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Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Illustration: Autopia 2099/Kevin McCauley

The car world is struggling through an era of cynicism and disillusionment these days, and I desperately want us to break through the fog into a world of optimism again. I’m not talking about general positivity, I mean Harley Earl, Raymond Loewy, Buck Rogers, atomic age, world’s fair, Eames chair, mid-mod kind of optimism. We still don’t have jetpacks or flying cars, but we are currently in a new wave of technology shift as electric propulsion steadily inches its way closer to the standard. Let’s throw it back to the early 20th century and be optimistic about the future of transportation again! That’s exactly what Autopia 2099 is for, and Jalopnik is helping out.

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[Disclaimer: I am one of the co-founders of Autopia 2099. I will directly materially benefit if you buy a ticket or some merch. I am absolutely biased in favor of this show continuing to be a roaring success. It’s important to me, Autopia 2099, and Jalopnik that you know this information.] 

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Image: Nissan

A few years ago some friends and I started a little car show that would become something of a cultural phenomenon, Radwood. While Radwood continues to rage on across the country, and I love my periodic looks into an awesome era of automotive past, another of my passions is what’s coming for our collective automotive future. That’s why, earlier this year, I decided to try to capture lightning in a bottle a second time, joining forces with pals Jeff Glucker, Chad Kirchner, Ethan Tufts, and Kevin McCauley to kick off Autopia 2099 this December. And we convinced Nissan to come on board as presenting sponsor.

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Image: Bradley Brownell

Today Jalopnik is joining forces with Autopia 2099 to announce the inaugural event on Saturday, December 4th This isn’t your average everyday car show. No parking lots or golf courses. No uppity suit jacket and mint julep crowd, just a gathering of electric car appreciators. Whether you daily drive a Tesla, race an electric streamliner at Bonneville, built a solar car for your university, or swapped some lead acid batteries and a forklift motor into a Ford Pinto as a weekend project (in fact we’d love to see that), you’re welcome at Autopia 2099. It’s going to be a hell of a party, and you should come.

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Image: Bradley Brownell

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Where: Optimist Studios in Los Angeles, at the end of the runway at LAX

When: Saturday, December 4, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

How much: The standard cost to enter the car show is $15 per car, or $5 to spectate (children 12 and under enter free). In addition to the cars, guests will be treated to some fun entertainment, and a real good time.

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How to sign up: Head on over to the Autopia 2099 Eventbrite site

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Image: Bradley Brownell

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What cars: Anything powered by electrons. Whether they were built in the Contender Era, the Crap Era, or the Tesla Era, your electrically-propelled mobility gadgets are welcome with open arms. Battery electrics, PHEVs, hybrids, hydrogen cell, etc. Your home-built projects, your brand-new Arcimoto three-wheeler, your experimental hydrogen fuel cell in-line skates, or your kid’s powerwheels, it’s all welcome. Whether you’re a hypermiler or a racer or anywhere in between, if you have an appreciation for electric propulsion, Autopia 2099 is where you want to be.

There will be some awesome displays from Nissan, Livewire, Zero, AEM EV, and more, plus a whole slew of awesome swaps and projects from SoCal speed shops. Bisimoto told me he has nine cars to bring, and Jehu Garcia said he’d bring his whole electric-swapped Volkswagen crew. The brand new record holder for fastest electric car in the world, the Revolt Systems Tesla-powered streamliner, will also be there (more about that car soon). We’re even hoping to have a couple EV1s on display. It’s going to be a wide array of electrified machines, and you’ll want to see it first hand.

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What else: We’re encouraging people to dress up to play along. Whatever your idea of the future is, dress like that. We’ll have a prize for whoever has the coolest or perhaps most elaborate costume. Enjoy the future of optimism, folks. We’re all friends here.

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Image: Bradley Brownell

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Keep an eye on Jalopnik in the coming weeks, because we’ll have a reader contest to win VIP passes to the show, a feature on the site, some Autopia swag, and a shiny trophy! And don’t worry — we’ll have plenty of reminders between now and when the show goes down.

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Photo: SMCO

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See you there!

Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Photo: Bradley Brownell

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Image for article titled Autopia 2099: The Future Of Electrified Car Shows Is Coming And Jalopnik Wants You There

Photo: Zero Motorcycles

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Illustration for article titled I'm Not Sure If I Think Volkswagen Is Really Changing Its Name To Voltswagen, But Let's Talk About The Original
Screenshot: CALTECH 1968

As I suspect you’ve heard, Volkswagen of America is claiming that they’ll be changing their name to Voltswagen of America, as a way to highlight their new focus on electric vehicles. You may also have heard that we at Jalopnik are pretty skeptical this is really happening, to the point that our bossman Rory said he’ll get a VW tattoo if they do it. It’s April Fool’s day the day after tomorrow, people. More significantly, though, is that “Voltswagen” for an electron-powered VW is by no means a new name. In fact, it goes back to at least 1968.

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

Sure, VW is playing it up, with the Voltswagen name used on their website showcasing the ID.4, and they did tweet this:

Okay, okay, we get it. Maybe VW will use the Voltswagen name in specific EV branding, but I’m not sold they’re changing the name of the whole company in the U.S. to “Voltswagen of America.”

We’ll see how it plays out on April first. Until then, I’d like to talk about where I think the Voltswagen name first came from, and I’m happy to say it’s a pretty fun story.

It’s from the Great Electric Car Race of 1968.

That first Voltswagen (well, until we find out about an earlier one) was a 1958 VW Type 2 bus, owned by Caltech student Wally Rippel, who converted it to electric power around 1966 or so, and drove it around town to, as Caltech’s magazine Engineering and Science reported back in 1968,

“…to demonstrate an alternative to smog.”

Rippel then became part of an electric car team at Caltech that challenged an MIT team to a cross-country electric car race: the Caltech team would drive from Pasadena, California to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the MIT team, in a 1968 Chevy Corvair donated by GM and converted to electric power at MIT, would travel in the opposite direction.

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As you might have guessed, attempting this sort of cross-country EV race back in 1968 was borderline bonkers. It wouldn’t even be easy to do today; back then, it was almost Sisyphean.

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To accomplish the feat, 54 charging stations were established along the 3,311 mile route, placed between 21 and 95 miles apart. Some of these charging stations were extremely improvised, like this one in Winslow, Arizona that looks to be tapping right off a small roadside power transformer:

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

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The race was, by all accounts, something of a shitshow: long charge times for both cars (45 minutes to an hour), the MIT Corvair caught on fire, one of the Caltech drivers got the mumps, both teams ended up burning out critical components (motors, transformers, etc), and both teams made significant use of ice to cool the batteries.

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Photo: Popular Science Jan 1969

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The Caltech team only used 50 pounds of ice, and only when recharging their lead-cobalt (a variant of lead-acid) batteries. The MIT team’s more advanced nickel-cadmium batteries constantly struggled with overheating, and had to be packed full of ice pretty much all the time, with the team using 350 pounds of ice during the trip.

The race was a great underdog vs. rich kid sort of story, like most movies made in the 1980s. Where Caltech’s Voltswagen was just a student’s personal project car, built using pretty basic and mainstream electrical tech, MIT’s donated brand-new Corvair was cutting-edge in every respect at the time, and as a result was faster (it could do about 60 MPH instead of 55) and was supposed to have a longer range, and recharge faster, as well. It even had a special aerodynamically optimized front facia. It did look pretty cool.

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The advanced NiCad batteries used by the MIT team were worth $20,000 in 1968 dollars—that’s about $151,000 today! MIT was not playing around, here.

In practice, though, the technical advantages really didn’t come to matter at all. The MIT car was plagued by technical snags and, while it technically finished the race before the Caltech bus, penalties assessed for all the time it had to be towed en route (the Corvair had to be towed 250 of the race’s first 500 miles at a penalty of 5 min per mile!) eventually gave the win to Caltech, with a time of 210 hours—30 minutes less than MIT.

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Photo: Popular Science Jan 1969

They won by just 30 minutes! That’s amazing!

The Voltswagen wasn’t all that primitive, though—it did have the ability to do some regenerative braking, using the motor driven by the wheels to generate electricity to recharge the batteries, which was used on a long downhill grade into Needles, California.

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

Caltech’s Voltswagen proved a few crucial things: sometimes proven reliability beats bleeding-edge tech, and if you’re doing a cross-country drive, it’s great to have a vehicle you can easily sleep in.

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You really should read through the whole Caltech article; it’s a fascinating look at how far we’ve come and a great insight into how clever and bold these early EV pioneers were.

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Photo: Engineering and Science October 1968 (Other)

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Wally Rippel, the owner of the Voltswagen, later went on to work for JPL and then later Tesla, helping to develop the motor for the original Tesla Roadster around 2006.

Maybe Volkswagen will really become Voltswagen. Maybe not. Either way, it’s worth taking a moment to commemorate that original 1958 Voltswagen, the winner of the first ever Great Transcontinental Electric Car race.

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