1999 World Solar Challenge


The 1999 World Solar Challenge was one of a biennial series of solar-powered car races, covering about 3,000 km through the Australian Outback, from Darwin, Northern Territory to Adelaide, South Australia.
There were 40 entrants in the event, 28 of which completed the course. The overall winner was Aurora 101, built by the Aurora Solar Car Team of Australia at an average speed of 72.96 km/h. It is the only edition of the race to be won outright by an Australian team.

Route

The World Solar Challenge runs across approximately 3,000 km from Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory, to Adelaide, the capital of South Australia.
Control points are established along the route for driver changes and public viewing opportunities. In 1999, these included Katherine, Dunmarra, Tennant Creek, Alice Springs, Cadney Park Homestead, Glendambo, Port Augusta and Angle Vale.

Results

The Aurora Solar Car Team from Melbourne, Australia won the event outright.
RankTeamCarCountryClassTime Speed
1AuroraAurora 101Australia41:0672:96
2Queens UniversityRadianceCanada41:3372.12
3University of QueenslandSunSharkAustralia41:5071.86
4Northern Territory UniversityDesert RoseAustraliaSilver Zinc42:1471.00
5Kanazawa Institute of TechnologyKIT Golden EagleJapanSilver Zinc44:3367.31
6Tamagawa Solar ChallengersTamagawa Super GenbowJapanSilver Zinc45:2666.00
7Lake Tuggeranong CollegeSpirit of CanberraAustralia45:3165.86
8Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyManta GTXUSACutout45:3465.81
9University of MichiganMaize BlazeJapan47:3463.04
10Osaka Sangyo UniversityOSU Model SAustralia48:2162.02

Separate classes were convened based on the solar cell material used by teams.

Cycle challenge

The Electricity Trust of South Australia sponsored a solar-powered cycle challenge over approximately 1,500 km from Alice Springs to Adelaide.