Written by Christopher DeMorro
Published on September 25th, 2009, Posted in Fuel Cells
A student engineering team from Ohio State University broke into the 300 mph club yesterday with their hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicle. The Buckeye Bullet 2 averaged 300.992 MPH yesterday in the flying kilometer, with a top recorded speed of 304 MPH.
» See also: Student-Built, Hydrogen Fuel Cell-Powered Boat to Set Sail on Hudson River
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The original Buckeye Bullet was the first electric vehicle to break the 300 MPH barrier, and the Buckeye Bullet 2 continues that legacy, in hydrogen form. This vehicle differs from Jesse Jame’s hydrogen fuel streamliner in that it actually went the whole distance at a sanctioned event, and the power comes from a custom 700 horse electric engine fed by hydrogen fuel cells. Jesse Jame’s vehicle was a big-block Chevy fueled by actual hydrogen.
The record run was set at the Bonneville Salt Flats yesterday, though it has not yet been officially confirmed. The front-wheel drive Buckeye Bullet 2 now holds the FIA record for the first hydrogen vehicle to break 300 MPH, and the fastest recorded speed for an electric drive vehicle. How come I never got to do cool things like this in college? I just had a lot of friggin’ homework…
Kudos to the Buckeyes though, this is quite an achievement, one that will hopefully be made “officially official” in the coming days.
Source: Buckeye Bullet Blog
Tags: bonneville, buckeye, buckeye bullet, buckeye bullet 2, buckeyebullet, buckeyes, FIA, flats, land speed, land speed record, landspeed, ohio, ohio state university, record, salt, university of ohio
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Friday, September 25, 2009
Fuel Cell Buckeye Bullet Breaks 300 mph
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