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

  • PPRS: come together for International Road Maintenance Day
    March 27, 2018
    The world’s leading highway associations have launched International Road Maintenance Day to focus people everywhere on the protection of their local road networks. International Road Maintenance Day will take place on the first Thursday of every April, speakers said on day two of the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit (PPRS Nice 2018). The first event will take place on April 5, 2018. “It will be one day per year to talk about the maintenance of our roads,” said Juan Jose Potti, the president of
  • VIDEO footage shows bridge replacement project in Rhode Island
    October 10, 2014
    A time-lapse video has been released showing the rapid replacement of the Barton Corner Bridge in Rhode Island in the US. Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) partnered with EarthCam to document the US$6.4 million rapid replacement of the Barton Corner Bridge. The construction project was completed during an 11-day period in August 2014 and can be seen in an exclusive time-lapse, released by RIDOT. Had RIDOT had used conventional methods, the bridge replacement would have taken two full constru
  • VIDEO: Life in the deteriorating lane – Pennsylvania Turnpike
    October 17, 2016
    Nothing lasts forever, including – and perhaps especially – highways. One fine example of this is a 21km section of the original 580km Pennsylvania Turnpike in the US state of Pennsylvania.

    As the video shows, vegetation, animals and cyclists have slowly been reclaiming part of what was hailed as an engineering masterpiece when it was opened in 1940.
  • Brazil: contractors fear more layoffs as DNIT fails to pay up
    November 25, 2014
    The head of Brazil’s association of road constructors has warned of more layoffs unless the National Department of Infrastructure and Transport (DNIT) starts paying its contractors. Jose Alberto Pereira Ribeiro, president of ANEOR – National Association of Road Works - said companies already have been forced to lay off around 1,700 workers in light of non-payment by the government. Another 950 employees are on forced holidays. Ribeiro claimed DNIT failed to meet its financial obligations for September