Project
Pioneering Voyage of the „Wind Explorer“
Crossing Australia on 10 Euros of Electricity
The “Wind Explorer” project wants to inspire ideas about limiting the bad effects of traffic on the environment – while staying mobile as well.
The world's first self-sufficient 'windmobile' is now en route across the Australian continent. The two developers and pilots Stefan Simmerer and Dirk Gion observe every day that the climate is changing. Severe forest fires near Perth, Western Australia, threaten whole villages and destroy roads. Two strong cyclones over Queensland suddenly change the wind conditions of a whole continent. And near Melbourne, Victoria, rivers burst their banks, causing floods, forcing the team to find alternative routes. These are the effects of man-made climate change.
The “Wind Explorer” team’s journey is a pioneering achievement. It shows how self-sufficient and environmentally sound transport can be today. We only have to use the already existing technology. Get rid of meta and gasoline in car production! And instead use light-weight construction material and Lithium-Ion rechargeable batteries. The wind explorer only uses a fraction of the energy of the most efficient cars with combustion engine of today. That’s what the pioneering tour demonstrates.
The Wind Explorer is a lightweight electrically-, wind- and kite-powered vehicle all in one. It might seem futuristic, but it's here and in service right now. With extreme efficiency, the Wind Explorer combines technologies that are available today, but neither sensibly nor fully utilized.
Every day, in the course of the Wind Explorer's 5000-kilometer journey coast to coast straight across Australia, pilots Stefan Simmerer and Dirk Gion set up a mobile wind turbine to recharge the vehicle's lithium-ion-batteries. In addition, hundreds of kilometers are logged by kite: in crosswinds the Wind Explorer is pulled by large, steerable kites.

The Wind Explorer is an absolute lightweight, a wind-electromobile, an open roadster for two which, ready to go, weighs in at 200 kilograms including batteries and wind turbine. That makes it precisely 67 kilos heavier than both pilots together.
The Wind Explorer combines state-of-the-art lithum-ion technology, uncompromising lightweight carbon fiber sandwich technology, low friction tires and an aerodynamic form. It is so efficient that the little wind turbine carried aboard can produce enough energy for a daily distance of 250 to 400 kilometers. By comparison: for a 100-kilometer stretch, the Wind Explorer needs roughly half the amount of electricity needed to wash and dry a load of wash.
The starting point for the continental crossing was south of Perth in Albany, Australia's southwest-most point. From there the route followed the south coast through the Nullarbor plain, Adelaide and Melbourne all the way to Sydney on the Pacific Ocean. Thus far the Wind Explorer has been able to cover 200 to 490-kilometer legs every day. The first 1,000 kilometers in Western Australia were spent adjusting and fine-tuning the wind turbine and lithium-ion- battery components. Up until then, no one had chalked up any experience at all in combining these two technologies in mobility applications. During this first project phase, electricity was drawn from the Australian grid. Since crossing the border to South Australia, however, the team has been relying nearly exclusively on self-generated wind power.
Thus far, the Wind Explorer, as the world's first wind-powered automobile, can claim the following high-performance firsts:
never before has such a long distance been covered thoughly independent of external energy sources or fuels
never before has a vehicle powered solely by wind energy and electricity crossed an entire continent
never before has a wind-powered vehicle covered a distance of 493,5 km within 36 hours (from Eucla to Ceduna), 31.01.11
Wind Explorer Fact Sheet
Open roadster for up to two persons
Spacious trunk under the front hood
Electric hub motor integrated into the rear wheel assembly
Wind turbine transported aboard the vehicle
Component bamboo mast: 6 meters
Rotor diameter: 2.70 meters
Max. power: 1000 watts
Wind turbine height: 7.30 meters
Mobile anchoring system for wind turbine mast suitable for all surfaces (sand, rock, soil, gravel)
Lithium-ion batteries with ceramic separators (cells correspond to those in the e-smart as of 2012)
Battery: 4 blocks of 14 cells each
Power on full charge: 4 times 2 kilowatt hours; 8 KW/h total
Same lightweight construction as for Formula 1 / body shell from ROHACELL
sandwich carbon fiber
- Total vehicle weight: 90 kg plus 90 kg batteries plus 20 kg wind turbine head
- Daily distance averages: 300 to 430 kilometers
- Top speed: 80 km/h
- Most economic power consumption at 45-60 km/h
- Average power consumption: 2.0 KW/h for 100 km (corresponds to 48 Euro cents at 0.24 €/KW/h)
- Full battery charge: 8 KW/h (corresponds to an electricity cost of 1.92 Euros at 0.24 €/KW/h)
- a washing machine running a 5-kg load at a normal setting, including drying, uses approx. 4 KW/h of electricity at a cost of approx. 1 Euro. That enables to Wind Explorer to run approximately 200 KM
Individual legs
Approximately 4,800 km straight through the Australian continent from Albany (Australia's southermost point) to Sydney
Approx: 2,100 km with electricity from the grid, during technical adjustments and fine-tuning of vehicle components. Because of unusual weather conditions caused by storm "Yasi" the wind mill could not be used.
Approx. 2,280 km with wind-generated electricty.
Approx. 420 km by kites.
For the 2.100 KM with grid power the Wind Explorer needed 42 KW/h electricity. With 0,24€ for a KW/h that costs 10,08€, with 0,23€ for a KW/h it costs 9,66€.



























