The first step is getting the registration dept (federal) paperwork regarding doing the modification. The next step is the state equivalent, because they need to make money out of it as well, then find the Engineer what can do the NCOP14 certification required for an electric vehicle, no matter who the manufacturer is, from a major manufacturer down to a one-off conversion, it must comply with NCOP14. Once that compliance is achieved, and the vehicle meets all normal road use requirements, then money exchanges hands and presto, registered for use on the road and that is enough certification for the insurance companies to comprehensively insure a motor vehicle ..... the tricky bit is getting full comprehensive insurance for a motorhome, no matter who built it and what type of motor drives it, only a handful of insurers will cover a motorhome .......supersparky wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2024 8:56 pm Terry, just kinda thinking outside the box. If the V10 resurrection doesn't go well, and you finish up going down the V6 hybrid from donor Lexus route, have you had any discussion with an automotive engineer to see what you would need to do to make it compliant?
I kinda like the idea of an EV motorhome for a number of reasons, even though owning one wouldn't quite suit our needs at the moment.
If you have a 10m motorhome and can ditch the roof rattler, there is a bunch of roof space to fill up with solar panels and maybe just do a bit of tour and stay, and have a hybrid toad.
Dunno what the insurance company would say though.
If the vehicle is a real one-off contraption, that does meet all the rules and regulations, Shannons Insurance will cover it for the agreed value, even if no one else will ...
It's not like EV conversions are never done and I'd be a first, there are a lot of prime movers already converted to full EV, a lot of rigid body trucks, both factory and converted, ll out there running up and down the same highway as everyone else.
The lunatic hype about EV's catching fire at the drop of a hat, or cigarette butt or something, doesn't live up to the data, the most likely vehicle to catch fire and be destroyed, is a diesel fuelled vehicle, next is petrol, then LPG, then hydrogen ..... and last comes the EV.
Electric buses in China catch fire, but so do diesel buses in every other country but China ..... because they no longer use diesel fuelled buses, all their buses are BEV (Battery Electric Vehicle)
Hybrids have a greater % of vehicle fires compared to BEV, because the fuel powered part of a hybrid is at the same risk as any fuel powered vehicle ..... yet they never specify that it was a fuel fire .... it's always an "electric vehicle" fire, because that makes better headlines to grab a greater % of the gullible general public ......
T1 Terry