Home » Changli Update: The Cheapest Electric Car In The World Is Still Fantastic But Has One Annoying And Confusing Problem

Changli Update: The Cheapest Electric Car In The World Is Still Fantastic But Has One Annoying And Confusing Problem

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I’m a bit appalled at myself for neglecting the Changli content all of you so richly deserve, and for that I apologize. Getting The Autopian going has been a lot of work, and some things slip through the cracks. Why, just earlier this morning David yelled at me for starting edits on Shitbox Showdown late, because I got caught up looking for a contact at an Austrian technical museum that has an 1875 car I want – no, need – to know more about for an upcoming story. I fucked up. I falter, I stumble. But, I can also attempt to make amends, so, with that in mind, let’s talk Changli, mothertrusters!

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

The sad truth is that at this moment, the Changli may be my most reliable vehicle. The Pao’s body is recovered from the deer-smack incident, but there was an undetected radiator crack from the wreck that caused a coolant leak and subsequent overheating, so now I need to replace the head gasket. My wife’s Tiguan is currently driving me fucking clamshit because the PCV valve clogged and I just dropped a bunch of money to replace blown seals, and now another seems to have blown.

[Editor’s note: What a lot of people don’t realize is that Jason’s car situation is far worse than mine. I have more broken cars, yes. But I also have more non-broken cars (that’s the genius behind buying so many vehicles), and what’s more, I’m just a single dude. Jason has a family and responsibilities!

We all know that the severity of one’s automotive problems can be approximated by one’s Car Situation Index (CSI), which is calculated via the equation  CSI = (number of working cars) / (number of broken cars * responsibilities). You want to maximize this number: If you have a lot of working cars, you’re good. If you have few responsibilities, you’re probably okay, and if you’ve got few broken cars, then naturally you’re fine. -DT]. 

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The Yugo runs and is usable, but, you know, it’s still a Yugo. I love it, but it’s a bit, um, marginal. The Beetle’s carbs are off and awaiting me to clean them, which I’ve been very effectively putting off, and it’s been sitting a while. 

[Editor’s note: I don’t know why Jason is neglecting to mention this. The Beetle’s engine is seized. Possibly in need of a full rebuild if he doesn’t get it unstuck. I don’t know if his wife is reading this and he’s trying to keep this on the downlow. If so, sorry Torch! -DT]

[Editor’s note-note: I put Marvel Mystery Oil in the Beetle’s engine a while ago, hopefully to de-gunk and un-seize it. If I don’t check on it, I can assume it worked! So that’s where I am: assuming it’s freed, and just needs the carbs back on. This is the same method I’m using by avoiding getting a colonoscopy.]

I’m not proud of any of this, of course, it’s just the reality of where I am. David left his manual ZJ here, so that’s been very handy to have around, and, yes, the humble little Changli has been filling in for all kinds of in-town duties.

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I’ve been driving that little 1.1 horsepower goofball around a lot. In fact, on some weekends, it’s all I drive! I’ve been using it so much around town, people have started taking grainy, Sasquatch-like videos of it and putting them online:

You can ignore the upper tweet there, just watch that bottom video. I was dropping my kid Otto off at his friend’s place when I was spotted there. For getting around the smallish college town where I live, I’ve proven all you need is an electric horse and a fractional horse, four wheels, and a funny-looking shell to cover it all up. I even took the ol’ ‘Li through a fast food drive-through for the first time, and hardly anyone batted an eye.

It’s been fantastic. You really don’t need to push around 4,000 pounds of car – electric or combustion – to do most of what you need to do.

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While the Changli has been just about trouble-free, it hasn’t been completely trouble-free. There’s been one new problem that’s cropped up, and while it’s not especially severe, it’s very annoying. It’s this:

See what’s going on there? When you try to use the turn indicators or wiper, the whole unit that houses the control stalks rotates as well, so instead of, say, indicating a right turn, you’re rotating the whole damn thing 70° clockwise. It’s so annoying.

I figured this should be an easy fix, right? Probably just some loose screws, so that’s what I checked first:

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I thought these two screws might be what clamps the unit to the steering column, but nope. Tightening them did nothing. So, I removed them, thinking maybe the plastic housing would split in half, revealing whatever clamps the stalks to the column, but no again. In fact, I have no idea just what these two screws do at all.

So, I kept looking. While searching, I did solve one minor mystery: Why does the steering wheel make that funny squeaky-scrapey sound when I turn it? Turns out, this is why:

See those little spring-loaded brass contacts? Those are the electrical contacts for the horn! They’re a little noisy when they rub against their contact rings, but overall it’s a pretty clever solution.

Still, that’s not what I need. I kept looking, and eventually found this:

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There’s a nice, meaty screw! That’s probably the set screw to keep this unit tight! So I tightened it. And, nothing. Huh. I then removed it, to see what was going on, and this is what I found:

There was a strange little threaded cuff on the screw, and that seemed to be restricting the screw’s ability to make hard contact with the shaft to keep the stalk unit in position. I couldn’t figure out why it wasn’t an issue before, so I removed the cuff, thinking I’d then be able to screw the set screw far enough in to make a strong lock. But, again, no luck.

You see, what I didn’t realize was that there’s no threaded hole on the stalk unit itself; that cuff-thing is the threaded hole!

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I suppose it was cheaper to buy a little fitting like that than to mold threads into the plastic? Or maybe the plastic is just too soft to make screw threads effective? Probably both.

What seems to have happened is the threaded cuff worked its way out of the hole in the plastic meant for the set screw, and now it’s all loose. I tried hammering the cuff back in, but it only worked a bit, and the thing is still kinda loose. That hole must have just worn itself a bit larger over time.

I think I’ll JB weld the cuff in there to make up for the enlarged hole in the plastic, and try the screw again. This should make a more stable threaded hole for that set screw, and keep everything tight.

I’m just happy to have figured it out, because it was driving me nuts. Still, as far as problems go, this is really minor, especially with all the use I’ve been giving this $1,200 miracle.

We have interesting future plans for the Changli, so, as always, stay tuned, pals.

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Dave Horchak
Dave Horchak
2 years ago

Am I the only one thinking a tshirt with DT and JT emerging from the Changali in Batman and Robin outfits would be a great merch idea.?

Skubee
Skubee
2 years ago

wait. i just tried to do the math.
CSI is infinity if you have zero broken cars. what do you do then? break a car?

Gary Lynch
Gary Lynch
2 years ago

This is 2022. Forget the JB Weld (although I agree an epoxy would be a better option). Just use a big honken zip tie and pull the mother really tight. Gotta have the proper internal patima….

To go with the wonky front bumper. Is that a remnant of the piñata episode?

Steve Karo
Steve Karo
2 years ago

JT – check out a product called Bondic. It’s a UV cured glue..resin..ahem..epoxy. I don’t know exactly what it is, but you squirt some on/in whatever you are needing it for, put a UV light on it and it cures within seconds. I use it for a lot, including building up broken plastics, and it is fast and without mess.

Dave Garland
Dave Garland
2 years ago

He needs to talk to his old associate Mercedes about buying a Freightliner or some such. Maybe one of those YouTube Peterbilts that’s been sitting since 1995. (I *think* this is a reply to a post about Jason buying something bigger and safer… it’s a little hard to tell where it’s going until they get the comments section sorted out a bit more.)

BetterThanAverageJoe
BetterThanAverageJoe
2 years ago

Admittedly I skimmed the comments, so it could have been mentioned, but the replacement for the threaded brass collar should be a rivnut…..

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
2 years ago

Definitely use epoxy, NOT JB Weld. As someone else noted, JB is too thick. ‘80s Subarus used those threadserts in their plastic timing-belt covers, and you always stripped out 1-3 when replacing the belt on a $75 car pulled out of someone’s backyard. I got pretty good at ‘fixing’ them. If worried about how loose it is in the stripped hole, a sliver or two of bamboo will set you right. I still have the rest of the bamboo kebab sticks I bought for this. Toothpicks will work, but, with bamboo it’s way easier to control thickness because of the fine grain.

Der Foo
Der Foo
2 years ago

You are thinking too narrow when talking about using JB Weld on that threaded cuff. I say just JB Weld that whole freaking control box directly to the column. Might make it difficult to remove/replace should you ever need to wrench on the steering column, but hey, it will be on there real good.

Erik Hancock
Erik Hancock
2 years ago

Who’re you callin’ pal, friend?

MATTinMKE
MATTinMKE
2 years ago
Reply to  Erik Hancock

Who you callin’ friend, buddy?

GizmonicLoadingBay
GizmonicLoadingBay
2 years ago

I wish, I wish with all of my heart that I didn’t have a sunroof on my ’12 JSW TDI. The panoramic roof announces my stupidity.

Who is the Leader
Who is the Leader
2 years ago

“CSI = (number of working cars) / (number of broken cars * responsibilities)”

Hmm, pretty sure this has me dividing by 0. Perhaps it should be (working cars) / (1 + (responsibilities * (broken cars * 1/(severity out of 10))

Martin Ibert
Martin Ibert
2 years ago

The problem with the CSI is — if you have zero broken cars but at least one functional one, a situation maybe less common among Autopian readers than the general population, it becomes infinity.

Bags
Bags
2 years ago
Reply to  Martin Ibert

But that’s the goal, right? If you only have working cars, then adding more working cars doesn’t negatively impact you, right? You can just keep adding them and adding them? Right? RIGHT?

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
2 years ago

Couldn’t you just hold the steering wheel with your knees, and then turn on the wiper with the right hand, while you turn the right blinker on with your left hand?

And the opposite, when you make a left, just holding the wiper switch down at off position? That way the opposed torque on both sides of the steering wheel cancel each other out, at the stalks should stay still, according to the laws of physics.

Seems a lot easier than taking everything apart, and ruining more soft Chinese plastic in the process.

Like a motorcycle or strange French car, it doesn’t have self cancelling blinkers, does it?

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
2 years ago

Oh, and old unused engines are like the movie type brown paper covered dynamite sticks, and should be turned once in a while, so the nitro glycerin – or engine oil – doesn’t seep out.
But used VW Beetle engines are everywhere, so get an extra one to go in the Yellow Menace, while you work it’s own one. That four bolt VW engine swap is an easy victory, that can boost one’s self confidence, some saturday afternoon, while the rest of the family are out shopping.

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