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Who's Resurrecting the Electric Car?

Forget those poky little golf cars — the battery-powered muscle car is just around the corner

The 1946 Oldsmobile that sits amid the old boat hulls and flywheels in the Reverend Gadget’s Culver City machine shop harks back to an era of voluptuous curves and radiant chrome; its owner, actor and comedian Tommy Chong, calls it “Ace,” and considers the car so exquisite that he lists it among his collection of sculptures. Open the door, however, and it looks like somebody doused Chong’s baby in gasoline and torched it: There’s no engine, no seats, no pedals — nothing, in fact, but a small white box bolted to the floor where the back seat should be, with two wires connecting the box to some contraption in the trunk.

Reverend Gadget's electric gospel: ''If electric cars are going to make a difference, a lot of people have to drive them. They have to be affordable.''
Reverend Gadget's electric gospel: ''If electric cars are going to make a difference, a lot of people have to drive them. They have to be affordable.''
Straight outta Earl Scheib: Gadget's candy-coated electric-powered streamlined baby. Standing by, Left Coast partner Roger Wilson.
Straight outta Earl Scheib: Gadget's candy-coated electric-powered streamlined baby. Standing by, Left Coast partner Roger Wilson.

“That’s for the air bags,” says Reverend Gadget, a.k.a. Greg Abbott, the craftsman, lay engineer and artist who’s restoring Chong’s Olds. A compact, muscular man, with a boyish grin and blue eyes that crinkle up when he laughs, he ushers me around the back of the car to see a little black machine branded “Praise the Lowered.” He flashes a smile and winks. “It’s a lowrider.”

When he finishes outfitting the Olds with a DC motor, enough serial-wired, nickel-metal hydride (NiMH) D-cell batteries to produce 340,000 watts of power, and a computerized controller to connect the two, Chong’s ride will be the first all-electric vehicle to bounce down San Fernando Road competing for glory with the ’60s-era Chevy Impalas of the Imperial Car Club. It will also do speed when necessary. “He’s getting a huge motor,” says Gadget of Chong. “He’ll be able to do burnouts in this car.”

And so what if the electric engine whines more than vrooms? “It’ll be my spaceship,” says Chong, who currently drives a Prius. “These cars glide. The only sound you’ll hear will be the sound system and the air bags.” Plus, he says, “by driving the ultimate electric stoner car, I can get off the titty. You know, the oil titty.”

There was a time not too long ago that Chong thought electric cars were only for “guys like Ed Begley — you know, people who wear Birkenstocks and don’t eat meat.” Only a year ago, he was building Ace as a hot rod with a gasoline engine. Then he went to a party at Gadget’s place and, as he puts it, “got educated.”

“He had all his cars sitting out, and I saw the possibilities,” Chong says. “He showed me the benefits of it all and how perfect it is, and how fast can it go. Now I don’t want to put gasoline in anything.”

Despite the reputation electric vehicles have as poky little wagons for hippies and old people, the electric muscle car has been around for a while. There’s even a National Electric Drag-Racing Association (NEDRA) devoted to high-performance electrics. In 1998, San Dimas–based engineer Alan Cocconi of AC Propulsion introduced the first version of his sun-yellow tZero roadster, featured on the cover of this paper in 2002, which does 0 to 60 in 3.6 seconds, leaving Ferrari F355s in the smoke off its tires. Amateur race-car constructor Ian Wright took the tZero’s three-phase AC induction motor and fitted it to a British street-legal race car, the Ariel Atom, and managed to get all the way to 112 miles per hour in first gear. (Electric motors are renowned for their torque — Chong’s Olds won’t even need a transmission.) Wright has now joined a Silicon Valley team to produce the Tesla Roadster, a high-end all-electric sports car with a battery range of up to 250 miles.

All those cars are fine, says Gadget, who learned about fast electric cars by hanging around electric-car drag racers such as former NEDRA president Roderick Wilde, inventor of the electric Graumann postal-van drag racer, “Gone Postal,” and Palo Alto–based Otmar Ebenhoech, whose Zilla controllers dominate the EV racer market (and who races his own Porsche 914 from time to time). “But those are all quarter-of-a-million-dollar sports cars,” says Gadget. “Your market’s really small. I’m looking at it thinking, if electric cars are going to make a difference, a lot of people have to drive them. They have to be made affordable.”

So instead of building cars from the ground up, Gadget and his business partner, Roger Wilson, convert existing cars or shells of cars into electric vehicles by supplying or outfitting them with preconfigured kits loaded with everything an electric car needs except a new motor.

“Usually if you want to do a conversion from gas to electric, you have to think about all the different pieces,” says Wilson, a software designer who founded the Alternative Energy Zone Village at the annual Burning Man Festival. “You have to buy wires, cable fittings, relays, DC-to-DC converters, batteries, a motor and a special motor plate. Our idea is that if you have a kit with all the parts in it, you don’t have to think about it so much. You buy a motor, our controller module and batteries, and you put it together.”

Most of Gadget and Wilson’s cars won’t make use of AC drives like the one Cocconi developed for the tZero; part of the plan to keep EV conversion affordable is to use the simpler, high-performance DC motor.

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  • 01/18/2012 6:57:00 PM

    Yes, they are. What did you need from LC?? Maybe I can pass on a email to them.

  • V8 12/16/2011 12:29:00 PM

    electric cars are stupid, they get crap range have no excitement are expensive. There is a reason the electic car was replaced by internal combustion 100yrs ago. Hydrogen cars is where the world should be focusing, save the fuel for car guys and save the earth. Id rather die then own anything but internal combustion but I still think its a better way then crap electric.

  • 01/13/2011 12:49:00 AM

    Can someone tell me if Left Coast is still around? I've emailed them a few times with no response, and can't seem to find a number for them.

  • Gustavo Gra� 12/28/2009 5:16:00 AM

    Hi everyone, i�m from Argentina. I really want to know how can we bring here this technology. I�m not an engineer, i�m a psychologist worry for our planet. Sorry for my english, thanks

  • Anthony Abela 09/16/2009 1:19:00 AM

    Hi 'Gadget'. I watched one of your fetures on tv and eventually looked you up on the net. I am interested in 'importing' your ideas to Malta. Malta is a small island in the centre of the Medeterranean Sea so ther could be some serious business generated here. I am interested to know of the fesibility of a conversion of say a 1990 convertible 320i BMW ? and as much further information you have to offer

  • Anthony Abela 09/16/2009 1:19:00 AM

    Hi 'Gadget'. I watched one of your fetures on tv and eventually looked you up on the net. I am interested in 'importing' your ideas to Malta. Malta is a small island in the centre of the Medeterranean Sea so ther could be some serious business generated here. I am interested to know of the fesibility of a conversion of say a 1990 convertible 320i BMW ? and as much further information you have to offer

  • David 01/19/2009 12:46:00 AM

    Instead of offering to sell you their book, is there any publication that will tell me what combination of battery type, AC motor and matching converter I should use for a first class BEV like the Tesla or tZero, or Lightening, and then what range on a charge, time to charge, and what acceleration I can expect, for what poundage of the car? I have a 2001 Jaguar XJ8 that I'd like to convert. Davy

  • ISITEL 07/12/2008 2:53:00 AM

    We at ISITEL would be interested in distributing the conversion kits.

  • Kenney 07/10/2008 7:15:00 PM

    Do you know how I can contact coast elctric car co?

  • Cynthia Bronte 07/01/2008 11:43:00 AM

    I am in Palo Alto California. Do you have contacts here. I could also use any and all cyber info that you want to share. Will there be a run on the market for parts? If so which ones. Cynthia M. Bronte

  • Terry Allen Buffo Sr 06/23/2008 5:03:00 AM

    Is it possible to convert a 1987 toyota 4X4 and would it hold up in the 40 below temps we get here in Alaska. i suppose the cost would be around $16,000. Unless it is easy enough to retrofit the pickup myself. thanks buffo

  • kathy L White 06/20/2008 8:58:00 AM

    I just do not want to pay gas prices anymore. Please let me know where to convert to electric car. I own a toyota 2003 deluxe 4 door camry. I work in Irvine. Please it is important to me. I will refer you to many people that will do the same. Your friend, Kathy L White

  • kathy L White 06/20/2008 8:02:00 AM

    I would like to convert my toyota camry 4 cyclinder to and all electric car? How and where? I live in 91765 area CA Thank You Kathy White

  • R.W.Thomas 06/10/2008 7:06:00 PM

    Yes, This is something that needs to be common knowledge. Please send me any and all cyber..information you have here...

  • Albert Godley-Davis 06/07/2008 2:18:00 AM

    Gentlemen: I would like to discuss with Mr. Abbott the conversion of my 1966 Volvo 1800S to electric. It's a coupe weighing about 2,330 lbs. An extremely attractive and good handling car. Mine is nearing the end of a complete restoration. I would very much like to convert to electric, if feasible. I'd appreciate it if he would e-mail me or call 410-831-4432. I'm in Baltimore MD. Thank you, Al Godley-Davis

  • Marty 04/18/2008 4:00:00 AM

    I would like the Reverend Gadget to get ahold of me or please send me his email address or phone # thanks, Marty (916)-769-5603

  • Craig Kindy 04/17/2008 3:17:00 AM

    How much is a DIY kit for a PT Cruiser? I'm interested in converting mine.

  • Kianti Murphy 04/04/2008 6:30:00 AM

    YES! YES! YES! I so look forward to taking advantage of the opportunity that these guise provide. I love it all. You guys rock! You'll be hearing from me soon.

  • Juan heredia 11/10/2007 1:28:00 AM

    Hi: I'm looking for Reverend gadget A.K.A Greg Abbott.To see if he would like to buy a 1974Fiat 126 spiter.At a good price.Plase call(626)337-7011 Thank you for your time.

  • steven xoc 11/03/2007 2:36:00 PM

    how much fror kits without batteries? I would like to do three a year.

 

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