Two-wheeled and cycle-type vehicles Mopeds,
electric bicycles, and even
electric kick scooters are a simple form of a hybrid, powered by an
internal combustion engine or
electric motor and the rider's muscles. Early prototype motorcycles in the late 19th century used the same principle. • In a
parallel hybrid bicycle human and motor torques are mechanically coupled at the pedal or one of the wheels, e.g. using a hub motor, a roller pressing onto a tire, or a connection to a wheel using a transmission element. Most
motorized bicycles,
mopeds are of this type. • In a
series hybrid bicycle (
SHB) (a kind of
chainless bicycle) the user pedals a generator, charging a battery or feeding the motor, which delivers all of the torque required. They are commercially available, being simple in theory and manufacturing. The first published prototype of an SHB is by Augustus Kinzel (US Patent 3'884'317) in 1975. In 1994 Bernie Macdonalds conceived the Electrilite SHB with power electronics allowing
regenerative braking and pedaling while stationary. In 1995 Thomas Muller designed and built a "Fahrrad mit elektromagnetischem Antrieb" for his 1995 diploma thesis. In 1996 Jürg Blatter and Andreas Fuchs of Berne University of Applied Sciences built an SHB and in 1998 modified a
Leitra tricycle (European patent EP 1165188). Until 2005 they built several prototype SH
tricycles and
quadricycles. In 1999 Harald Kutzke described an "active bicycle": the aim is to approach the ideal bicycle weighing nothing and having no drag by electronic compensation. • A
series hybrid electric–petroleum bicycle (
SHEPB) is powered by pedals, batteries, a petrol generator, or plug-in charger—providing flexibility and range enhancements over electric-only bicycles. An SHEPB prototype made by David Kitson in Australia in 2014 used a lightweight
brushless DC electric motor from an aerial drone and small hand-tool sized
internal combustion engine, and a
3D printed drive system and lightweight housing, altogether weighing less than 4.5 kg. Active cooling keeps plastic parts from softening. The prototype uses a regular electric bicycle charge port.
Heavy vehicle of
Metz, a diesel–electric hybrid driving system by
Van Hool Hybrid
power trains use
diesel–electric or
turbo-electric to power railway locomotives, buses, heavy goods vehicles, mobile
hydraulic machinery, and ships. A
diesel/
turbine engine drives an electric generator or hydraulic pump, which powers electric/hydraulic motors—strictly an electric/hydraulic transmission (not a hybrid), unless it can accept power from outside. With large vehicles, conversion losses decrease and the advantages in distributing power through wires or pipes rather than mechanical elements become more prominent, especially when powering multiple drives—e.g. driven wheels or propellers. Until recently most heavy vehicles had little secondary energy storage, e.g. batteries/
hydraulic accumulators—excepting non-nuclear
submarines, one of the oldest production hybrids, running on diesel while surfaced and batteries when submerged. Both series and parallel setups were used in World War II-era submarines.
Rail transport HB-E300 series Europe The new
Autorail à grande capacité (AGC or high-capacity railcar) built by the Canadian company
Bombardier for service in France is diesel/electric motors, using 1500 or 25,000 V on different rail systems. It was tested in Rotterdam, the Netherlands with Railfeeding, a
Genesee & Wyoming company.
China The First Hybrid Evaluating locomotive was designed by rail research center
Matrai in 1999 and built in 2000. It was an
EMD G12 locomotive upgraded with batteries, a 200 kW diesel generator, and four AC motors.
Japan Japan's first hybrid train with significant energy storage is the
KiHa E200, with roof-mounted
lithium-ion batteries.
India Indian railway launched one of its kind
CNG-Diesel hybrid trains in January 2015. The train has a 1400 hp engine which uses fumigation technology. The first of these trains is set to run on the 81 km long Rewari-Rohtak route. CNG is less-polluting alternative for diesel and petrol and is popular as an alternative fuel in India. Already many transport vehicles such as auto-rickshaws and buses run on CNG fuel.
North America In the US,
General Electric made a locomotive with
sodium–nickel chloride () battery storage. They expect a greater than 10% improvement in the fuel economy. Variant
diesel electric locomotive include the
Green Goat (GG) and
Green Kid (GK)
switching/yard engines built by Canada's
Railpower Technologies, with
lead acid (Pba) batteries and 1000 to 2000 hp electric motors, and a new clean-burning ≈160 hp diesel generator. No fuel is wasted for idling: ≈60–85% of the time for these types of locomotives. It is unclear if regenerative braking is used; but in principle, it is easily utilized. Since these engines typically need extra weight for traction purposes anyway the battery pack's weight is a negligible penalty. The diesel generator and batteries are normally built on an existing "retired" "yard" locomotive's frame. The existing motors and running gear are all rebuilt and reused. Fuel savings of 40–60% and up to 80% pollution reductions are claimed over a "typical" older switching/yard engine. The advantages hybrid cars have for frequent starts and stops and idle periods apply to typical switching yard use. "Green Goat" locomotives have been purchased by
Canadian Pacific,
BNSF,
Kansas City Southern Railway and
Union Pacific among others.
Cranes Railpower Technologies engineers working with TSI Terminal Systems are testing a hybrid diesel–electric power unit with battery storage for use in
Rubber Tyred Gantry (RTG)
cranes. RTG cranes are typically used for loading and unloading shipping containers onto trains or trucks in ports and container storage yards. The energy used to lift the containers can be partially regained when they are lowered. Diesel fuel and emission reductions of 50–70% are predicted by Railpower engineers. First systems are expected to be operational in 2007.
Road transport, commercial vehicles hybrid version Hybrid systems are regularly in use for trucks, buses and other heavy highway vehicles. Small fleet sizes and installation costs are compensated by fuel savings, with advances such as higher capacity, lowered battery cost, etc. Toyota, Ford, GM and others are introducing hybrid pickups and SUVs. Kenworth Truck Company recently introduced the Kenworth T270 Class 6 that for city usage seems to be competitive.
FedEx and others are investing in hybrid delivery vehicles—particularly for city use where hybrid technology may pay off first. FedEx is trialling two delivery trucks with Wrightspeed electric motors and diesel generators; the retrofit kits are claimed to pay for themselves in a few years. The diesel engines run at a constant
RPM for peak efficiency. In 1978 students at Minneapolis, Minnesota's Hennepin Vocational Technical Center, converted a
Volkswagen Beetle to a petro-hydraulic hybrid with off-the shelf components. A car rated at 32 mpg was returning 75 mpg with the 60 hp engine replaced by a 16 hp engine, and reached 70 mph. In the 1990s, engineers at EPA's National Vehicle and Fuel Emissions Laboratory developed a petro-hydraulic powertrain for a typical American sedan car. The test car achieved over 80 mpg on combined EPA city/highway driving cycles. Acceleration was 0-60 mph in 8 seconds, using a 1.9-liter diesel engine. No lightweight materials were used. The EPA estimated that produced in high volumes the hydraulic components would add only $700 to the cost.
UPS currently has two trucks in service using this technology.
Military off-road vehicles Since 1985, the US military has been testing
serial hybrid Humvees and have found them to deliver faster acceleration, a
stealth mode with low
thermal signature, near silent operation, and greater fuel economy.
Ships Ships with both mast-mounted
sails and
steam engines were an early form of a hybrid vehicle. Another example is the
diesel–electric submarine. This runs on batteries when submerged and the batteries can be recharged by the
diesel engine when the craft is on the surface. , there are 550 ships with an average of 1.6 MWh of batteries. The average was 500 kWh in 2016. Newer hybrid ship-propulsion schemes include large
towing kites manufactured by companies such as
SkySails. Towing kites can fly at heights several times higher than the tallest ship masts, capturing stronger and steadier winds.
Aircraft The Boeing Fuel Cell Demonstrator Airplane has a Proton-Exchange Membrane (PEM) fuel cell/lithium-ion battery hybrid system to power an electric motor, which is coupled to a conventional propeller. The fuel cell provides all power for the cruise phase of flight. During takeoff and climb, the flight segment that requires the most power, the system draws on lightweight lithium-ion batteries. The demonstrator aircraft is a Dimona motor glider, built by Diamond Aircraft Industries of Austria, which also carried out structural modifications to the aircraft. With a wingspan of , the airplane will be able to cruise at about on power from the fuel cell. Hybrid FanWings have been designed. A FanWing is created by two engines with the capability to autorotate and landing like a helicopter. ==Engine type==