know much about vehicles other than basic things like how to change a tire or on changing the oil on a 2000s Toyota Town and Country.
My mechanically inclined father came to the rescue as to what it was.
Chevrolet Caprice? The impala also had a bench seat option in the front to the 90s I think
You could have an electric Saturn! Lol
That description doesnt give us much to work with!
To be fair, it's been over a decade since I've seen it, so I can only remember vague images of it.
Edit:
I couldn't even remember the right brand. Chrysler Concord.
Sounds like a Dodge Neon
I love my 2010 Mazda 3. It's basically the same platform as the Ford focus from the same year. If they were able to eventually make a Focus EV, then I'd bet it's possible to do the same with my Mazda.
I stared at that thumbnail for a solid 10 seconds trying to figure out why there was a water cooled GPU in someone's trunk
I was having flashbacks to Cars 2.
Thank you. I saw it and immediately went to Miles Axelrod.
Ay, yeah. Electric Fiero!
In my country any modification of any importance is required to be signed off by a mechanical engineer. If I were that engineer, I would never sign any of these conversions. Too much liability, especially with old cars of unknown integrity.
here almost any automotive mechanic shop can do it
Das awesome
Sorry. Saw the opportunity and had to take it.
I support you, 01189998819997253.
I really wish I could afford an EV but it's just way out of my price range the damn things are so expensive and they don't come down in price all that much on the second hand market either.
I can't really even get anything from my current car except the scrap metal value. It still works it's just not a desirable vehicle.
So for me I'm much better off just keeping this current car until the maintenance of it becomes prohibitively expensive. That's the problem really, no one's been incentivized to buy electric vehicles unless they're in the market for a new car anyway, and have a lot of money so don't mind spending a bit extra, which is a really limited subset of the population.
They've been telling us the same lying bullshit about computers and phones for 40 fucking years.
I have dealt with a massive number of Li-Ion batteries and never punctured one, always properly disposed of them.
Like, a lot of this shit isn't hard, and a lot of the pooh-poohing about safety comes from often are industry plants who basically exist to gatekeep people from being able to be in full control of the things they purchase.
Hmmm, let's see if we can find more about this Rojas guy.
https://www.bnamericas.com/en/news/national-agency-pitched-to-advance-electromobility-in-peru
No offense intended to Rojas, who I'm sure is a decent enough of a person, but the related article I found about him makes him certainly sound like he's a traditional business guy bureaucrat and so that says to me that at least part of the reason he speaks against conversions is because conversions impact all the business plans and bureaucracy he is working on.
By his LinkedIn, he's an executive of some type at Sustainablearth LATAM, a solar company.
Just personal opinion, Rojas is biased. Doesn't make him a bad person, but people within the industry generally don't like people fixing their own devices. That's a service they want people to have to pay for.
And let's not forget all the "professionally" built cars with lithium fires and explosions. The pros fuck up just as much as the hobbies, possibly more often.
Yeah, I'm debating getting a Chevy Bolt, but I'm a bit worried about them catching on fire.
I'd be a lot more comfortable buying from a local retrofit org, because they have a lot more to lose if things go sideways. Most of the issues are from shoddy work, meaning underpaid workers who don't care enough to do a good job soldering leads or whatever. A local shop that needs sales in order to eat will care a lot more about making sure the battery packs and whatnot are high quality.
And all of the petro cars accidents caused by failing vehicles, which is what these are replacing.
I mean I'm sure 98% of these people would take a new car for the same price and maintenance schedule (not a subscription to a car...). I mean I would, despite also being a big fan of DIY and self reliance. That said they aren't, so instead this option makes sense for people like us.