Volvo Group Wednesday broke ground on a $33 million expansion of its powertrain research and development site in Hagerstown, Md., for the construction of a new, state-of-the-art Vehicle Propulsion Lab (VPL).
Volvo’s VPL will be the first facility in North America to allow comprehensive testing of current and future products for Volvo Trucks, Mack Trucks, Prevost and Volvo Bus to meet evolving government regulations and ensure high performance on the diverse North American roadways.
Housed under one roof, Volvo Group says the lab will consist of two environmental chambers. One chamber will have a chassis dyno capable of emissions measurements and simulating extreme-weather and altitude conditions. The second will offer testing of fully operative vehicles, including highway and vocational trucks, as well as coach buses, for starting in a variety of weather conditions.
“The Hagerstown powertrain technology site plays a significant role in the Volvo Group’s efforts to offer advanced transportation solutions that meet customers’ needs today and down the road,” says Lars Stenqvist, CTO, Volvo Group. “The all-new VPL, slated to open in the second quarter of 2023, will enable us the ability to more quickly develop and test battery-electric and hydrogen-based fuel cell solutions, as well as internal combustion engines, which will be powered by fossil-free fuels in the future, for our Class 8 trucks and coach buses.”
Volvo Group notes additional testing features in the VPL will include:
Operating from -22 degrees F to 104 degrees F (-30 C to +40 C) for development and verification activities;
Wind speed simulation up to 85 mph (137 kmph);
Vehicle absorbing and motoring capability up to 1600 horsepower (1200 kW);
Altitude simulation up to 14,000 ft. (4270 meters);
Various types of performance and emissions testing for battery electric, fuel cell, hybrid, natural gas and diesel technologies; and
Capability to test highway and vocational Class 8 trucks and coach buses for North American, South American and European applications.
“Our engineers currently rely on long-distance travel for extreme-weather testing or tap various third-party labs that specialize in specific types of testing,” adds Audley Brown, vice president of powertrain engineering, Volvo Group North America. ”The VPL will be one of the few places in operation that offers vehicle emissions and on-board diagnostics requirements at all expected operating conditions for trucks, buses and powertrains.”
Volvo Group also expects the new lab to help drive ongoing product-quality improvements and speed-to-market capabilities due to the strategic migration from on-road testing to controlled, lab-environment testing.
At final construction, the VPL will be more than 35,000 sq.-ft., two-stories high and connected to the existing engine development lab on the Hagerstown campus. It’s been 15 years since the current lab went into operation, which Volvo says involved a $40 million investment at the time. Since then, the company claims it has spent an additional $12 million upgrading the test cells, a portion of which was used to enable the creation of electricity regeneration when operating the dyno tests.