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Records tumble in SA solar challenge

<B>SOLAR CHALLENGE:</B> 11 teams. driving solar-powered cars, took on the 2016 SA Solar challenge. <I>Image: Supplied</I>
<B>SOLAR CHALLENGE:</B> 11 teams. driving solar-powered cars, took on the 2016 SA Solar challenge. <I>Image: Supplied</I>

Cape Town - The V&A Waterfront in Cape Town was a scene of celebration as 11 teams from all over the world crossed the finish line after successfully driving more than 27 000km collectively on public roads on solar power alone.

Dutch team Nuon won the Challenger class after completing 4716km, breaking the four-year record of 4630km and beating Japanese team Tokai by 172km.

Sarah Bennink Bolt from the Nuon team said: “We’re really excited - we already started celebrating in traffic as we came into Cape Town when we suddenly realised that we’d won. The team that is here has been working on the car for years, so they were very emotional."

“Tokai was really good last year in Australia at the World Solar Challenge, and while a lot of people thought we were a shoe-in for the Sasol Solar Challenge in South Africa, it wasn’t obvious to us. We had to work incredibly hard to beat them - they came out strong this year.”

READ: SA solar challenge - Battery-powered Beetle to take on 6000km journey

With new regulations set for the global competition, all the teams will use the South African event to build completely new vehicles for the 2017 challenge in Australia, which is shorter than the Sasol Solar Challenge.

In SA, five teams held their own against the tough international competition. North-West University (NWU)  came in fourth position with 3524km under their belt, and high school team Maragon Olympus managed to beat the University of Johannesburg by just 40km.

Flying high for SA

Jimmy Pressly from the NWU team: “We are very proud of the fact that Sirius x25, the NWU solar car, travelled through the whole of SA without ever once being put on a trailer. The competition was great, and representing SA like this was a privilege. We plan on keeping the flag flying high by competing in the Bridgestone World Solar Challenge in 2017 with a brand new, better car.”

North-West University had to work hard to come back from an accident during track testing just before the Challenge began. But the 28-member team worked long hours, beating two international and four South African teams on the event.  

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Another incredible achievement on the 2016 Sasol Solar Challenge was celebrated when high school team Maragon Olympus crossed the finish line in seventh place narrowly beating the University of Johannesburg.

Marinda Jordaan, team manager for Maragon Olympus said: “Beating UJ is an enormous achievement for us as a school. This would not have been possible without the efforts of the whole team. With hard work and a lot of persistence we pulled it off. What the future holds for us as a school participating again is under discussion, but the Solar Eagle will likely retire to a museum after the 2016 Sasol Solar Challenge.”

For the Sasol Solar Challenge, a new record has been set, and teams are already planning their return in 2018 to improve on today’s achievement.

Nuon’s Bennink Bolt added: “We try to break the record in SA every year. The World Challenge is only 3000km, so this is a tough challenge for us. It takes long hours, early mornings, hard work and a car that is always at its best. We’ll be looking to break it again in 2018!”

Competitive class of 2017

The Sasol Solar Challenge director, Winstone Jordaan, said that this has been the most competitive event to date.

“The calibre of competition at this year’s Challenge has been awe inspiring to watch. We also had a very safe event with no major incidents - which is always our biggest point of pride when moving more than 350 people through the country on public roads.

"The Sasol Solar Challenge has such a positive impact on the teams that compete that we would like to challenge all South African universities to take part - to maximise the ripple effect that it has on our country’s engineering and energy development."

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