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mdmc

(29,066 posts)
Fri Jan 27, 2012, 08:49 AM Jan 2012

Race to the Future

Race to the Future
The Newburgh Free Academy’s Solar Racing Team takes the lead in building energy-efficient automobiles
By: E Stein

It’s 2 p.m. on a crisp Saturday afternoon in early October. About half a dozen teenagers crowd around a car in the garage of Chris Eachus’s Newburgh home, buffing and building, tinkering and tightening. While teenagers have been slaving over their cars for decades, there was something different about this scene: The car looked more like a rectangular flying saucer than a vehicle you’d see cruising around the Hudson Valley.

Eachus, a physics teacher at Newburgh Free Academy High School (NFA), is the advisor of the school’s Solar Racing Team, a unique club that designs, builds, races, and exhibits its own solar and electric vehicles. The club — the most established group of its kind in the state — has been one of the school’s extracurricular activities since 1993, and their cars have been traversing the country for years competing in (and winning) races. Their latest vehicle, however, recently zoomed into the national spotlight after appearing on the Discovery Channel’s new series, Battleground Earth. The reality show features Mötley Crüe drummer Tommy Lee and hip-hop superstar Ludacris going tête-à-tête in a rock-versus-rap series of eco-challenges — such as making bio-fuel — as they learn how to reduce their carbon footprint.


So how did the NFA solar team go from the banks of the Hudson to Hollywood? Just as the school year was winding down last May, Eachus received a phone call from Ameresco, a Newburgh-based independent energy solutions company that supports the racing team, asking if they would lend their car to the show. “The Discovery Channel decided that in one of the 10 episodes they would do a solar car race,” explains Eachus. “They contacted several colleges, but none of them would take the time to do it except for Stanford University. Then they found Ameresco, and saw that they had donated $20,000 and equipment for us to build — and win — the Dell-Winston School Solar Car Challenge in 2007.”

It seemed almost impossible that the team could get their car ready in just five days for the shoot in Los Angeles. But Eachus agreed to do the show without hesitation. “I had students in my garage Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday until 3 a.m. working on the car,” he smiles. Once “everything was perfect,” the finished vehicle — a 16-foot-long, 480-pound titanium rectangle on wheels — was loaded onto an 18-wheeler and shipped out to sunny California for its TV début.

http://www.hvmag.com/core/pagetools.php?pageid=6613&url=%2FHudson-Valley-Magazine%2FDecember-2008%2FRace-to-the-Future%2F&mode=print
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Race to the Future (Original Post) mdmc Jan 2012 OP
Put the kids in back pscot Jan 2012 #1
lol mdmc Jan 2012 #2
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