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Open-source car

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Open-source car
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An open-source car is a car with open design: designed as open-source hardware, using open-source principles.

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Joe Justice, founder of Wikispeed, presenting the cars' modular design

Automobiles

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Open-source cars include:

Completed and available to build, with link to CAD files and build instructions:

Concept stage:

  • Rally Fighter, an all-terrain vehicle by Local Motors uses a design released under a CC BY-NC-SA license. The design was made piece by piece by an open community in a forum. Several units have been manufactured and sold.
  • SGT01 from Wikispeed
  • OScar: started in 1999, still in concept phase as of 2013.
  • OSVehicle Tabby: Tabby is the first OSVehicle: an industrializable, production ready, versatile, universal chassis.[3][4]
  • Riversimple Urban Car: The CAD models for the Riversimple Hyrban technology demonstrator have been released under a CC BY-NC-SA[better source needed]
  • Common, Dutch electric car (2009)[5][6]
  • eCorolla, an electric vehicle conversion
  • Luka EV, an electric car production platform which first car is the Luka EV.[7] Only Mrk I & II are open source, the source was closed in July 2016 to allow commercial production of Mrk III
  • Google Community Vehicle, a multi-purpose mode of transport. It can be used as a farm vehicle that attaches to farming equipment or as a means to transport the produce. This car was created by an Indian team for the 2016 Michelin Challenge Design, "Mobility for All International Design Competition"[8]

Self-driving car prototypes have collected petabytes of data. Some companies, including Daimler, Baidu, Aptiv, Lyft, Waymo, Argo AI, Ford and Audi have publicly released datasets under more-or-less open licenses.[9]

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Other open-source vehicles

Many open-source vehicles come in the form of velomobiles, like the PUUNK,[10] the Hypertrike,[11] the evovelo mö[12][13] or the Atomic Duck velomobile.[14]

Other open-source vehicles include the Xtracycle cargo bicycles.

See also

  • Modular design, subdivision of a system into smaller parts which can be independently changed
  • Kit car, an automobile sold as a set of parts
  • Right to repair, legal right to freely modify and repair products
  • Velomobile, enclosed human-powered vehicle "bicycle car"

References

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