Monday, July 11, 2011

Doraemon / Soraemon solar powered car model


Doraemon is a Japanese cartoon character who is a robotic cat. As a promotional stunt, an actual solar-powered car that looked like Doraemon was built, and dubbed "Soraemon" and then entered into a smaller solar car race in Japan (The Grand Solar Challenge, on the beach in Noto).

I bought this Tamiya model of Soraemon when I was in Japan. It has an actual solar panel on it and an electric motor that will move it in sunlight. I did a crappy job of painting it, but had fun doing it so I guess that's something. This isn't really a great photo...I'll post better photos later.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Principia team polo from Sunrayce 99



Principia College is a small school in southern Illinois, with a Christian bent to it. They lack an engineering school, but entered Sunrayce nonetheless, and have continually improved with every passing event.

My alma mater (Iowa State) developed a close relationship with them. During Sunrayce 95, they blew out their only motor, effectively ending the race. We had a spare motor, and loaned it to them (at some risk to our own project). They were very grateful, and gave us a fruit basket at the finish line. The next year, when our team had a catastrophic pre-race accident, Principia helped us out.

Their polo shirts are pretty awesome.

Sunrayce 95 squeeze bottle


This was a squeeze bottle given out during Sunrayce 95 by event sponsor EDS (?). Of course, GM had already bought part of Hughes holdings (which had led to the creation of the GM Sunraycer, which started the whole danged US solar car racing thing off) - - so maybe this bottle was from GM? At either rate there it is.

The text says "Sunrayce 95. Digital from Day One - Hughes Network System"

Now that I'm looking at this, it may have something to do with our chase vans that year. Sunrayce 95 was the last year that the race sponsors provided one chase van for each participating team. It was a Chevy Beauville. It was equipped, that year, with some radical technology - - an early version of GPS navigation. The radios could tell you how far away (and in what direction) you were from certain waypoints. Additionally, they were rigged to broadcast their location to a central point. The positions were then posted to a website so people could track where the chase vans were (and, by extension, where the solar cars were). Pretty cool, overall.