King Long Electric Bus Goes Through Extreme Coldness Test
Jun 28 , 2022
In
March, focus is again put on the development of new energy buses in China at
2016 NPC and CPPCC sessions. Three most pressing challenges for bus makers are
how to further improve the safety standards of their vehicles, how to boost the
overall performances of their products and how to maximize the profitability of
new energy buses. While all these challenges are being heatedly discussed in
Beijing, King Long is rolling out two new electric buses for an extreme
coldness test. The most northern point of China, Mohe County, was chose as the
testing ground for the severe test.
According
to a person-in-charge from King Long, “the whole test will be conducted while
the local temperature drop s to minus 20 degrees. In the next thirty days, King
Long electric buses will go through a total number of nineteen tests, including
the overall performance test, continuous driving capacity test and energy
consumption test and battery recharge & discharge test.”
Tianjin
Automobile Testing Center, a well-known third-party organization in China, will
take part in the whole process of test. It will also present the testing
results to the public.
Recently,
Chinese governments at various levels have been actively promoting new energy
vehicles. However, this is far from enough. Great efforts must also be made to
help bus operators solve their immediate concerns, such as the costs and
durability of those environmentally friendly vehicles. Only by possessing real
competitive advantages over fossil-fuel powered vehicles can the new energy
buses be able to make substantial progress forward in their application.
“Extremely
cold weather often poses a big challenge for electrically powered vehicles.
Freezing coldness often severely undermines the performances of batteries.
Thus, it becomes even more difficult for the vehicle to get recharged or
discharged. In addition, the vehicle usually will have a hard time to start
working. These bottlenecks must be overcome along the way of developing new
energy vehicle. The ongoing extreme coldness test for our buses will definitely
offer us valuable data for continued improvement of our buses in the near
future,” says an expert from King Long Bus Engineering Research
Institute.