Coming off two years of victories on the drag strip with their hand-crafted electric car, the guys in the Great Mills High School engineering club are confident they will again claim the fastest time in their division โ€“ this year with two electric dragsters.

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Edwards, left, and Jarboe peerย in the rear of the

electric Mustangย ย  –ย ย ย Bay Net photo by Sean Rice

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With the help of St. Maryโ€™s Commissioner Larry Jarboe and โ€œresident automotive geniusโ€ Jonathan Edwards (as Jarboe calls him), owner of the Town Creek Shop, the automotive group in the Engineering Club are busy each week picking up skills in electronics and auto repair.

There are other groups within the engineering club, including rocketry and robotics, but this automotive group feels their experiences are the most practical, that will give them the greatest benefit later in life.

โ€œThis shows us the way, in the future, that we can power our own cars,โ€ Keith Stone told The Bay Net while the group was at the Town Creek Shop on Thursday working on the yet-to-be-named electric Mustang.

โ€œEventually weโ€™re going to run out (of oil),โ€ T. J. Patton said. โ€œAnd in the future corn will become our new gas.โ€

Right now the cars the teens are working on are strictly run on electricity, charged by solar power or generator, but they understand the importance of alternative fuels and power sources โ€“ probably more than their elders.

Lately, Keith and Jake Bosse have been tinkering with creating hydrogen, which may eventually be an automotive power source. Itโ€™s nothing large scale, and they arenโ€™t attempting to capture or use the hydrogen created. The method involves running electricity through metal submerged in water to โ€œcrackโ€ out and separate the hydrogen atoms. If youโ€™ve ever heard the phrase โ€œrun your car off tap water,โ€ this is the basic principle.

As for Jarboe, somewhat of a back yard scientist, he is constantly working on alternative energy production for his car, boat and home. The two generators he currently uses to recharge the โ€œGreen Hornetโ€ (his electric car that won a National Electric Drag Racing Association race last year) run on a gas-water mixture, and the other on a biodiesel mixture. But he hopes to have one that runs on methanol or ethanol by this yearโ€™s race in June.

During the two previous years, the club tweaked Jarboeโ€™s Green Hornet for the NEDRA race in Hagerstown, but this year, Edwards came across a fully converted Ford Mustang for sale for only $300. While the car already had thousands of dollars of conversion equipment already installed, it hasnโ€™t been run in nearly nine years, and needed some tuning up.

After a new collection of batteries were installed and other work performed, Edwards was ready to take the Mustang for a spin on Thursday. The team watched him first take the car for a spin up and down Town Creek Shop Drive, then each went for a ride in it.

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