The 1995 HEV Challenge: Results and Technology Summary 960741
The objective of this paper is to analyze and summarize the performance results and the technology used in the 1995 Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV) Challenge. Government and industry are exploring hybrid electric vehicle technology to significantly improve fuel economy and reduce emissions of the vehicles without sacrificing performance. This last in a three-year series of HEV competitions provided the testing grounds to evaluate the different approaches of 29 universities and colleges constructing HEVs. These HEVs competed in an array of events, including: acceleration, emissions testing, consumer acceptance, range, vehicle handling, HVAC testing, fuel economy, and engineering design. The teams also documented the attributes of their vehicles in the technical reports. The strategies and approaches to HEV design are analyzed on the basis of the data from each of the events. The overall performance for promising HEV approaches is also examined. Additional significant design approaches employed by the teams are presented, and the results from the events are discussed.
Citation: LeBlanc, N., Larsen, R., and Duoba, M., "The 1995 HEV Challenge: Results and Technology Summary," SAE Technical Paper 960741, 1996, https://doi.org/10.4271/960741. Download Citation
Author(s):
Nicole LeBlanc, Robert Larsen, Michael Duoba
Affiliated:
Argonne National Lab.
Pages: 14
Event:
International Congress & Exposition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
Electric and Hybrid-Electric Vehicles-PT-85, SAE 1996 Transactions - Journal of Engines-V105-3
Related Topics:
Hybrid electric vehicles
Fuel economy
Emissions certification
Environmental testing
Vehicle handling
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