CAR explains Solar-powered Lightyear One
Sunshine’s energy. EVs need energy. Start-up Lightyear has seen the light.
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 eciency 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 eciency, 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 coecient ‘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).