Mid-Atlantic Electric School Bus Experience Project

Mid-Atlantic Electric School Bus Experience Project

Episode 4130 , Episode 4145
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These days, it seems like every automaker offers a plug-in electric model. Well now, we’re seeing an upturn in the number of larger passenger vehicles making that EV switch too. So, for millions of school students, that means their ride to school is about to get cleaner and quieter.

Nearly every day, in virtually every community and neighborhood around the country, 500,000 yellow buses hit the streets, transporting 26 million children to and from school. Taken as a whole, school buses make up the nation’s largest public transportation network, but about 95% of those buses run on diesel fuel. That puts the most vulnerable members of our populace at risk for respiratory problems and other issues linked to breathing exhaust fumes.

The recent growth of electrification for cars and trucks presents an opportunity to change that, and the recent infrastructure law includes two and a half billion dollars in federal aid, specifically to help school districts purchase zero-emission electric school buses and an equal amount for other low emission and electrified vehicles.

But making the electric switch requires education for those who will manufacture, purchase and use those buses, and that’s where programs like MEEP come into play. Meep is the Mid-Atlantic Electric School Bus Experience Project, spearheaded by the Virginia Clean Cities coalition and begun with funding from the US Department of Energy in 2019.

MEEP is working with bus manufacturers, school districts, and other partners to provide hands-on experience and extended demonstration loans of electric school buses to school bus fleets throughout Virginia, Maryland, DC, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey over the next two years.

ALLEYN HARNED: We’ve kicked off the program and already done more than twenty successful demonstrations, as well as six virtual events. This has led to the deployment of 100 electric school buses within the region.

JOHN DAVIS: This bus, known as Jouley, is manufactured by Thomas Built Buses in North Carolina, using an electric propulsion system developed by Proterra, and already proven through 8 million service miles on electric transit buses across America. Jouley has a driving range of about 138 miles and can recharge in just 3 hours using a DC fast charger.

JIM BEASLEY: Well, the routes that it runs. It runs in the AM and the PM mostly, predominantly. They’re easy to charge because there’s downtime in between, and they’re sitting overnight. They’re quiet, they run through the neighborhoods, and they’re non-polluters.

JOHN DAVIS: the electrification of school buses is gaining a groundswell of support from community leaders, parents and the students themselves.

SPEAKER: I am so proud of our students and the awareness they have, and they know now is the time to take the environmental legacy into their hands.

PAUL D’ANDRADE: And the main thing is about our kids, you know. We want them to have the opportunity to have zero emission buses, to have a nice quiet ride, and less effects on their health.

Our total amount of buses is just over 1600. We have eight electric buses, and we have ten we should get sometime next school year, and we put in the application for another grant for an additional ten.

JOHN DAVIS: Electrifying our nation’s school bus fleet won’t happen overnight. That 2-and-a-half billion dollars is expected to add about 10,000 electric buses to the national total over the next five years; but it’s an investment that will continue to pay huge dividends in awareness and one that will drive us towards a cleaner future for generations to come.

1994 Audi RS2 3/4 Front

1994 Audi RS2

One Truly Amazing Avant

by Roger Mecca
Episode 4328
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For years, America’s Audi fans could only dream of owning one of the sporty station wagons only available to the Quattro faithful across the Atlantic. Finally, in 2021, Audi brought the 591-horsepower RS6 to our shores, and this year, they’re sending an even faster version. But as our Roger Mecca is going to show us, Audi’s history of lightning-quick wagons under the RS name are what US car fans have been lusting for, for more than 20 years.

ROGER MECCA: In the early ‘90s, Audi was living in the shadow of its German peers Mercedes and BMW, and considered an alternative, quirky option like Saab or Volvo- not the premier luxury brand they are today.

Audi was eager to be taken as seriously as its Bavarian brethren and needed a big splash with a halo car that could not be ignored.

The result was the RS2, the first Audi to ever carry the RS badge and the world’s first truly fast station wagon. And it helped Audi succeed in getting the attention of serious car fans. But they didn’t do it alone. They had help from another very iconic German brand.

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In the early ‘90s, Porsche was in deep financial trouble, but still carried respect as a premier performance brand. Though Audi knew plenty about making fantastic racecars, with their storied rally racing history, they didn’t have the cache or recognition as a company that made sports cars.

So, when Audi approached them with a proposal to collaborate, Porsche was happy to take the engineering fee. Using the existing Audi 80 wagon as the base, the RS2 was developed over 18 months, and roughly 2900 of them rolled off the line at Porsche’s Stuttgart factory from 1994 to 1995. The very same line where another legendary four-wheel drive turbocharged car was produced, the Porsche 959.

So, just how much Porsche is there in the RS2? A lot.

Starting in the front, you got the badge that says Porsche, the front fog lights are from a 911; the sideview mirrors are from a 911; these wheels are from a later 911, but they rolled off the factory with a 968 club sport wheels. I think the rear taillight bar looks a lot like a 911 from the time. The suspensions tuned by Porsche, the brakes are from Porsche, the calipers say Porsche, and then we haven’t even gotten to what Porsche did under the hood.

The engine started out as Audi’s stalwart, if odd, 2.2-liter turbocharged five-cylinder. But then Porsche added a bigger turbo, a larger intercooler, a new ECU and a new camshaft. Porsche also added a six-speed manual gearbox, the only shifting option available for RS2 buyers. As you might expect, the results of Porsche’s tinkering were remarkable.

The engine puts out 315 horsepower and goes to 60 in 4.8 seconds. Now, that does not seem super fast today, I know, but back in 1994 that was faster than Ferrari’s flagship V12 coupe, the 456. In fact, Audi would not make another car that was faster to 60 for 10 years.

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Unfortunately, that power isn’t nearly as immediate or available as Ferrari’s grand tourer, and the addition of the RS2’s bigger turbo came at a price that was all too familiar in the 90s- turbo lag. To get everything out of this car, and the engine, you need to keep the exhaust pressure up and the turbo spinning. Let them wind down and the performance goes with it, along with the excitement- until the RPMs climb back into the fun zone.

But once it hits, oof, it is intense! You go from no drama at all to being thrust into the back of your seat like you’re on a rocket.”

In terms of how it rides, it feels wonderfully civilized and firmly planted at speed. Though the RS2 has a reputation for not being a great car in the twisty stuff, I found it to be a ton of fun to power into a corner, have it confidently hold its line, and shoot out the other side. Porsche’s work on the suspension is evident and there’s great steering feel and feedback. Plus, you get all of this excitement in a car with terrific visibility, comfort and practicality.

The RS2 was the best of both worlds. You could pack the whole family up for a wonderful vacation, but you could go 100 miles-an-hour down the Autobahn to get there.

Since the RS2, Audi has introduced a plethora of cars, wagons and SUVs with the RS name, all of which could easily leave the RS2 in a cloud of dust and smoke. But none of them made as much of an impression as this unassuming station wagon, the car that helped Audi grab the world’s attention.