I was thinking about the direction that Westfield are going in, and wondering how hybrid registration works.
At what point does your bike engine'd seven, with electric motor reverse, become a hybrid that qualifies for a reduced or zero rate tax disc?
Is there a minimum speed/range that the car has to be able to cover under battery power? Or some technicality based on drive train - that the engine
should be able to supply full power to the alternator, which then drives the electric motor? So motor KW has to equal engine KW?
Gary
Hybrid is the car moving forward at normal traffic speed with no emissions ie electric or hydrogen
hybrid built kitcars i.e all cars not built by a big firm like caterham and westfield will not become in abundance as it is illegal for the average
punter to touch a hybrid system on what would be a donor car
[Edited on 27/10/10 by jack_t]
In terms of reduced tax your car must be an approved design (Class M1?) So unless your willing to go into production and provide samples for testing I'd leave modifying your kit car!
quote:
Originally posted by jack_t
hybrid built kitcars i.e all cars not built by a big firm like caterham and westfield will not become in abundance as it is illegal for the average punter to touch a hybrid system on what would be a donor car
[Edited on 27/10/10 by jack_t]
quote:
Originally posted by tegwin
Why is that the case? What is the logic behind it?
I can understand not being allowed to touch hydrogeon stuff.... but electric/petrol seems fine to me..
quote:
Originally posted by jack_t
hybrid built kitcars i.e all cars not built by a big firm like caterham and westfield will not become in abundance as it is illegal for the average punter to touch a hybrid system on what would be a donor car
[Edited on 27/10/10 by jack_t]
quote:
Wouldn't surprise me in this anal H&S obsessed county and may be a problem for a future project!
quote:
Originally posted by garyo
quote:
Wouldn't surprise me in this anal H&S obsessed county and may be a problem for a future project!
Although isn't it fairly dangerous lying underneath a badly supported vehicle, replacing your own brakes, steering joints, wheel nuts...
I don't see how some electricity is an order of magnitude more dangerous.
Well...sounds like I won't be able to register my car in the UK.