400 HP 1987 Mustang gets 85 MPG?, page
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Topic started on 1-7-2008 @ 08:36 PM by AkashicScribe

www.toledoblade.com.../20080701/BUSINESS02/807010341

Please visit the link provided for the complete story.


A local man is competing for the Progressive automotive X Prize. His 1987 400 HP / 500 lbs of torque , is currently getting 85 MPG and can win the 10 Million Dollar prize by getting to 100 MPG. The engine must be marketable and affordable and will be judged on performance as well as economy.

This Electronics engineer and master mechanic claims his engine could save the automotive industry. Quite a bold statement but he seems sincere. He said he could have sold off his technology and it probably would not have seen the light of day. If his claims are correct and he succeeds then it could most certainly be a huge jump in the right direction. We still need an alternative energy source but this could hold off the inevitable for little while longer while new technologies are researched and developed. Time will tell!

[edit on 1-7-2008 by AkashicScribe]


reply posted on 1-7-2008 @ 08:54 PM by IvanZana
reply to post by AkashicScribe



Napoleon man's low-profile auto aims for $10 million mileage prize


The 1987 Ford Mustang now achieves 80 miles per gallon.


Zoom | Photo Reprints


By LARRY P. VELLEQUETTE
BLADE BUSINESS WRITER


NAPOLEON, Ohio - Doug Pelmear has lots of secrets beneath the hood of his black 1987 Ford Mustang on which the only outward hint of individuality is a series of stickers.

But looks can be deceiving. Mr. Pelmear's 21-year-old pony car has enough technological innovation to quadruple the classic Mustang's original gas mileage while almost doubling its available horsepower.

That's 80 miles per gallon and 400 horsepower, folks. And the 48-year-old electronics engineer and master mechanic is not done yet.

The third-generation automotive tinkerer hopes that next year his Mustang - more specifically its engine - will help him win the $10 million Progressive Automotive X Prize: a "race" to find an affordable, marketable automobile that gets at least 100 miles per gallon, or its equivalent.

"I'm an optimist, and I think people need to know there is hope out there," Mr. Pelmear said. "That's why I decided to enter the X Prize race. I could have sold this [technology] off, but then people might not have seen it.

"It's not about the money. Our country really needs this."

The Progressive Automotive X Prize is sponsored by the X Prize Foundation to focus attention on and improve technology for real-world fuel economy.

Private teams compete in two categories, mainstream and concept, and compete against one another in a staged race that will judge performance, fuel economy, and marketability. There are no official entrants yet, but scores of teams have signed letters of intent to participate in the races, scheduled for 2009.

What radical technology did Mr. Pelmear introduce? His patents are not fully in place, but he said it mostly is a matter of electronics and precision.

"We redesigned a lot of different things on the [engine] block," the engineer said.

"It's still a rod-and-piston engine; it just has a lot more electronics on it."

Mr. Pelmear said that traditional gas engines operate "at a very low efficiency, like 8 to 10 percent, and our engine is like at 38 percent efficiency."

He said he could greatly increase even that number if his car used traditional gasoline instead of a mix of gas and 85 percent ethanol, which burns hotter but releases fewer hydrocarbons into the atmosphere.

His engine also would be more efficient if he had sacrificed some of its 400 horsepower or 500 foot-pounds of torque, but Mr. Pelmear said his design is intended for "real-world" uses, not the laboratory.

"I'm not the highest-miles-per-gallon vehicle entered in the X Prize, but I think I'm the more consumer friendly, more down to earth, more conventional," he said.

Mr. Pelmear's Mustang is entered in the X Prize's "mainstream" competition against other modified pro-
duction cars.

According to the X Prize foundation, he will compete against several dozen other vehicles from around the world.

Mr. Pelmear, president of Horse Power Sales.net Inc. in Napoleon, already markets one of his fuel-saving, performance-enhancing inventions: a "girdle" that strengthens engine blocks by spanning the valley of V-configured engines.

After spending what he said is more than $1.4 million pursuing patents and his design work, he recently picked up a new partner: Rocket Ventures, a venture capital arm of the Regional Growth Partnership in Toledo.

Todd Davies, business development manager for the public-private Rocket Ventures, said the firm's involvement with Mr. Pelmear's firm fits in with the venture company's mission.

"He has a new technology, and what we help do is build the business around new technologies," Mr. Davies said. "This could be an American-built engine that could save the American auto industry."

Contact Larry P. Vellequette at:
lvellequette@theblade.com
or 419-724-6091.


just in case the link didnt work"http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080701/BUSINESS02/807010341"


reply posted on 1-7-2008 @ 10:59 PM by aava
reply to post by Yell04



And what do you say about the multi-billion dollar losses announced at said automakers? If true, this man has certainly got a winning combination on his hands.


reply posted on 1-7-2008 @ 11:44 PM by Yell04
Originally posted by aava
reply to
post by Yell04



And what do you say about the multi-billion dollar losses announced at said automakers? If true, this man has certainly got a winning combination on his hands.


Not to go to far off topic, but those "losses" are quite intentional IMO. What better way to beat back organized labor than to show us peons how we're dragging down the economy actually expecting to get paid for our efforts. And before it "goes there," I do not belong to a labor union.


reply posted on 2-7-2008 @ 11:25 AM by ProTo Fire Fox
reply to post by sir_chancealot



I do agree with you, I cant help but feel like this is a well above-par engine and that it should start to be mass produced now; in my own opinion i feel like this is a lot better than the norm so it should be mass produced now to start the savings for the people, and then try to perfect it after.

Fox


reply posted on 2-7-2008 @ 11:58 AM by SugarCube
Originally posted by sir_chancealot
This guy is making the mistake that many have made. One of the very few things that qualify Bill Gates as a "genius" is that he realized "good enough is good enough".


You're right, but I am not sure that the "built-in obsolescence" that we enjoy today is right. The point is to reduce environmental impact, the "genius" that you ascribe to Mr. Gates is atypical of the attitude that has got us into the crap in the first place.

I recently had to retire a tumble-dryer after 20 years service - only because the motor can no longer be replaced. I retired my previous TV after 14 years service, again, because it couldn't be repaired.

Now, I can expect 4 years service from a TV and maybe 2 or 3 years from a washing machine. Accepted, it can be argued that obsolescence creates change which is good for innovation and advancement, however, a balance has to be struck between the vast waste of resources that we see and the desire to create yet more mobile phones and MP3 players.

Necessity is the mother of invention. It is strange that we managed to promote the genius of *real* invention just a couple of decades ago without having to resort to dumping everything just because a new pointless gadget has been "innovated".

Time was, you could buy a Mercedes Benz and it would run and last "forever". Engineering to be proud of. Now, even the great engineering disciplines are corrupted by fads and the capitalistic need to create disposable items just to create more money.

"good enough" is good enough in a pinch - not something to be lauded though. Do you remember Back To The Future?...

Dr. Emmett Brown: Let me show you my plan for sending you home. Please excuse the crudity of this model, I didn't have time to build it to scale or to paint it.
[reveals intricate tabletop model of the town square]
Marty McFly: [impressed] It's good.

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