How To Build An Electric Car In 4 Easy Steps

by Ken Stevens on July 29, 2010


 How to Build an Electric Car in 4 Easy Steps

Your parents finally decided to give you their car as a hand-me-down present and at long last you can fulfill your dreams of having your very own car and converting the beloved yet old ‘junk’ to a brand new electric car. So since the main thing is now yours you can check the box beside the ‘donor car’ in your conversion car project, your hard-earned money from taking summer job can be checked as well and free labors from friends can be checked too. And because all the major resources are now available the next question you need to answer is “what to do next?”

Step 1

Search for information. Use the power of the internet to find facts about electric cars that you and your friends need to build your electric car. Your search can simply start with search engines like Google. You can entire keywords like “guides in building electric cars”, “DIY electric cars” or “electric cars software”. In just an instant you’ll get the drift of all the websites that you need to look for a better understanding for your project.

Step 2

Check first for the free downloadable software about electric cars. Make sure to find a site that is secure before downloading so as to avoid viruses and hackers. Electric cars software is good source of guidelines in electric car makings because the directions in there are precise and detailed. Normally there are also illustrations and even videos to clearly illustrate to builders what they need to do.

If you don’t want to download unknown software in your computer than you can look for a website that explains electric cars and the groupings under it like why is it advantageous to you, what are the best car models to convert, what kind of device should be use for a better working condition and so on and so forth. Since electric cars are so popular right now with all the environmental positive issues boosting it then it will be easy for you to find a site that can help you with your conversion project.

Step 3

Focus on sites that translated Do-It-Yourself projects because the directions you’ll get here are very realistic. Meaning you won’t have a problem executing the tasks to build your own electric car. Because sometimes downloadable software and/or other sites’ directions are quite complicated that people have a hard time following. You can also look for electric car conversion tips and how-to’s in the popular site YouTube.com. Just key-in the correct keywords and you’ll be directed to the world of electric vehicles and the simple doable methods that you and your friends can copy. What’s great about this is the fact that you can always play again the video until you accomplished the undertakings correctly.

Step 4

Visit forums that talk over electric cars. You’ll greatly find valuable tips and cautionary instructions that will be beneficial in your conversion project. If you want to clarify something or your friends inquires about some methods then don’t hesitate to ask. Posters and electric lovers like you would surely love to address your concerns.

All in all, in converting regular to electric car you’ll need to have a sound plan, a good research and a lot of fun.

Ken Stevens knows how to turn YOUR vehicle into an electric car. Visit his electric car conversion website right now to find out exactly how to convert your car into an electric. Go there now –> Click Here To Get Your Own DIY Electric Car.

Thank you for reading, British Gas Energy Smart
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 How to Build an Electric Car in 4 Easy Steps

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{ 22 comments… read them below or add one }

fouque August 1, 2010 at 12:57 am

Eddies Got nothing on you…

mendrueha pocco August 3, 2010 at 4:21 pm

Electrons and protons are too small to be observed (with a microscope that uses photons that react with protons and electrons) and they cannot be dissected to better understand them. They are often represented as tiny balls in diagrams of atoms where the electron with far less mass is much smaller than the proton (or neutron) but that is only for convenience. On the quantum mechanics level (very small scale) tiny objects may be considered to be more fuzzy rather than distinct and often behave more like waves than distinct particles. Mass-less photons travel at the speed of light but particles with mass (protons and electrons) can never reach the speed of light. Still, such particles (as waves) may travel at incredible speeds. Therefore a particle may not have a specific location like a pool ball on a pool table, but more like a pool ball that is at once all over the table but located mostly (most often) near one pocket. The protons and electrons then could exert influence at a distance from their theoretical locations. Two electrons influence each other to repel while an electron and a proton (of different but equal charges) attract. This was named negative and positive charge for convenience. As you suggest the charges are self-existent (otherwise we likely would not be here to wonder about it?).

There is a so called tunnel effect in which an electron can relocate for no known reason (which helps operate some semiconductors). Although the effect applies to all objects (and a car can theoretically leak out from a garage) as objects increase in size the probability of leakage becomes extremely remote. Therefore tiny particles such as protons and especially electrons are far more apt to exhibit the tunnel effect (fuzziness?).

harab August 9, 2010 at 7:10 am

Nuts and crackers.

Healthy Web site. Sorry No.

juhr morozo August 14, 2010 at 1:28 am

- ISPs/Carriers are always in charge.

guergreau August 26, 2010 at 11:41 pm

going through junk pile will probably be the last!

trom September 17, 2010 at 5:40 pm

Second best novelty song of the 70s after Mr. Jaws.

tropel September 18, 2010 at 1:41 am

Look under kit cars.
They make a fiberglass kit cars.

porrer September 21, 2010 at 11:17 am

I need to transfer all clothes shoes and junk from old to new wardrobe but really can't be arsed ha

card September 28, 2010 at 2:22 pm

Yeah I was a bit worried about that myself. Explaining to the insurance company that I ran up the back of my own car would have been interesting…

har stonde October 1, 2010 at 2:40 am

edge or ortan will probably go…….or they could bring back some old people that dont wreslt no more but are still capable of it ………..that would be fun to watch….

or the HARDY BOYS will go over there and kick some a$$

muscius hon October 6, 2010 at 11:42 am

suger foods give you short lasting energy, i think

frank also has a point

mayer schmidt October 11, 2010 at 1:59 am

The U.S. Federal Reserve runs the risk of diminishing returns from its next round of money printing to amplify the subdued economic recovery, but that won’t stop it from trying. Minutes due Tuesday from the Fed’s most recent policy-setting meeting may reflect some divisions among officials over whether to launch another round of asset purchases, known as quantitative easing.

Investors, however, assume the Fed will pull the trigger, likely at its next policy-setting meeting in November.

A Reuters poll of 16 primary dealers—investment firms that deal directly with the Fed—showed all expected the central bank to return to buying bonds.

All but one predicted the announcement would come at the Nov. 2-3 meeting.

The Fed cannot sit idly by with unemployment stuck near 10 percent and inflation below the central bank’s perceived target, economists say. Statements from some of the Fed’s top officials in recent days have made it increasingly clear that action is likely, even though others remain vocally opposed.

The next batch of U.S. inflation data comes Thursday and Friday, and is likely to show price pressures remain low, particularly for consumers. The Fed said in its latest statement that inflation was lower than it would like.

Low inflation raises concerns about the risk of deflation, a vicious circle of a downward spiral in prices and the economy.

While action seems assured, don’t bank on the Fed performing economic miracles.

“One should not expect too much from further quantitative or credit easing,” said Olivier Blanchard, the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. “It should be done but the implications for the economy will be limited.” Christina Romer, who recently stepped down as a White House economic adviser, said the Fed is in uncharted waters and it is unclear how much further easing will accomplish.

“There’s a lot of questions about quantitative easing and how it works and how communications policies work, but they need to be tried because this is still a crisis,” she said.

Measuring Success

The Fed, which has held interest rates near zero since December 2008, launched its asset-buying spree nearly two years ago, swelling its balance sheet to nearly $2.3 trillion from a pre-crisis level of around $800 billion.

The program succeeded in driving down borrowing costs, yet it did not spur as much lending as the Fed would have liked. Banks hoarded cash, fearful of racking up more loan losses so soon after the crippling financial crisis. Many companies balked at borrowing because of concerns about sluggish sales.

Paul Kasriel, director of economic research at Northern Trust in Chicago, said commercial bank credit will be the measure by which he judges the Fed’s success this time. The central bank releases weekly statistics on commercial and industrial loans on Fridays.

“I will be charting the course of QE2 every Friday afternoon,” Kasriel said, using a popular acronym for the Fed’s expected second round of quantitative easing.

Printing money is not without consequences, at home and abroad. Eswar Prasad, an economist at Cornell University, said he is concerned that investors will abruptly shift from worrying about deflation to predicting inflation as the Fed’s actions debase the value of the dollar.

In that scenario, “we get spiraling inflation that the Fed will have to move aggressively to counter, leading to another bust just as the economy recovers,” he said.

Emerging economies have their own concerns. The weak dollar has sent investors searching for fatter returns in faster-growing emerging markets, driving up inflation and asset prices. South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said this forces emerging markets to tighten monetary and fiscal policy sooner than they would like.

“A lower dollar and a lower euro is fine for all of you, but it’s not fine for us. You are making us uncompetitive and we are the people sitting on the 25 percent unemployment and we need to work our way out of it,” he said.

mart October 15, 2010 at 6:34 am

Those are called drugs

delinegan November 5, 2010 at 2:09 am

RHCP is great!!!!!!

borselli barne December 3, 2010 at 8:22 am

do you use a altern current motor ?

logilli December 26, 2010 at 3:28 am

ate more junk food today than I do in two months. tisktisk rawr. Oh well its the holidays<3

siong December 27, 2010 at 5:09 pm

Get a new Palm device every 2 months #thetechcheck #hp #palm #pixi

taghera anne January 5, 2011 at 6:26 pm

Oh I see.. Haha! Wala naman kasi akong iPad! Haha. What you meant pala is the two device using the same wifi :p

dietmana gritte January 14, 2011 at 5:50 pm

yes look at my website for more info

chenradie January 17, 2011 at 2:46 pm

if i dont get an answer fast my idea is gone

gratock January 21, 2011 at 11:11 am

Electric Vehicle Conversion – DIY Electric Car Conversion From Your Home Garage: Is it a good idea to start an e…

bond seamski January 24, 2011 at 6:19 am

present to them what you have, you can't do more than that

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