Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The second generation team built its car, Maize & Blue, and competed in Sunrayce 93 (the predecessor to the North American Solar Challenge) finishing in first place in the national race, and 11th in the World Solar Challenge. After 1993's races, all projects have run on a 2-year cycle.
The Stanford Solar Car Project (SSCP) is a student group at Stanford University that designs, builds, tests, and races solar-powered vehicles. The SSCP, a student-run, donation-funded organization, has been building and racing solar-powered vehicles since 1986. It has competed and placed at The World Solar Challenge, the Global Green Challenge ...
The Solar Car Challenge is an annual solar-powered car race for high school students. The event attracts teams from around the world, but mostly from American high schools. The race was first held in 1995. Each event is the end product of a two-year education cycle launched by the Winston Solar Car Team.
Students from a Detroit-based after-school program who worked for 15 months to build a solar car from the ground up have headed to Texas to put their skills, knowledge and vehicle to the test in a ...
The University of Minnesota Solar Vehicle Project, or UMNSVP, is a team of undergraduate students from the University of Minnesota that designs and constructs solar-powered cars. In its 31 years, it has established itself as one of the world's top solar racing teams, and the top Cruiser/Multi-Occupant Vehicle team in the Western Hemisphere ...
Oregon Solar Car Team (Bend-LaPine School District) 2007: 3: Lumidos: URL: Oregon State University Solar Vehicle Team (Oregon State University) 2005: 3: Phoenix: 256: URL: Prairie View A&M University Solar Car Team (Prairie View A&M University) 1995: 1: Principia Solar Car Team (Principia College) 1991: 11: Ra XI: 32: URL: Project SARA (Project ...
The planned specifications for the car include a 4.8 kWh lithium-ion battery, a 4 m 2 (43 sq ft) solar array producing 985 W (1.321 hp), and two DC hub motors together good for 2 kW (2.7 hp). The team designed for a weight of 160 kg (350 lb) for BeVolt by using a carbon fiber monocoque chassis and kevlar solar wing. [ 25 ]
In July 1990, 32 teams of some of North America's brightest college students took to the road in solar-powered vehicles they had built during the previous year and a half. [1] The GM Sunrayce USA route covered more than 1,800 miles, from Florida to Michigan . [ 2 ]