Skip to main content

Chinese inventor puts together vacuum cleaner-size petrol car

Traffic congestion and the cost of running a car have been pushing Chinese car manufacturers to think small, especially for electric vehicles. Electric scooter and motorcycle have long been popular and in the past several years more and more small electric cars are appearing on crowded urban roads One popular three-wheel electric vehicle has a large retractable bubble top, making it look like a futuristic car from a low-budget 1950s Hollywood movie. It may have a top speed of only 30kph, as the BBC report
December 15, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Traffic congestion and the cost of running a car have been pushing Chinese car manufacturers to think small, especially for electric vehicles.

Electric scooter and motorcycle have long been popular and in the past several years more and more small electric cars are appearing on crowded urban roads

One popular three-wheel electric vehicle has a large retractable bubble top, making it look like a futuristic car from a low-budget 1950s Hollywood movie. It may have a top speed of only 30kph, as the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal BBC reported two years ago Visit BBC Story page false http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-17780515 false false%>, but the battery is easily removed to be taken indoors and recharged from a normal electric socket.

The three-wheeler cost between US$950 and $2,350 back in 2012. Fast forward to today and the small Chinese car has got even smaller as well as less expensive, thanks to a 60-year-old inventor in Shanghai. Xu Zhiyun, built his own petrol-driven mini car that measures 60cm long, 35cm wide and 40cm high – it barely reached up to his knee.

You don’t sit in it, you sit on, as the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal China Daily newspaper recently reported Visit china daily business Page false http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2014-12/03/content_19019508.htm false false%>. It may look like a toy car, but it is recognisable as a road vehicle. It has an engine, an accelerator and braking and gearing systems, the newspaper said. For night driving it has front and rear lights, a horn and for the driver’s pleasure, as well as anyone standing on the pavement when it zips by, a sound system.

Xu may have taken two years to build what looks like a large vacuum cleaner with a seat on top, but he figures it cost only around $245. However, he says, he didn’t build it to beat the traffic or save money on commuting. He just likes making things with his hands.

Related Content

  • Chinese compact
    February 24, 2015
    Traffic congestion and the cost of running a car have been pushing Chinese car manufacturers to think small. Electric scooters and motorcycles have long been popular and in the past several years more and more small electric cars are appearing on crowded urban roads. One popular three-wheeled electric vehicle has a large retractable bubble top, making it look like a futuristic car from a low-budget 1950s Hollywood movie. But the small Chinese car has got even smaller as well as less expensive, thanks to a 6
  • Hi-viz hijinks make a flockery of saftey clothing
    September 16, 2015
    Fashionable they aren’t, but the wearing of high-visibility clothing is increasingly either recommended by businesses or made mandatory by law, especially for construction workers on every kind of site. But has the use of “hi-vis” clothing, especially the vest, gone too far? In Britain, the wearing of the hi-viz clothing has taken off - literally, according to a BBC television news report that shows a flock of chickens wearing the fluorescent coloured vest.
  • Bristol, UK: when a parking space is just too small
    May 8, 2015
    People park in the smallest of places, despite the best efforts of urban street designers and town planners to ensure an orderly arrangement of suitably spaced cars. Surly some spaces are just too small to park even the smallest car. But the city of Bristol, in southwest England, has taken no chances and has painted the double yellow ‘no parking’ lines in areas no one in their right mind could squeeze a car. Click here to see just how small the space is that authorities in Bristol have felt they need
  • It’s a deadly business for contractors painting road markings
    August 4, 2015
    Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway. A report by Irish newspapers quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.