May 14 2008
A unique government-corporate partnership led by CALSTART has selected a Michigan firm to build three identical hydraulic hybrid delivery trucks for real-world testing by UPS, FedEx Ground and Purolator.
The partnership, CALSTART’s Hybrid Truck Users Forum (HTUF), selected Hybra-Drive Systems LLC to build three large Class 6 trucks for road testing that incorporate the firm’s approach to the promising hydraulic hybrid technology.
“We are increasingly convinced that this technology offers a chance to – fairly quickly - improve the fuel mileage of large trucks,” said Bill Van Amburg, senior vice president of CALSTART. “We’ve seen several innovative approaches for this type of vehicle and this is one that our team wants to test to help speed introduction.”
Under the new agreement, which is being funded by the Department of Energy, Hybra-Drive will build and deliver three hydraulic hybrid trucks over the next 9-to-12 months. UPS, FedEx Ground and Purolator then will conduct a 6 to 9 month evaluation of the vehicle. Hybra-Drive hopes the evaluations will demonstrate up to a 60 percent cut in fuel use along with an accompanying reduction in emissions.
Hybra-Drive, based in Deerfield, Mich., was selected from among roughly four dozen companies that responded to a Request for Proposals issued last September.
“We appreciate the opportunity that HTUF has provided and the chance to have an impact upon a new generation of fuel-efficient commercial vehicles,” said Richard J. Goldstein, president & CEO of Hybra-Drive.
In a hydraulic hybrid truck, a high-efficiency diesel engine is combined with a unique hydraulic propulsion system, replacing the conventional drivetrain and transmission. The vehicle uses hydraulic pumps and hydraulic storage tanks to store energy, similar to what is done with electric motors and batteries in hybrid electric vehicles. Fuel economy is increased in three ways: vehicle braking energy is recovered that normally is wasted; the engine is operated more efficiently; and the engine can be shut off when stopped or decelerating.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency unveiled the first hydraulic hybrid diesel urban delivery vehicle in June 2006. Since then, several vehicle manufacturers have been working on the technology. Hybra-Drive’s approach is unique in that it has developed a hydraulic fluid transmission to go along with the hydraulic pumps and storage tanks that are used to store energy.
Hybra-Drive Systems, working in conjunction with Gates Corporation, Detroit Custom Chassis (a subsidiary of Spectra LMP, LLC) and Morgan Olson LLC, proposed a series hydraulic hybrid vehicle (HHV) based on a Ford chassis for the validation project. In this design, a gasoline, alternative fuel or diesel engine can be used to operate a hydraulic pump that pressurizes a stored energy hydraulic system to propel the vehicle. The HDS-HHPT system is designed to add no extra curb weight compared to the standard vehicle and includes unique, cost effective designs for the variable displacement gear pump and fluid power accumulator system.
Although the corporate members have direct experience with operating both hydraulic and electric hybrid parcel delivery vehicles, their objective is to explore other technology options to better understand the relative merits and benefits of different technical approaches. The Hybrid Truck Users Forum allows the corporate members to pool their resources more efficiently and work together to advance alternative fuel technologies.