http://www.sunlive.co.nz/news/89567-electric-car-visits-tauranga.html
Electric car visits Tauranga
20 Dec, 2014  

[image  
http://www.sunlive.co.nz/assets/images/site/141220-Electric-Car.jpg
Craig Salmon charging up at Beachside Holiday Park at Mt Maunganui before
heading north.
]

A beekeeper from Paihia is on what is believed to be the first trip from
Cape Reigna to the Bluff and back in a production model 100 per cent
electrical car.

Craig Salmon stopped off in Tauranga today to charge both his and his car's
batteries.

During his return trip he has travelled home via the remote West Coast of
the South Island then around East Cape to show people he can get a charge
wherever he goes. 

“I wanted to show it's now possible to travel the length of the country
running on 100% New Zealand made electricity,” says Craig.

“The technology is here, electricity sockets are everywhere, and we have a
good alternative to petrol fuelled cars. It's affordable for lots of people
with electric Nissan LEAFs for sale on Trademe between $20-25,000 and new
for around $40,000. And it's only going to get better and cheaper.”

It costs Craig around $5 to go 100 kilometres.

He's used about $250 worth of electricity to recharge the car and has
travelled over 5000km on this month long tour so far.

The bulk of the recharging has been done at holiday parks as they have ample
parking and a good power supply which is normally used by caravans but
nearly doubles the speed of recharging compared to a normal power socket.

“I called in to Nissan Mt Maunganui this morning grabbed a bit of charge and
had a chat to them about the trip. 

“They were amazed I'd taken it (the car) so far.  Now I'm plugged in at the
Mt Manganui Beach Side Holiday Park enjoying the beach and cafe's while my
car's topping up.”

Craig adds: “It's totally awesome knowing you're driving on New Zealand made
electricity.”

“I let people take a test drive and they're genuinely surprised when they
feel how quick off the mark the car goes - they end up smiling like a little
kid.

“It was important for me to visit the Mount and East Cape on my trip. Bay of
Plenty has felt the effects just a small oil spill with the Rena, and all
the Kiwi's I've talked to know we need to head this way and get off oil. 
I'm out to show that it can be done now, and you can save money and have fun
while doing it.”

All Craig needs to recharge is a household power socket for overnight
charging, otherwise with a caravan plug adapter he can fill up at a holiday
parks which takes around 4-5 hours.

While the car is refuelling, Craig checks out the local attractions.

“In some areas 20 minute fast-charge stations are being installed and the
electricity companies are getting right behind the technology.

“I see opportunities for tourist operators, movie theatres and supermarkets
to install low cost charging stations so owners can top up while they shop.”

He says it's been a great way to travel and while the car's been charging
he's been whitewater rafting at Turangi, visiting museums, seen yellow eyed
penguins at the Catlins, ate crayfish along the Kaikoura coast and caught up
with old friends and made plenty of new ones.

Craig also drove to the top of the world's steepest street in Dunedin and to
the steps of Parliament to meet with MPs and journalists.

“It's a pity our government doesn't really see the opportunity. By
supporting the technology and helping set up charging infrastructure they'd
be helping ordinary Kiwis save money, creating jobs in the clean energy
sector and be working towards energy independence all in one hit. All the
people I've talked to on this trip see it the same way,” adds Craig.

“I guess they've put themselves over a barrel when they're promoting oil
drilling.” The car gets about 100 km of driving from a full charge on the
open road and around 150 km around town.

Over the past year Craig's covered 20,000 km with fuel savings of over $2000
all with no pollution while driving.

Because the car is electric it does not have a cam-belt or exhaust pipe and
doesn't require oil changes.

Many plastics and metal used in the car's construction are recycled and the
lithium batteries are taken back by Nissan for recycling. Check out Craig's
blog at:http://www.eventure.kiwi/
[© 2014 Sun Media]




For EVLN posts use:
http://evdl.org/evln/
http://www.evdl.org/archive/index.html#nabble+template%2FNamlServlet.jtp%3Fmacro%3Dsearch_page%26node%3D413529%26query%3DEVLN%2Bbrucedp2%26days%3D0%26sort%3Ddate

http://www.designboom.com/design/sudaca-electric-motorcycle-ultralight-combustion-free-riding-12-15-2014/
sudaca e-motorcycle gives buenos-aires.br combustion-free riding (v)
...
https://facebook.com/motosudaca

http://green.autoblog.com/2014/12/10/nrg-evgo-no-charge-to-charge-atlanta/
NRG eVgo's 'No Charge to Charge' L3&2 EVSE Network in Atlanta GA
+
EVLN: FreeWire Mobi Carts> 10kWh "2nd-life" batteries as mobile-EVSE


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Tauranga-nz-Tesla-Traverses-the-Kiwi-Island-tp4673254.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to