Kids Build Soybean-Fueled Car
High School Kids In Auto Shop Outdo Big Carmakers
-
Play CBS Video Video Soybean-Powered Car Gasoline prices have been sliding lately but are still high. That might be the reason why visitors to cbsnews.com voted to send Steve Hartman out to report on a car you can fill for beans.
-
Video Do-It-Yourself Funerals CBS News viewers sent Steve Hartman to investigate a strange trend in America that is having a surprisingly broad appeal.
-
Five kids, along with a handful of schoolmates, built the soybean-fueled car as an after-school project. (CBS)
-
Interactive Education In America Backpack ready? Learn more about education in America through fun facts, national statistics and unusual schools.
-
Interactive Motor Away Things to know before hitting the road.
But as CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman reports in this week's Assignment America, the car that buyers have been waiting decades comes from a source no one ever dreamed of — and runs on soybean bio-diesel fuel to boot.
A car that can go from zero to 60 in four seconds and get more than 50 miles to the gallon would be enough to pique any driver's interest. So who do we have to thank for it. Ford? GM? Toyota? No — just Victor, David, Cheeseborough, Bruce, and Kosi, five kids from the auto shop program at West Philadelphia High School
The five kids, along with a handful of schoolmates, built the soybean-fueled car as an after-school project. It took them more than a year — rummaging for parts, configuring wires and learning as they went. As teacher Simon Hauger notes, these kids weren't exactly the cream of the academic crop.
"We have a number of high school dropouts," he says. "We have a number that have been removed for disciplinary reasons and they end up with us."
One of the Fab Five, Kosi Harmon, was in a gang at his old school — and he was a terrible student. The car project has changed all that.
"I was just getting by with the skin of my teeth, C's and D's," he says. "I came here, and now I'm a straight-A student."
To Hauger, the soybean-powered car shows what kids — any kids — can do when they get the chance.
"If you give kids that have been stereotyped as not being able to do anything an opportunity to do something great, they'll step up," he says.
Stepping up is something the big automakers have yet to do. They're still in the early stages of marketing hybrid cars while playing catch-up to the Bad News Bears of auto shop.
"We made this work," says Hauger. "We're not geniuses. So why aren't they doing it?"
Kosi thinks he knows why. The answer, he says, is the big oil companies.
"They're making billions upon billions of dollars," he says. "And when this car sells, that'll go down — to low billions upon billions."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




