Automotive

Venturi's cutting-edge electric polar explorer readies for Antarctica

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The Antarctica prepares for polar research duty
Venturi
The Antarctica prepares for polar research duty
Venturi
The Antarctica V2 prototype does some testing in the cold snow
Venturi/Sarah Del Ban
In Winter 2019, Venturi took the Antarctica to Canada for testing on the Telegraph Creek Road/Sarah Del Ban
Venturi
The Antarctica comes equipped with an easy-to-use joystick control system
Venturi
Venturi gave Prince Albert a sneak preview of the Antarctica V3 ahead of its public reveal
Venturi
The new Antarctica proves its mettle on dirt and rock
Venturi
As it moved forward with the third Antarctica, Venturi gave the second to Prince Albert, who piloted the vehicle during the Canadian testing in 2019
Venturi
The new Antarctica has a two-seat driver cab and four-seat passenger compartment
Venturi
Antarctica rear cabin with foldaway benches
Venturi
Integrated roof solar
Venturi
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With a princely heritage and sub-zero ambitions, the all-electric Venturi Antarctica has been slowly evolving for more than a decade, preparing to tackle the extreme weather and terrain of the Antarctic continent. The snow-and-ice-hungry all-terrain mini-tank enters its third iteration this month as it prepares to embark on a grand Antarctic mission in December. The latest version gains a new layout, increased range, redesigned tracks and double the passenger capacity.

Venturi's Antarctica rover got its start back in 2009 after Monaco's Prince Albert II returned from an Antarctic trip puzzled by the fact that the research stations did not use cleaner vehicles. His foundation teamed with Venturi on creating a zero-emissions Antarctic-grade vehicle for shuttling scientists and equipment around the frozen continent.

The Antarctica V2 prototype does some testing in the cold snow
Venturi/Sarah Del Ban

To create an electric vehicle ready to tackle roadways of drifted snow, ice and rock in the world's most extreme cold is certainly no small task, and it's been a slow but steady push toward the finish line. The last we heard of the Antarctica, the V2 prototype was preparing for cold-weather testing in northern British Columbia. The testing went well, as Venturi tells it, but the company still further evolved the Antarctica design over the two years since.

The third iteration of the Antarctica steps back from V2 to a body design more similar to the original. Like that original design, the new model features a driver cab/rear cabin split, with the driver and navigator seats split by the joystick controls. The rear cabin is separated from the driver cab by tubular frame members, housing a pair of two-person folding benches that double the vehicle's total capacity to six, as compared with the three-person V2.

Antarctica rear cabin with foldaway benches
Venturi

Despite the added 500 kg (1,100 lb) that accompanies the new build, the Antarctica roams an extra 5 km (3 miles) farther than the older version for an even 50-km (31-mile) range. Its 52.6-kWh battery pack powers two 60-kW (80-hp) motors and takes between two and 18 hours to charge, depending upon the infrastructure doing the charging. The vehicle is designed to operate in temperatures as low as -60 °C (-76 °F).

Venturi presented the new model as part of its World Environment Day celebration earlier this month, ahead of plans to ship it to Belgium's Princess Elisabeth research station, Antarctica's first zero-emissions station. Plans call for it to be put into operation at the station in December. In addition to serving in place of a traditional ICE-powered vehicle, the Antarctica will be available to take scientists on trips they'd usually take on foot for fear of polluting their samples.

The Antarctica comes equipped with an easy-to-use joystick control system
Venturi

"With the Venturi Antarctica, scientists are getting an efficient, easy-to-handle vehicle with very good performance," Venturi president Gildo Pastor said during this month's Antarctica presentation. "They will be able to carry out their research in optimum conditions, without polluting sites where the quality of analyses needs to be accurate down to the last molecule."

Before putting the Antarctica in the hands of those polar scientists, Venturi will continue running it through a gauntlet of rugged dry-ground tests to ensure that the brakes, controls and other systems are operating smoothly. You can see some of the footage below.

Source: Venturi

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5 comments
paul314
Is that range figure at normal temperatures? How much range at -60? (I guess while you're charging , you can keep the battery heated, and then that's part of your power budget during travel.)
jerryd
It should carry a wind generator for endurance/heating and charging. Since winds are high there a 12' dia would put out 5kw, enough for heat and some charging while stop and running.
I'd have made more insulation to lower heating needs and add outlets for electric snowsuit heaters.
I'd have gone longer to bridge cracks better and to give more time to stop.
dudster
WHY!!!!!????!!!!??? :(
wolf0579
The weather at the poles has a fabled history of chewing up and spitting out western attempts at surface vehicles.
T N Args
Well, with the "Cars with Wings, Boats with Wheels" headline, I thought for sure the snowmobile would have mud waders. Or at least a sunroof!