Source ; philly.com
This is a solar-powered police car in Swarthmore. You can see the solar panel on the back of the car. (Julie Zauzmer/staff)
SWARTHMORE Amid an ordinary day of teaching classes and supervising lab
experiments, Swarthmore College instructor Carr Everbach got the sort of call
one afternoon that most professors never receive.
A solar panel on a police car was on fire, the caller said. The police
needed the professor to come put out the flames.
Everbach found himself running to the police station to help handle the
smoldering car, the sort of town-gown collaboration that he had not imagined.
He helped put the fire out, and if his ongoing experiment is a success, he
plans to provide more help to the Swarthmore Borough Police Department than
just amateur firefighting. He wants to let it run its cars partly on solar
energy.
The idea was Mayor Rick Lowe's brainchild. Having heard about similar
projects elsewhere, he envisioned a police car powered in part by the sun, and
asked the president of the college to make it happen. She provided the funding,
about $1,200, for a prototype. Kara Bledsoe, now a sophomore at the college,
spent the last summer designing and testing the system. And on the one day that
the police department could spare a working police car from its fleet, Bledsoe
and Everbach worked rapidly to install the battery, three solar panels, and
some wiring.
Since then, the car has been patrolling Swarthmore while soaking up the
sun. And aside from that time that the panel caught on fire, due to a problem
that has since been fixed, the experiment is going smoothly, Everbach said.
Police officers spend a lot of their time sitting in place in their
cars, Everbach said. They are not driving, but they need to keep their radio
and other devices running. Usually, they simply idle their cars.
The goal of the Swarthmore prototype is to use solar power to fuel a
second battery for the car. The radio and other devices get their power from
that battery. Officers can turn off their cars rather than idling - which means
saving lots of money on gasoline - and they will not use up their main battery.
"What we have allowed them to do is to focus on their job and not
think about whether the car's going to start," Everbach said. "They
have to fight crime and chase the bad guys. . . . They don't have to worry
about running down their batteries as much as they used to."
Everbach is tracking police officers' usage of the car to see how much
the solar-powered battery reduces the time they spend idling and to make sure
that the solar panels provide enough power even during the dim wintry months.
At the end of the year, he plans to publish the results and perhaps look toward
replicating the technology for other police departments.
But he won't rule out any more fiery mishaps.
"It's a prototype," he said. "No prototype has worked
perfectly, ever. You don't see the Wright brothers' plane flying around much
anymore."
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