CAR (UK)

CAR explains Solar-powered Lightyear One

Sunshine’s energy. EVs need energy. Start-up Lightyear has seen the light.

- By Ben Miller

The timing of the Lightyear One solar concept car’s unveiling – in the middle of another uncomforta­bly hot European heatwave – could not have been better. In June the company pulled the covers off the One, a premium EV designed from the ground up to boost its range and operating eciency through solar power. Meanwhile much of continenta­l Europe sweltered in the kind of heat climate-change experts have been talking of for years. What’s more, in June an Australian think tank published a faintly terrifying paper warning that global warming represents a ‘near- to mid-term existentia­l threat to human civilisati­on’. Cheery.

The first 100 Lightyear One production cars (500 are planned) have been reserved (via a €119k fee – this thing ain’t no

Leaf rival) for 2021 deliveries. The car promises an outstandin­g range, 450 miles, from a modest battery thanks to a combinatio­n of aero eciency, light weight and the car’s solar array – five square metres of integrated panels, rugged enough to survive life on the road but capable of delivering a peak output of 1250W.

The team behind it is born out of Solar Team Eindhoven, winners of Bridgeston­e’s gruelling World Solar Challenge events in 2013, 2015 and 2017. To supplement this core, Lightyear’s recruited a number of staff with performanc­e automotive background­s, notably from Tesla and Ferrari.

The resulting One manages to look far more like a normal car than a purpose-built solar racer. They tend to subscribe to one of two schools of thought, both aesthetica­lly challengin­g: ‘tabletop’ with a cockpit bubble, maximising solar panel surface area; or teardrop, minimising drag. The One neverthele­ss manages a drag coecient ‘below 0.20’ – far more slippery than convention­al cars, and on a par with VW’s equally expensive, progressiv­e and low-drag XL1 (see ‘The last gallon’, page 112).

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 ??  ?? The One’s essentiall­y a battery-electric vehicle with solar
topping-up
The One’s essentiall­y a battery-electric vehicle with solar topping-up

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