EV Pusher meets the Eco-Trekker
Continued
July 31, 2003,
Steamboat Springs Campground.
Morning, and I'm
the only one up. All of the tents here are occupied by people attending the
wine convention at the Inn, and it seems that they all stayed up well past
midnight and probably had a wee bit of their trade to drink. The Eco-Trekker
RV is silent, and Eddy is still wrapped up in his sleeping bag on the ground.
| Before he left
for Crater Lake, I mentioned to Thomas that he should probably put up
his tent while it was still light, but the push was on to get to the
lake before the light gave out, so when he got back with the rest of the
ET crew and the van, it was fully dark. No problem, I found him
peacefully asleep in his Honda MiniRV. |
 |
One-by-one, the
crew awakened, organized their brain cells, and turned their attention to
coffee and breakfast. Apparently, Thomas had been promised some Vegemite, so
the electric toaster was brought out, plugged into the RV's electrical system,
and white bread toast slathered with butter and flavored yeast extract
(Vegemite) was the featured fare. Since Vegemite is vegetarian friendly, I
produced some wheat bread and made a few slices for myself. It's not bad, but
you have to be careful to not use too much, it's quite salty. Sally showed us
the proper technique for spreading it along the top of the toast in just the
right amount. Search Google for more information about Vegemite than you could
ever want to know...
Ray and Teresa left in the van to scout some
locations and Shaun washed the dishes from last night's meal, carefully drying
each plate, bowl and pan with his own personal bath towel. Teresa would
re-wash the entire lot later when she cleaned up the RV. I remarked that Shaun
had already washed them, to which she replied that she needed no other reason
to re-wash them, because she had seen before how Shaun washes dishes....
One project that I
had not managed to finish before leaving for this trip was getting the cruise
control brake interlock circuit working. For some time, I've been concerned
about the possibility that I might have to make a panic stop in the EV while
using the Pusher, and that I wouldn't have time to turn down the throttle knob
to stop the trailer's pushing the car into danger. This concern became even
more acute when I learned that Shaun would be driving the EV, so I designed
and installed a circuit that cuts the throttle to the Pusher when the brake
lights of the Pusher come on. No throttle control commands will function until a
"resume" button is pressed on the Pusher's control panel. On the
bench, the circuit worked fine, but after installing it in the car, I couldn't
get the brake lights to fault the throttle. I had a pretty good idea what the
problem was, and brought some resistors of a different value to swap into the
control to see if I could get it working.
While Shaun and the crew did some filming in the
creek bed (more on this in a moment), I used my AC inverter and soldering iron
to change the value of the circuit, and got it working perfectly. Now,
touching the brake pedal shuts the Pusher's engine down to an idle, and the
oil pressure warning light flashes to indicate that the cruise control is
faulted and needs to be reset using the resume button.
While I was
putting away my tools, I noticed Marty and Eddy trying to strangle a tree with
a length of rope. What they were trying to do was to pull the top of the tree
aside so that Ray could get a shot of Shaun down by the creek from the roof of
the RV. Although it was a fairly skinny bush of a tree, they weren't having
very much luck pulling it aside. The action down in the creek was some footage
of Shaun "discovering" the Pusher on the web, using his Mac computer
power by a portable PV panel. Of course, the entire thing was staged, not only
was there no internet access in the campground due to the steep ravine which
prevented the RV's satellite uplink from working, but there was no sun this
early in the day to make the solar panel operate. No Problems, mate, both
issues will be taken care of in post production. A photo of the car will be
chroma-keyed onto Shaun's laptop screen, and the aperture of the camera will
make the shadowed creek bed look like mid day sun.
Anyway, after Shaun "discovers" the EV and
Pusher on the "web" (insert special effects here), he
"calls" me on my "cell phone", walking up and down over
the stones of the creek bed, talking animatedly, setting up a
"meeting" so that he can use the EV and Pusher to continue his
"trip". Are you getting the feeling that this bit of video I'm
participating in is a bit less that a fully accredited documentary?
Round about noon,
I was in my tent eating a banana or something, when Sally walked up and said
that we would be leaving. I stepped out and zipped up the tent fly behind me,
and she said we were leaving, as in not coming back, and sent Marty and Eddy
to help me carry my stuff, bedding and tent over to the RV to be packed away
in the garage, so that the EV could be empty for filming.
Shaun would be riding with me as far as the Steamboat
Inn, where I would turn the car over to him for some "driving
shots". This would work out well, as I needed to show Shaun how driving
the car was different from yesterday, now that the cruise control fault
circuit was working.
At the Inn, I switched over to the van, giving Shaun
last-minute instructions about the operation of the car. We drove up the road
a bit to a place where there was an accessible rock outcropping that
overlooked the road, a perfect place to set up the camera and tripod. Eddy and
I continued up the road after letting Sally and Ray out, parking the van in a
turnout that didn't appear in the camera's view. Shaun drove the EV and pusher
past the camera location a number of times, Sally calling on the two-way radio
for repeat takes when Shaun had cars following, or traffic approaching from
the opposite direction entered the shot. Eventually, Ray was satisfied with
the takes, and I got back into the EV with Shaun to travel to the next
location.
Shaun was actually doing very well controlling the
Pusher, and had picked up on the cruise control's fault function very quickly.
He seemed to have the driving of the car figured out, and I snuck a few
glances at the temperature gauge to make sure the Pusher wasn't overheating in
the mid-day temperature.
The next shot was set up at the end of a long
straightaway. I got out of the car at a turnout at about the middle of the
long stretch, and hid myself out of the camera's aperture by moving back into
the trees. Shaun again made several passes, and at one point, complained that
they were "just bloody driving shots" and that Ray should have
enough to be satisfied by now.
At the end of this session, Shaun circled back to
pick me up, and we continued to the "rendezvous" location, where
Shaun and I would "meet up" for the transfer of the car and trailer
to him. Remember, this was all being shot out-of-sequence.
The final shooting
location was a wide apron of pavement alongside the Umpqua River, where there
would be ample room for us to pull the car over, set up the camera, and get
all of the angles involved for the shot.
Shaun had made a cardboard sign that read "Mr.
Sharkey", which had a cartoon of a diver's legs and feet sticking out of
a sharks mouth. The idea here was that Shaun was going to stand alongside the
road flashing this sign at passing cars as though he was trying to flag me
down. That's exactly what he did too, while Ray filmed the whole thing. Most
motorists just stared at this wild-haired, tall Aussie wearing a solar panel
on his back, jumping up and down waving a sign at them. None of the stopped.
Well, almost none of them, one car did stop to take a picture of the river,
and Sally had to go over and shoo them away, as they were in the shot, and
Shaun was supposed to be deserted, in the middle of nowhere, trying to hitch a
ride from some guy with a weird EV/Hybrid combination.
Now it was time
for my "Grand Entrance". Eddy dropped a wireless microphone
transmitter into the pocket of my shorts, then taped a small mic inside my
shirt using gaffer's tape. Ray piled into the back of the EV with the Sony
digital camera, and we drove downriver a mile or so, with Ray taking shots of
the instruments on the dash, my hands controlling the Pusher remote, and views
out the windshield. As we approached Shaun, standing alongside the road, he
went into a frenzy, jumping up and waving his sign at the car. Ray trained the
camera on him as I brought the car to a halt alongside him.
We did this several times until Ray was satisfied
that he had enough stock to pass the editing process, then he set up the
camera in a position to view the EV approaching Shaun, and I repeated the
drive-up a couple of more times solo. Each time, I got out of the car, shook
hands with Shaun and greeted Sparky the dog as though it was our first
meeting.
The next bit was
me being filmed while I explained the Pusher to Shaun. What Sally wanted was
for Shaun and me to both jump up on the towing tongue of the Pusher and stand
up there while Shaun made exclamations about "Look Sparky!! It's an EV
Pusher!!!" I kind of thought he whole jumping on the tongue thing was a
bit overdone, and just didn't do it. Shaun did though, and while he's already
about 6" taller than me, while standing on the trailer, he was about two
feet taller, meaning Ray had to pan the camera up and down between us to
compensate for the height difference.
They wanted me to show Shaun the engine, the trunk
with the fuel tank and shift lever, etc, but DID NOT want me to explain why a
pusher trailer was a useful piece of equipment for en electric car driver, the
operating modes the hybrid was capable of, total possible range of the
vehicle, or anything else about the car. In fact, they didn't want, and did
not take any video images of the EV's under-hood electric drive components,
batteries, or really, any images of the EV at all, outside of what was
necessary to show the trailer. I was told that electric vehicles were covered
in the previous segment, this segment was about Biodiesel, and I
needn't bother with any EV-related information. Also included in this part of
the filming was me turning the car over to Shaun, giving him brief operating
instructions, and him driving away, leaving me standing on the side of the
road, waving goodbye. I guess that I wasn't a very significant part of the
plot after Shaun had the car, as no explanation of what I was supposed to do
to get home was given....
A good long bit of
time was spent installing a small digital video camera inside the car, using a
suction-cup mounting device that was placed on the inside of the windshield. A
microphone was taped to the sun visor above the driver's seat, and the cable
tucked out of sight. I put the passenger seat back in the reclined position so
that Ray would have more room to wield the big camera. We loaded Sparky into
the EV, Ray and Shaun got in, and then drove off. Sally, Eddy and I stood
around for about 15 minutes in the hot sun, with very little shade to block
the July heat. I finally climbed down the slope to the river and soaked my
feet, eventually joined by the other two. The temperature of the Umpqua was
not nearly as temperate as that of Steamboat Creek a few miles upriver. We
splashed about for 40 minutes or so before Shaun, Ray and my car reappeared. I
have no clue where they went, what they did, or what the finished video will
show while they were gone.
The filming
completed, we were now going to go into Roseburg and join up with the rest of
the crew and the RV, which had gone into town to offload the Corbin Sparrow EV
that was in the RV's garage, and connect to the satellite uplink so they could
send some e-mails. Shaun got into the passenger seat, and I started the EV's
electric drive for the first time today, running the car in parallel mode.
Shaun had been doing all of the driving for the filming using only the Pusher
for power, as I was reluctant to turn him loose on the EV's operating modes
without a lot more training.
We met up with the RV in town, and then nicked off in
the EV to a coffee kiosk for some caffeniated beverages. Once back at the RV,
which was parked in the lot of a closed-down industrial building, I attracted
the attention of one of the local VW enthusiasts, who
couldn't resist the appearance of a vintage VW Rabbit towing an even older VW
trailer.
After half an hour
or so, the RV was made road-worthy, the satellite uplink dish returned to it's
traveling position, and we made our way to Interstate 5 for the trip to
Eugene, the EV/Pusher in front, the van following and the RV bringing up the
rear.

Antenna flag flapping in the
breeze on the RV
Onward, to
Eugene...
|