High School Students Build Solar Car For Cross-Country Race

High School Students Build Solar Car For Cross-Country Race
 

High School Students Build Solar Car For Cross-Country Race


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Aug 29, 2008

High School Students Build Solar Car For Cross-Country Race

Gasoline won’t power a thing on the 700-pound, solar-powered car parked inside the technology building at Baton Rouge Magnet High School.

Two-hundred pounds of solar panels will fuel the car down a 600-mile stretch of highway.

The sun-powered car, which so far resembles a skeletal cross between a dune buggy and a motorcycle, will carry one of its high school-age builders and designers through two states beginning in Round Rock, Texas, and on to Golden, Colo., where the national Winston Solar Car Race will end.

The Baton Rouge Magnet High team wants to compete in the national cross-country race in July, 2009. said Simon Shirazi, 18, a Baton Rouge Magnet High 2008 graduate who helped spearhead building the car.

Students have performed continuous upgrades that have helped improve the car’s performance. During a July test drive, the car reached speeds of 60 miles per hour, about 30 miles above its high speed a month prior, Shirazi said.

The car has cost $8,000 so far. Some parts have come from junkyards. Other parts were purchased or donated. But it will require another $6,000 to complete the body work, add tail lights and buy more solar panels and upper end batteries, said Peter Oelschlaeger, drafting teacher.

The race is held annually in various locations and occurs in a series of heats. Team drivers are limited to three hours per day behind the wheel, with cars limited to six hours of total race time daily.

The car was conceived at a coffee shop where Shirazi and his buddies knocked around the idea of entering the race and then used their drafting skills to create conceptual designs of the car on coffee napkins, Shirazi said.

“The race is 2,000 miles total over 10 days (two five-day segments), so we really need to make something that will last.”

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