MAN A22 Retrofitted Electric Bus

MAN A22 Retrofitted Electric Bus
Bus 176 – ST Engineering Retrofitted Electric Bus (SG3100M)
Manufacturer MAN (chassis); Linkker (drivetrain)
Bodywork MAN Lion’s City Hybrid (Gemilang Coachworks)
Years in operation 2021 —
Operator SMRT Buses
Technical Data
Length 12 metre
Powertrain Linkker LinkDrive
Battery 177.5 kWh LFP
Accessibility Low Floor
Emission Standard Zero tailpipe emissions

The MAN A22 Retrofitted Electric Bus is the product of an electric bus conversion project undertaken by ST Engineering and Linkker on an existing MAN A22 (Euro V) bus.

Initiated by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) in 2017, the project is a proof-of-concept to determine the feasibility of converting existing diesel buses to electric buses.

Only one unit exists today, registered as SG3100M. It is fitted with the Linkker LinkDrive conversion kit. A similar electric driveline was fitted to the 20 Linkker LM312 buses procured by LTA.

On 5 October 2021, the bus made its revenue service debut on Service 176, operated by SMRT Buses.


Background

See also: ​MAN A22 electric bus conversion project

ST Engineering’s 2017 Annual Report first revealed that the company was awarded an LTA tender to retrofit a single-deck electric MAN bus as a proof-of-concept. The tender is believed to be a closed tender, with LTA not making any references to the tender within its annual reports published in that period.

The retrofit project was done in cooperation with Finnish electric bus manufacturer Linkker, who ST Engineering worked with to bring its electric bus technologies into the Singapore market. ST Engineering is currently an authorised distributor of Linkker right-hand drive electric buses in the Asia-Pacific region, with a partnership inked in 2017 and Linkker cited as an “Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM)”.

As for the bus, SMB3075A was selected for the conversion. The bus is a former Euro V MAN NL323F bus (Chassis no.: WMAA22ZZXD7001880) bodied with the MAN Lion’s City Hybrid bodywork assembled by Gemilang Coachworks. First registered to SMRT Buses on 2 September 2013, it was first laid up from October 2017 to October 2018, which indicated that the bus would be taken out of service for a prolonged period of time (during which it is exempted from road tax). It bore SMRT’s beige livery at launch, before being repainted to SMRT’s pixel livery.

SMB3075A was shipped from Singapore to Turku (Finland) for the modification work, where it was retrofitted with the Linkker LinkDrive retrofit kit, a conversion kit based on Linkker’s own electric drivetrain. The main subsystems of the conversion kit are the traction system, battery system, power distribution unit, vehicle control system, charging connectivity system and driver’s workplace upgrade. Linkker conversion kits are also made for other bus types.

Linkker’s LinkDrive retrofit kit would be formally announced in a press release on 14 August 2020. This was preceded by product announcements by ST Engineering in the form of this brochure and this video earlier in 2020.

Apart from this project, ST Engineering (Land Systems) also worked with Linkker on various projects such as the STE-Linkker Autonomous Electric Bus, and the fulfilment of 20 Linkker LM312 pantograph-charged buses procured by LTA, which entered revenue service in 2021. The company was one of three successful tenderers, the others being BYD and Yutong, who delivered a combined 60 electric buses between 2019 and 2020. Prior to this, ST Engineering also undertook another MAN A22 concept bus, the 3-door MAN Lion’s City SD Concept Bus (now LTA Smart Bus).


ST Engineering Retrofitted Electric Bus

The sole ST Engineering Retrofitted Electric Bus (formerly SMB3075A) was re-registered as SG3100M to SMRT Buses Ltd (former operator of SMB3075A) sometime in October/November 2019, under a non-user lay-up status. The bus was spotted in storage at various places including a warehouse facility at Tuas South leased by Pacific Logistics Group and ST Engineering Land Systems car park at Corporation Road.

The bus was eventually taken out of lay-up on 29 July 2021. Following the initial launch of Linkker LM312 buses in August 2021, the bus was deployed on revenue service from 5 October 2021, appearing on Bus Service 176.

Basic Technical Specifications
Dimensions Length 12.0 m; Width 2.55 m; Height 3.34 m.
Driveline Linkker LinkDrive electric driveline
Electric Machine Danfoss Editron EM-PMI375-T800-1600
Synchronous Reluctance assisted Permanent Magnet Motor (dual inverter)
Continuous power/torque of 139 kW / 828 Nm
Maximum power/torque of 231 kW / 2100 Nm
Battery Lithium Iron Phosphate batteries (177.5 kWh)
Opportunity charging via inverted pantograph (Oppcharge) with secondary CCS2 plug-in charging capability
Up to 450 kW DC charging input
Up to 130 km range, depending on operating scenarios
Bodywork MAN Lion’s City Hybrid (Built under license by Gemilang Coachworks)
EcoRange aluminium bus body, full-low-floor layout
EDS Mobitec MobiLED, orange LED matrix design
Mobitec MobiMASTER ICU 402 controller
Passenger Capacity 35 seating + 56 standing = 91 total
Additional Specifications Vogelsitze System 750/3 seats
Masats doors
Onboard Telemetry System
Fire suppression system in battery compartments
Stroller Restraint System
TNT Surveillance Front Alert Camera & Side Camera
Teething Issues

On its first day of revenue service (5 October 2021), SG3100M was observed to roll backwards when attempting to accelerate from stationary on an incline [Youtube link 1 / link 2]. Electric buses typically come with a hill start assist feature to mitigate this problem, but SG3100M did not appear to have it installed or operational. In addition, the Bus Captain was unable to apply a light throttle before releasing the handbrake (similar to a diesel bus) to mitigate the rollback issue; it is likely that the handbrake disabled the throttle application via interlock.

In addition, some issues were observed with the pantograph deployment when attempting to recharge at Bukit Panjang ITH [Youtube link], possibly the result of WiFi communication issues between the bus’ onboard systems and the charging infrastructure.

SG3100M did not return to revenue service the next day (6 October 2021), possibly as a result of these teething issues. The bus made a brief appearance on 11 October 2021, and a few days from 12 November 2021, before being taken out of service again. The bus returned to regular service on 17 February 2022.

In late 2022, the bus was taken off revenue service and spotted on ST Engineering’s premises, possibly for repairs. In June 2023, the bus was placed under non-user lay-up status for a month. The bus returned back on revenue service in Aug 2023.


Technical matters

Component Layout

A single longitudinally-mounted Traction motor is mounted in place of the transmission, located at the rear left side of the bus. Lithium-ion Batteries, Battery Management System (BMS), and Motor Control Unit are all mounted in the rear engine bay. The motor is liquid-cooled, as can be seen from the pink coolant lines (water-propylene glycol) in the side profile diagram.

Photos of the former engine bay also reveal that an electric motor (model unknown) is used to drive two compressors for the air conditioning system. On a diesel bus, these compressors would be driven by an engine belt.

The roof of the bus houses the air-conditioning unit and charging rails, which are compatible with the OppCharge opportunity charging interface. An inverted pantograph is used to quickly charge the bus during revenue service.

In total, the Retrofitted Electric Bus houses nine battery banks, with six units in the former engine compartment, and three more units on the roof.

Driving Performance

According to specifications released by LTA, a 10-minute charge stores up to 75kWh of energy in the bus’ batteries, which is sufficient for up to 48km of range. Specification sheets indicate a full recharge time of 30 minutes, and up to 130 km of range on a full charge, depending on operating scenarios.

As part of the retrofitting works, the centre pole at the entrance was removed to allow easier access for passengers travelling with open strollers.

Battery matters

It is noted that the Retrofitted Electric Bus has opted for Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) batteries, which differ from two existing Lithium-ion battery options offered with Linkker 12 LF buses (LTO and NMC batteries).

Omitting in-depth technical comparisons between the three, LFP batteries are relatively cheaper, less toxic, and typically last longer as compared to other forms of Lithium-ion batteries. LFP batteries have also been widely adopted for electric buses, with the world’s leading electric bus manufacturers by sales volume (Yutong, BYD and Zhongtong) opting for LFP batteries.

Linkker 12 LF legacy offerings Retrofitted Electric Bus offered battery
  • Lithium Titanate Oxide (LTO) – 60kWh or 90kWh
  • Lithium Nickel Manganese Cobalt Oxide (NMC) – 127.5kWh or 170kWh
  • Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) – 177.5kWh

 


Opportunity charging

Based on the concept of Opportunity charging, the ST Engineering Retrofitted Electric Bus is charged at the terminus of a bus route, where charging points (typically overhead charging) are erected. The bus is sufficiently recharged in a short amount of time (usually several minutes) before the bus continues on its next trip.

Volvo 7900 Electric at a OppCharge charging station in Sweden
Volvo 7900 Electric at an OppCharge charging station in Sweden

With fewer batteries required per bus, its advantages translate to a more spacious bus interior, lower environmental cost of battery production, and lower electricity consumption through reduced vehicle weight. Its disadvantages include the lack of deployment flexibility (on non-infrastructure-equipped routes) and the possible impact on bus operations should a charging station break down, and some redundancy is thus required, such as installing multiple chargers at terminating points.

Currently, efforts are focused on expanding the use of opportunity charging on suitable routes and the adoption of similar charging infrastructure between bus manufacturers, allowing multiple bus models to use the same charger.

The Opportunity Charging approach is favoured by European bus manufacturers. Conventional, depot-charged buses carry a large number of batteries on every bus to achieve sufficient operating range over a day’s worth of revenue service, and is the approach preferred by Chinese bus manufacturers.

Overhead pantograph

The ST Engineering Retrofitted Electric Bus will be charged via overheard pantograph, based on the opportunity charging (OppCharge) platform.

ABB OppCharge pantograph charger at CleanTech One

OppCharge is an open and competition-neutral interface seeking to accelerate the adoption of electric buses by being compatible with multiple bus manufacturers, hence offering operators choice and flexibility of buses without the need to modify existing charging infrastructure. These overhead pylon chargers with extendable pantographs are usually installed at the end stops of bus routes, allowing buses to quickly receive a full charge in-between trips.

Charging is fully automatic and secured by a two-way WiFi communication sequence. The driver gets a clear indication in order to stop within the specified ± 200 mm from the reference point. The charging sequence is started by activating the parking brake, and the driver can interrupt it at any time.

Swiss-Swedish engineering group ABB supplied four 450 kW chargers with installation, civil works, project management and commissioning. These chargers would allow the electric buses to be quickly recharged in less than ten minutes at key bus interchanges with an automated rooftop connection.

A similar overhead charger was installed at Cleantech Park in support of the NTU-LTA-Volvo Autonomous Bus Trial. The Volvo 7900 Electric bus participating in the trial is OppCharge-compatible and is recharged with the ABB HVC 300P fast-charge system, which delivers 300 kW DC power.

Two overhead pantograph chargers were each installed at Bukit Panjang Integrated Transport Hub and Bedok Integrated Transport Hub.


Gallery


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9 thoughts on “MAN A22 Retrofitted Electric Bus

  • 1 November 2021 at 4:39 PM
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    Why choose 176?

    Reply
  • 6 October 2021 at 10:30 PM
    Permalink

    if this bus is successful, probably LTA want to consider convert more units?

    by then again cost is the factor

    Reply
  • 5 October 2021 at 4:36 PM
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    Should just put ST badge,Lol look too plain without badge

    Reply

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