Skip to main content

VIDEO: Flux Capacitor takes off on an electrifying winning ride

Blue smoke belches from spinning tyres as possibly the world’s fastest street-legal electric vehicle takes off down the track at Santa Pod Raceway in the UK. Sports journalist and commentator Jonny Smith pushed his bright orange Flux Capacitor, a reworked electric Enfield 8000 from the 1970s, to a sub-10 second quarter mile - 9.86 seconds to reach 121.73mph. Not bad for a car designed with a top speed of 40mph in mind. The noise in the video is from the petrol-engine car that struggled to keep up.
July 25, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Blue smoke belches from spinning tyres as possibly the world’s fastest street-legal electric vehicle takes off down the track at Santa Pod Raceway in the UK.

Sports journalist and commentator Jonny Smith pushed his bright orange Flux Capacitor, a reworked electric Enfield 8000 from the 1970s, to a sub-10 second quarter mile - 9.86 seconds to reach 121.73mph.

Not bad for a car designed with a top speed of 40mph in mind. The noise in the video is from the petrol-engine car that struggled to keep up.

It’s rare for an electric car to beat out other cars. It’s even rarer if the electric car is one of less than 200 that were built 35 years ago as a run-about-town vehicle.

According to media reports last month, Smith took out the 12V batteries and 6kW engine and spent £30,000 stuffing into the tiny vehicle 188 lithium-ion cells – the same array of power that kick-starts the Bell Super Cobra military helicopter. He reportedly named the car Flux Capacitor in honour of the fictional device that powers the time-travelling DeLorean in the Hollywood movie Back to the Future.

But what is an Enfield 8000?

It was a two-seater built in the UK between 1973-77 by Enfield Automotive, owned by Greek millionaire Giannis Goulandris. Only 120 were produced at the site on the Isle of Wight, just off the south coast of England. Of these, 65 were bought by local public electricity providers as service vehicles.

The car has a tubular chassis frame with aluminium body panels. It used suspension parts from the British Hillman Imp car, doors adapted from the Mini and a rear axle derived from another eccentric British run-about, a Reliant three-wheeler.

Goulandris later moved production to the Greek island of Syros and renamed the company Enfield-Neorion, with headquarters in Piraeus, a port near Athens. He built only around 100 with virtually all sent back to the UK because, for tax reason, they were illegal on Greek roads. But one of them resides well preserved in the Ermoupolis Industrial Museum in Syros.

To read more about Jonny Smith’s conversion and see pictures of the little beastie, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal click here Visit flux-capacitor.co.uk false http://flux-capacitor.co.uk/the-car/ false false%> to enter his website.

Related Content

  • Riding the sustainable cycle
    October 5, 2020
    It’s taken a while in North America, but “vehicular cycling” has been replaced by “sustainable cycling”, says transportation engineer Tyler Golly.
  • UK contractor Ringway provides protection for autonomous vehicles
    April 3, 2018
    Ringway, a Eurovia company in the UK, has taken part in a self-driving vehicle test on public roads in the English city of Milton Keynes. For the three-day test, two Ringway trucks provided a rolling roadblock behind an autonomous Jaguar Land Rover passenger vehicle. The trucks were there to ensure other highways users were safe and not inconvenienced by the tests, according to Ringway. Ringway also supplied two supervisors and two traffic management vehicles.
  • Innovative hybrid mixer developed by CIFA
    January 6, 2017
    CIFA is introducing an innovative hybrid truck mixer in the shape of its new Energya 9 model. This features a conventional 9m3 capacity mixer drum however the rotational drive system is electric and the machine is also equipped with a lithium ion type battery pack that is charged up while the truck is being driven, assisted by regenerative braking. When the mixer stops on-site, the drive to the drum is supplied either by the battery pack or can be plugged in to a mains power supply. This allows the truck dr
  • Innovative hybrid mixer developed by CIFA
    February 21, 2013
    CIFA is introducing an innovative hybrid truck mixer in the shape of its new Energya 9 model. This features a conventional 9m3 capacity mixer drum however the rotational drive system is electric and the machine is also equipped with a lithium ion type battery pack that is charged up while the truck is being driven, assisted by regenerative braking. When the mixer stops on-site, the drive to the drum is supplied either by the battery pack or can be plugged in to a mains power supply. This allows the truck dr