Skip to main content

Chinese compact

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
February 24, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
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 60-year-old inventor in Shanghai. Xu Zhiyun, built his own petrol-driven mini car that measures 60cm long, 35cm wide and 40cm high. This looks like a large vacuum cleaner with a seat on top for the driver. It may look like a toy car, but it has an engine, an accelerator and braking and gearing. 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.

Meanwhile in China’s Liaoning Province, a carpenter has built an electric car featuring a bodywork and chassis entirely of wood. The vehicle is able to attain 50km/h, measures 2.44mm long by 1.22m wide and the 350kg vehicle is equipped with lights and side mirrors. Special features include wooden missiles and a wooden radar receiver on its roof. This is the second electric vehicle the man has constructed, undeterred by a lack of any formal training or qualifications.

Related Content

  • Driving safely to cut risks for road users
    August 24, 2015
    Regulations in France covering driving have become tougher. In a bid to tackle distracted driving, French drivers are now banned from using hands-free phone kits that use headsets while at the wheel. This follows research showing that the use of hands-free kits is only slightly less dangerous than holding a phone in the hand while at the wheel. French drivers are also forbidden to eat, apply make-up, read a map or listen to very loud music when behind the wheel. Meanwhile headphones or wireless earpieces ar
  • Roo'd Awakening and BMW Drivers
    June 29, 2018
    A rider amongst a group of cyclists on a training run in Australia had a rather unpleasant experience. The man was cycling along a road with his team mates when a young kangaroo jumped out from the road side and collided with him, knocking him from his bicycle. Although he was riding at speed at the time, he was not seriously hurt and as one of his team mates filmed the incident, will have video footage to better remember the incident by. The feelings of the kangaroo over the incident were not recorded.
  • Volvo CE moves on carbon reduction
    September 30, 2022
    David Arminas asks why Volvo Construction Equipment recently exhibited at MOVE, a major London urban mobility exhibition. Mats Bredborg explains it all
  • Cycling heavyweight
    January 27, 2017
    A German man from Schleswig-Holstein has set a new world record. With his 1.1tonne bicycle he has now had his name listed by the Guinness World Records for the world’s heaviest bicycle. The man rode his monster, self-built bicycle a distance of 100m to claim the record, beating the previous title holder which tipped the scales at a mere 860kg. Because of its immense size and weight, the bicycle did have to be equipped with training wheels at the rear to ensure it remained stable. Novel features for the bicy