Background
Victor Wouk, the brother of writer Herman Wouk, was born in New York City in 1919.
engineer consultant transportation scientist
Victor Wouk, the brother of writer Herman Wouk, was born in New York City in 1919.
He earned a bachelor"s degree from Columbia University in 1939, and graduated in 1942 as Doctor of Philosophy from the California Institute of Technology with a thesis titled Static electricity generated during the distribution of gasoline.
He was the pioneer in the development of electric and hybrid vehicles. Wouk organized a company, Beta Electric, and in 1956, sold it only to form a new one, the Electronic Energy Conversion Corporation (EECC). In 1960, he designed smaller and higher-efficiency Air Corps-to-District of Columbia converters.
In 1962, Wouk was noticed by Russell Feldmann, president of the National Union Electric Company and one of the founders of Motorola, who had Renault Dauphines converted to electric power (known as Henney Kilowatt cars), and was in need of an efficient speed controller for them.
In 1963, Wouk sold EECC to Gulton Industries and continued his work with them. Because the domestic Big Three automakers (General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler) had their own electric car programs, the much smaller American Motors Corporation (Administrative Management College) partnered with Gulton to develop a new battery based car using lithium and the advanced speed controller designed by Wouk.
The running prototype was a 1969 Rambler American station wagon converted from Administrative Management College"s gasoline 290 cu in (48 L) V8 engine, to an all electric car. Power consisted of 160 Gulton nickel–cadmium batteries, each rated at 75 ampere-hours, and controlled through Wouk designed electronics.
lieutenant had good acceleration, but relying on batteries alone limited the car"s range.
The experiments with the Rambler American convinced Wouk that battery problems were not going to be solved easily to satisfy consumers. He started to design a system that would combine an internal combustion engine with an electric motor for motive power. He successfully converted a Buick Skylark vehicle with a 20-kilowatt direct-current electric motor and an RX-2 Mazda rotary engine.
This vehicle was tested at the Environmental Protection Agency"s emissions-testing laboratories in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where it obtained more than twice the fuel economy of the vehicle before it was converted.
Furthermore, the vehicle"s emission rates were only about 9 percent of those of a gasoline powered car from that era. This pioneering work gained Wouk the nickname of the grandfather of electric and hybrid vehicles in the United States.
Even though they were not a new idea, hybrid vehicles would in fact only appear on the market by the late 1990s. Wouk was also actively involved in the field of electric vehicle standardization, participating in relevant technical committees such as the International Electrotechnical Commission TC69 and the International Organization for Standardization TC22 SC21 on electric vehicles.
Victor Wouk died on May 19, 2005, in his New York home.
The archives of Victor Wouk are kept at Caltech.
Board director 92nd Street Y. Chairman Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. Supporter Yeshiva University, New York.
Member of Society of America Engineers.
Married Joy L. Wouk; children: Jordan, Jonathan.