Looks like an Electric Delta Wing
Nissan to enter 300 kmh electric car in Le Mans endurance race
With preparations now almost complete for the start of Saturday's 90th anniversary 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race, Nissan has surprised the petro-heads by showing off a fully electric car that it will be entering into the competition next year. Nissan's ZEOD RC electric car Nissan goes to the home of motor sport to take …
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 04:06 GMT Lord Zedd
Yeah, sure, good luck with that battery thing.....
Unless they're towing a semi-trailer sized battery pack or plan on swapping the pack out every 50 miles, they don't have a chance.
The Tesla barely got 25 miles when Clarkson pushed it hard. Even after having "invested over $5bn in battery technology" in the Leaf it only gets 75 miles of normal driving.
At about 3,300 miles total distance, that is 44-132 pit stops, one every 11-32 minutes or 3--9 laps!
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 08:02 GMT Elmer Phud
Re: Yeah, sure, good luck with that battery thing.....
"The Tesla barely got 25 miles when Clarkson pushed it hard. 2
And Clarkson is not known for being a presenter of a highly scripted show - a pantomime where the cock-ups and mishaps are never telegraphed or ever written as a 'build up/let down'.
Right, now I understand.
(Top Gear is a comic show, never expect anything really informative - they have one hell of a lot of DVD's to sell)
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:46 GMT MrXavia
Re: Yeah, sure, good luck with that battery thing.....
"Although Tesla say it will do 200 miles, we worked out that on our track it would run out after just 55 miles and if it does run out, it is not a quick job to charge it up again." - Clarkson
So it was a bit further than yout hink, and that is 55 Miles hard driving, racing round a track...
Range will vary on driving style, if I was to race my Jag round a track, I expect I'd get around 15Mpg if I was lucky... I get ~55 Mpg on the motorways...
So a massive reduction in range for racing is not a shocker, they just presented it slightly biased against it.....
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 04:27 GMT BornToWin
Only as a hybrid not as an EV
These cars can only race any distance as a hybrid not as a true EV. Audi has been doing well with their hybrid so Nissan figures they might as well cash in on the PR. The sales figure totals for all EVs combined is so insignificant as to be a joke. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand you need a really long power cable to drive these cars more than in the city.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:55 GMT John Smith 19
Re: Only as a hybrid not as an EV
"These cars can only race any distance as a hybrid not as a true EV. Audi has been doing well with their hybrid so Nissan figures they might as well cash in on the PR. The sales figure totals for all EVs combined is so insignificant as to be a joke. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand you need a really long power cable to drive these cars more than in the city."
There's a fine line between cutting edge humour using exaggeration for comic effect and coming across as an idiot.
Your downvotes suggest you might like to refine your writing style?
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Monday 24th June 2013 13:54 GMT Alan Brown
Re: Only as a hybrid not as an EV
" It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand you need a really long power cable to drive these cars more than in the city."
The vast majority of cars ARE driven in city traffic almost all of their lives
Just because it doesn't suit you doesn't mean it doesn't suit a lot of other people.
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Monday 24th June 2013 15:02 GMT rh587
Re: Only as a hybrid not as an EV
Indeed. My grandmother accumulated something like 2000 miles a year prior to giving up the car, which comprised driving exclusively into town and back. No motorways, nothing more than 20 miles each way.
There are issues with leaving a battery standing for periods without undergoing significant charge or discharge, but in her circumstance, a mechanically simple electric car would have been far more economical (and perfectly adequate in terms of range) than a mechanically complex combustion engine which needs oil changes and annual servicing even though it's only done 2000 miles.
Of course to hit her demographic the prices need to come down to match that of an entry level Corsa, not £30-40k.
It does amuse me when people slate electric cars for their poor range. If you're a motorway warrior don't buy one. That doesn't make it a bad car. Arguing that it does is like arguing that a Smart car is shit just because you can't get 3 kids and a dog in the back. If you need to get 3 kids and a dog in the back, don't get a Smart. If you need to put logs in the back, buy a Landie not a Jag. Tis horses for courses. 65,000 is a lot more than I thought. Quite impressive really (Land Rover sell 15,000 Defenders a year, so for a niche vehicle Nissan aren't doing badly).
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 06:37 GMT jake
The questions remain ...
1) What kinda energy goes into producing EVs?
1a) And the pollution involved?
2) Where does the electricity come from?
2a) And the pollution involved?
3) Battery-pack "tune-ups" (read "replacements")?
3a) And the pollution involved?
4) And ultimately, recycling?
4a) And the pollution involved?
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 09:09 GMT Androgynous Cupboard
Re: The questions remain ...
Christ, you must be fun at parties.
Perhaps in the interest of balance you could give us a list of questions to ask about the full cost of the petrol burnt by the vehicles it's competing against? What about the suits worn by the drivers, is that material bad too? Carbon fibre, does that cause cancer? I bet the cars are all painted with lead paint, and lets not even start on the noise pollution.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:35 GMT Matthew 25
Re: The questions remain ...
I can't answer most of these questions, but I can answer question 2 / 2a.
The electricity comes from the grid, so in the UK that would mean mainly coal / gas fired power stations. Even though coal is really bad, at the scale power stations work it still pollutes less than your average car petrol / diesel engine (probably better than the best too).
I can guess at some of the others.
1/1a probably about the same as a 'normal' vehicle if you don't include the battery pack (you did split it out yourself)
4/4a see answer to 1
3 this is the real crunch and I don't even have enough data to guess.
Would I want an EV? Well, not a charge up from the mains job which is what you can get at the moment. If petrol stations sold hydrogen I would consider a fuel cell car as that gets around the main draw back of limited range in current EVs.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:49 GMT Steve Crook
Re: The questions remain ...
30% of the UK have no access to off street parking. Unless there's mass installation of public charging posts, there's always going to be a substantial minority of people for whom electric motoring isn't going to be a reality.
Ironically, many of them are people living in large towns and cities, for whom an EV would be ideal...
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Wednesday 26th June 2013 09:32 GMT Chris Reynolds
Re: The questions remain ...
@Steve Crook
It's a good point and I don't disagree. It will probably take a rethink of ownership for these to be adopted in the UK. Renault are probably onto a good thing by retaining ownership of the battery. One of the French manufacturers engineered prototypes with batteries that could drop out of the bottom of the chassis. Ultimately this meant the owner wouldn't have to recharge at home but could swap out as required and their 'subscription' guarantees a battery in decent nick.
(what follows is highly speculative but not impossible)
We might also see cities offering car hire similar to the bike hire schemes popping up in cities around the world. The technology for self-driving cars keeps developing; once they arrive then your car could drive itself to a charging point after you get home.
But on balance, public charging points are probably more likely.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 16:25 GMT Spoonsinger
Re: The questions remain ...
1) What kinda energy goes into producing EVs?
What do you mean by energy?
1a) And the pollution involved?
What do you mean by pollution?
2) Where does the electricity come from?
Good question
2a) And the pollution involved?
What do you mean by pollution?
3) Battery-pack "tune-ups" (read "replacements")?
Not really a question, so the answer is probably.
3a) And the pollution involved?
What do you mean by pollution?
4) And ultimately, recycling?
Not really a question, so the answer is probably.
4a) And the pollution involved?
What do you mean by pollution?
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 17:44 GMT Benjamin 4
Re: The questions remain ...
@jake
I can't believe all the downvotes and comments you've recieved from people who just fail to understand the issue. You raise a very good set of questions.
For those that don't understand the main question behind the questions; over the course of the life of an electric vehicle and the equivalent class of petrol vehicle, which requires more energy to produce, which requires more energy to maintain, to run, to dispose of, which is less environmentallly friendly to dispose of, and ultimately which is actually more environmentally friendly.
And to be honest, if I had to guess, by the time you've swapped and big Li-Ion battery packs five or six times (assuming the car lasts 175-200 thousand miles which is not unreasonable for a modern IC car) and dispose of them and created the electricity using coal or gas plants (as in the UK) and extracted the rare Earth magnets for the motor (I know they're not strictly speaking rare, but it is a dirty, pollutive process to extact them nonetheless) I wouldn't be so surprised of the electric car loses.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 04:53 GMT jake
@Benjamin 4 (was: Re: The questions remain ...)
I didn't even touch on the most important questions ...
Can any country on Earth's National Grid support EVs for even 10% of the population? Will any National Grid EVER be able to support 10% of the population driving EVs?
Magic bullets don't work, even if rich people get richer off the backs of idiots.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 05:12 GMT MachDiamond
Re: @Benjamin 4 (was: The questions remain ...)
**Can any country on Earth's National Grid support EVs for even 10% of the population? Will any National Grid EVER be able to support 10% of the population driving EVs?**
In the UK, the grid operators would love to charge EVs at night. Once everybody has gone to bed for the night, there is a massive excess of power generation especially if the wind is blowing. It doesn't make sense to shut down coal fired plants as it takes a bunch of coal to get them back up to temp in the morning and the thermal cycling wears the plants out faster. Same thing with nuke plants. You can get a great tariff for charging an electric car during off-peak.
Check out "Fully Charged" with Robert Llewelyn on iTunes. There is an episode with him talking to the operators of the national grid about just this.
Robert is a self confessed "wet-liberal", owns a Nissan Leaf and powers it a lot with a rack of solar panels on his roof. It's a bit spend up front, but his operating costs for the car are mighty slim. Look at www.llewblog.squarespace.com for writings and sums.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 05:33 GMT jake
@MachDiamond (was: Re: @Benjamin 4 (was: The questions remain ...))
You didn't answer my follow-up questions, vis-a-vis "can the grid handle it", and "will it ever be able to handle it".
As a side-note, I actually fired up the TV for the first time in about half a year, and have had Le Mans coverage running for about the last 5 hours. I have heard absolutely zero coverage of the electric Nissan. Is it actually still running?
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Monday 24th June 2013 20:19 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: @MachDiamond (was: @Benjamin 4 (was: The questions remain ...))
re: Jake
I watched it from the rear cameras on two of the Corvettes (via speedtv.com) while I was working. The GFs kids were upset because I was consuming 7Mb/sec for four hours and their facebook/pinterest/etc were slow as molasses. I knew my rdp sessions would be slow, but I did get to see the 'vettes get lapped by the prototypes rather often.
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Tuesday 25th June 2013 07:42 GMT James Micallef
Re: @jake - can the grid handle it?
I don't see why not. Firstly as a previous commentor said, grid is operating below capacity at night, so adding charging onto the grid at night will just give a smoother load, it won't increase the peak.
Secondly as I mentioned in my other reply, people aren't just going to switch over to EVs en masse. the grid has 20, 30, 50 years to adapt and gradually increase capacity, it's not going to have a 5-10% or more increase overnight.
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Monday 24th June 2013 12:15 GMT Greg D
@jake
Your short-sightedness is astounding.
Do you even read technology news?
New battery tech: http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/157525-new-sulfur-based-battery-is-safer-cheaper-more-powerful-than-lithium-ion
As for generating the electricity in the first place, new nuclear power will be built. The greens wont hold out for much longer when their precious coal and gas power plants (seriously, they think coal and gas is safer than nuclear). We also have ITER coming online in just under a decade, and NIF in the US. Both hold great potential for fusion power.
Stop thinking about EV's in today's terms. They are a) not here yet anyway (Li-Ion just doesnt have the power capacity) and b) when they finally get some traction, we'll have all this new tech to play with.
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Tuesday 25th June 2013 07:31 GMT James Micallef
Re: The questions remain ...
@jake - very valid points.
Most probably the energy / other resources / pollution produced to build an electric car will be approximately the same to that of producing a petrol/diesel car with 2 notable differences. Electric cars have a LOT less parts so probably there's quite some savings in supply chain / assembly, and lithium batteries are a lot more complex to recycle than a hunk of metal.
I don't know enough to be able to say whether these 2 effects cancel each other out. Current values of energy etc required to produce an e-car are a lot higher than for combustion engine cars, however that's not completely comparable because production runs are a lot smaller. I would hazard a guess that when electric cars are produced in the same volumes as combustion engine cars, it will be about the same.
Keep in mind that (most) people aren't going to throw away their current cars to buy an e-car, or buy an e-car on top of their current one. They would arrive at a point where they want a new car anyway and some will opt for an e-car. So over the course of 20, 30, 50 years it won't make too much difference.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:01 GMT John Smith 19
Err, Tesla demonstrates battery change in 90 secs.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/06/21/tesla_battery_swap_tech/
Perhaps those pit stops may be a bit shorter than you think.
And getting you technical information from Top Gear is, shall we say, unwise?
But to me the really interesting point just slipped out.
"There have been hybrid electric cars competing in the race for the last four years and they now dominate the race"
From "WTF, it's a hybrid?" to being front runners in 4 years is pretty impressive. sure it's impossible to say how much of that tech will make it to normal road cars but its a hell of an achievement.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:50 GMT John Smith 19
Re: Err, Tesla demonstrates battery change in 90 secs.
"Most of the 'hybrid' racing cards are using KERS. They aren't even remotely similar to the hybrid road cars like the Prius. Apples meet oranges."
In that case, depending on wheather they are allowed this season all F1 cars would be "hybrids."
I think you need a bit more storage than that to qualify at Le Mans as a hybrid.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 10:19 GMT ElNumbre
Knee-Jerking...
Everyone hold up just a minute... Nissan aren't some two bit outfit having a crack at running Le Mans for the fun of it! Through Nimso, they're a pretty serious motorsport manufacturer and designer and have access to lots of technical expertise. I'm sure they realise that Le Mans is an endurance race that can be won or lost on pit stops, and if you're running a car, it needs to go several hundred miles between pit stops.
Le Mans is a prestigious event and to place in the final standings is a massive marketing coup for any manufacturer. Hence why Audi et al pour millions of € into developing racers for the 24hr race. So Im pretty sure if you're spending tens of thousands, if not millions on batteries, you can make a car with enough juice in a package small and light enough to be competitive.
I'm quite excited to see what they bring. I'm guessing the latest and greatest Li-Po cells mounted on sleds that can be swapped out in a minute or two, or maybe even lithium non-rechargeables as there is no requirement to have a power source that can be refreshed over an extended period.
One thing I think we can agree on though, it won't sound as good as a multi-V infernal combustion engine.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 14:50 GMT pepper
Re: Knee-Jerking...
Indeed, many of the other endurance races are a run-up/test bed for Le Mans, especially Spa-Francorchamps. Although Nurburgring is always a delight to watch and a good heads up on whom to watch for at Le Mans.
Also, Le Mans doesnt just allow anyone to participate, you really have to show that you can race, some of the other Endurance series are actual entrance tickets to Le Mans. So if you can get there then you know you belong to the best.
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Monday 24th June 2013 08:46 GMT Hairy Spod
Re: Knee-Jerking...
I'm not so sure on the sound point.
When I went to Le mans a few years ago, at the speeds they go at for most of the race the petrol cars just make a lound piercing noise, the diesels on the other hand made an amazing and very cool Star Wars pod racer esk wub wub wub wub noise sounding nothing at all like my mrs's Focus diesel .
I'd be very interested to see what kind of sound the high speed leccy cars would make when thrown into the mix and are either over taking or being overtaken by the other types. I think it will really add to the overall spectacle next year.
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Monday 24th June 2013 10:44 GMT monkeyfish
Re: Knee-Jerking...
Good point all round. It's a pity they wont be recharging on the fly though, since that's the main objection to EVs from a practical point of view. Maybe something to aim for in future years (i.e. get the EV to the finish line first, then work out how to do the same with recharging later).
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 12:39 GMT swissrobin
It's motor racing
Asking about the environmental impact of building or running a race car is not exactly sensible. All motor racing is an environmental disaster - it achieves nothing except bring a bunch of drivers back where they started, and burn a lot of fuel along the way.
Comparing full life cycle environmental impact of a conventional fuel vehicle against that for a similar size EV is sensible, but not interesting in the context of this article.
If Nissan can produce a 100% EV that can be competitive at Le Mans then that will be an achievement and I think they're not overstating it - if they pull it off, it will change the way EVs are perceived.
100% EV is practical already for certain applications. Fast charge battery technology is coming (as much as for your power hungry mobile telephone as for your car). Once it is here, motorway recharging will become practical and range will then be as per conventional fuel car.
Cheers,
Robin
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 13:25 GMT Rol
Re: It's motor racing
You don't refill your gas bottles , you simply swap your empty for a full one.
I see a future for petrol stations, where your international standard "power brick" is automatically removed from your vehicle and replaced with a fully charged one.
The cost to you would be based on the charge condition of the replacement less the charge condition of the one your dropping off, plus handling.
Not only will this extend your driving range to that enjoyed by normally fuelled cars, the recharging done by the petrol station will occur at off peak times, using more efficient chargers than your domestic ones.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 10:01 GMT swissrobin
Re: It's motor racing
"You don't refill your gas bottles , you simply swap your empty for a full one.
I see a future for petrol stations, where your international standard "power brick" is automatically removed from your vehicle and replaced with a fully charged one."
If that's how it pans out, fine. I don't think it'll be practical to do this, though, because the mass of the battery packs or whatever they are will be huge; it works for diesel/petrol because they have enormous energy density so we can afford to transport the fuel to the fuel station. The cost of delivering the fuel to the fuel station is still substantial (approx 10% of the energy delivered is consumed to deliver it).
A Lithium Ion battery pack has approx 1MJ/kg. Petrol has more like 40MJ/kg. Also (as Boeing found out) you need to wrap these batteries in something flame proof and give them physical security in case of impact. That means you're lucky to get 0.75MJ/kg once packaged.
So it's just not practical to swap out battery packs for a large % of the national fleet, I think. If it were, they would have to be recharged on site, so you need quick cycle times whether the pack is charged in vehicle or in a shed at the fuel station (otherwise you arrive with an empty pack and no charged packs are available for you).
Somebody asked whether the national grid was big enough to deal with 10% of the national fleet being EV.
Assuming 10% is 3 million cars and they use an average of 5l fuel per day (that's 40 miles, say), that gives you:
3 million x 5 x 35 MJ = 525TJ/day.
Averaged over the whole day (assume some local storage on site) that's 6GW.
The UK national grid has a capacity of 80GW and there is always surplus capacity. So I'm pretty sure they could accommodate 6GW all day long and not fail.
At 100% EV, you're obviously looking at doubling the size of the grid - which is a tall order, but not impossible if the delivered electricity is paid for at a fair price.
Cheers,
Robin
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 12:23 GMT Rol
Re: It's motor racing
Once a petrol station has taken delivery of lets say 500 batteries, that's it, after 12 months of customer use it still has 500 batteries, all quietly charging away.
Of course the petrol station would need some heavy redesign and not all stations would have the capacity, but taking a leaf out of the liquid stuffs "How to" book, placing much of the storage under ground would make this workable.
Drive into the orange parking bay, press the console button and an arm would extend from the floor to automatically locate, then remove your flat, taking it down to the charging room, then replace it with a charged one, locking it in place.
Finding a petrol station would most probably get very easy, as the wind turbines would be easily visible, unless of course they are using high pressure geothermal, fusion or work experience slaves on a treadmill.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 19:15 GMT Paul Hovnanian
Re: It's motor racing
"The UK national grid has a capacity of 80GW and there is always surplus capacity. So I'm pretty sure they could accommodate 6GW all day long and not fail."
Or charge at night, when the grid has surplus capacity. This will be an advantage of swapped battery packs over rapid charging. With swapped packs, recharging can be deferred to off-peak times without inconveniencing drivers. Rapid charging means each station (but not the overall grid) needs a peak short time capacity far exceeding their consumption averaged over a day.
Charging stations are a good load for utilizing variable power supplies. With a suitable 'smart grid' the chargers can easily throttle their inputs to the batteries in response to sources like wind generation in a matter of seconds.
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Monday 24th June 2013 09:52 GMT Intractable Potsherd
Re: It's motor racing
"[motor racing] achieves nothing except bring a bunch of drivers back where they started,"
I think you'll find that describes most travel - even the daily commute brings drivers (or, indeed, users of whatever form of transport) back where they started. There are approximately no people that keep travelling from place to place with no base to return to.
Given the Luddite attitude of the Swiss to cars in general, and motor-racing in particular, your name doesn't exactly make you worth listening to on this topic.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 14:34 GMT Anonymous Coward
"I believe at the end of Le Mans 2014 we will have changed people's perception of electric vehicles forever."
Unless there is a battery fire or it runs of out juice during the race then it just reinforces that perception.
To the critics; a petrol engine can fail at anytime just like a battery can fail at anytime. One second they are fine, next they are dead.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 11:06 GMT Richard 12
Amusingly, the hardware reliability is where the EV wins
Or at least, where it should win.
I expect this Nissan will be going down the route of high-torque, (switched-reluctance or multipole) motors either right in the wheelhubs or on short shafts (to reduce unsprung weight).
Essentially, the complete drivetrain made of either four or eight moving parts. (Ignoring the suspension itself as you need that on all vehicles.)
Done that way, if a motor goes down you lose 1/4 of drive power and some stability, but swapping it out may only take about twice as long as changing the tyre. While that would lose a short race, it could win an endurance race!
Unfortunately none of the EVs (aside from bicycles) currently on the market seem to be playing to the strengths of electric motors, keeping all the gearboxes, differentials, clutches etc that an IC needs but are simply unnecessary for an electric motor.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 18:39 GMT Will Godfrey
Re: Amusingly, the hardware reliability is where the EV wins
On A brighter note Eurostar does make full use of electric motor characteristics. As a rule of thumb:
Maximum torque at zero RPM.
Maximum power at half no-load speed.
Pretty much ideal for a car I'd say, and can you imagine the road holding improvement of having exactly matched steering and true independent four wheel drive.
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Monday 24th June 2013 09:57 GMT Intractable Potsherd
Re: Amusingly, the hardware reliability is where the EV wins
I agree with Richard - I'm in a position where an electric car could be useful for my wife's current transportation (fairly frequent short journeys against the clock). Leaving aside the cost issue (basically, we can't afford any electric vehicle at the moment - waaaaayyyy too expensive), they are all converted IC cars. I want independent motors per driven wheel at least - no heavy driveshafts with complex joints.
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Monday 24th June 2013 14:03 GMT Alan Brown
Re: Amusingly, the hardware reliability is where the EV wins
"Unfortunately none of the EVs (aside from bicycles) currently on the market seem to be playing to the strengths of electric motors, keeping all the gearboxes, differentials, clutches etc that an IC needs but are simply unnecessary for an electric motor."
The electric motors they're using have very limited rpm ranges, but that's nothing a 1950s vintage borg-warner 2-speed hydraulic transmission can't deal with. :)
Inhub motors are nice, but too expensive at the sizes need to haul a car about - and making the motor part of the wheel both increases the unsprung mass and reduces the device's life dramatically on real-world roads (potholes!)
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 18:31 GMT AverageGuy
Re balanced assessments of electric cars
... why don't we assess the speed, fuel efficiency, refuelling hassles, reliability, etc., of petrol-engined cars in their first few years. Then we can write them off, too, back-to-the-future-style and not waste 100+ years getting them to where they are today. Ditto 'planes.
Unless we have a vested interest in preserving the status quo or are just plain stoopid, of course.
And while we're at it, let's assess computers on the same basis.
Could ENIAC run MS Office? Do graphics? Sound? Linux (for Eadon)? IOSMacDroid? Banking?
No?
Huh! No point in developing them any further, then.
As that famous master of literacy might say:
"COMPUTERS POINT NONE FAIL"
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 20:54 GMT JP19
Re: Re balanced assessments of electric cars
"why don't we assess the speed, fuel efficiency, refuelling hassles, reliability, etc., of petrol-engined cars in their first few years"
People did at the time. In 1900 more electric cars were sold in America than gasoline and steam powered combined.
They turned out to be relatively crap and are not much better today.
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Saturday 22nd June 2013 21:38 GMT ACx
A "crappy" electric racing car:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8vEEqcuZDs
Note that with out the big stupid engine noise you can now hear the driver earning his fee by listening to the tire noise, rather than the not very informative loud engine. You can hear both the electric motor speed, there for throttle work, AND the steering via the tire noise. Real motor racing fans will appreciate this.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 13:27 GMT Aldous
It's a Garage 56 Car
That means it runs in its own class and as such it does not matter how long it takes to go around the track.
Pitstops will be interesting as Le Mans rules only allow two mechanics to service the car whilst in the pitlane. What they can do instead is stick it on casters and garage it every stop which will allow them to do tires, battery and driver changes with as many people as they can fit around the car. It would take longer but as much as people think as le mans stops are nothing like F1 stops.
A for top gear vs tesla, remember a tesla is not a designed track car but was being hooned, most IC car's get crap mileage in similar situations. This thing is designed for one purpose only and will have things such as KERS (possibly mechanical) to assist with getting out of corners which is where the battery would be sapped and why 55mpg mway figures are not a good comparison. Once the car is up to speed it will not need as much power to keep it moving as it did to get there.The deltawing design is very slick aerodynamically. Chuck in regenerative/KERS capture braking and you can extend the battery life even further.
It's not going to win overall, it is not designed to. The IC deltawing was nowhere near the front before ite got hit off. It will be interesting though and more power to them!
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 13:47 GMT Esskay
Re: It's a Garage 56 Car
I believe the car has it's own petrol motor charging the batteries, even Nissan has come out and said that it's impossible for a purely battery powered car to run at race pace for 24 minutes, let alone 24 hours. The engine only charges the batteries - it doesn't deliver power to the wheels.
The ZEOD is 100% electric in that it's propelled by 2 electric motors, producing ~200Kw. It also weights around 100kg less than the prototypes (meaning it will be around 1 tonne) and due to the unusual profile, which minimises frontal area, it should be vastly more aerodynamic than the other cars (which is the most important factor at an extremely high speed track like Circuit de la Sarthe, and for a 24 hr endurance race). Garage 56 entries are also required to agree to use the propulsion method 3-4 years down the track - in an official le mans car - it's not just a PR excercise, it requires investment. It is, nonetheless, designed to stretch boundaries rather than demonstrate an alternative that is immediately competitive with the other cars.
As for those saying it's irrelevant... it's more relevant than any other form of racing. The advances made to diesels at racing level allow developments to trickle down to road cars - things like high pressure direct injection, alloy blocks, these are things that require investment, and the investment comes from racing. Whilst KERS may not seem to bear any resemblance to any road cars, Ferrari have already said they're using KERS developed technology in their new flagship, and Mazda are (I believe) releasing a mechanical hybrid using a flywheel device in the near future.
If it was immediately obvious how racing technology could be applied to road cars, someone else would come along and do something more extreme. Racing is where the investment is, if racing rules can provide direction for new technologies, then there's no doubt that they can be used to benefit road cars down the track.
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Monday 24th June 2013 13:47 GMT JP19
Re: It's a Garage 56 Car
"I believe the car has it's own petrol motor"
Up vote for being the only poster noticing it is a hybrid with a petrol engine which is going to be running flat out all the time.
"ZEOD" is as bullshit as the "Zero Emissions" you can have plastered on the side of your Leaf.
You stop the engine and it 'runs' for a bit on emissions already produced by the engine or a power station somewhere.
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Monday 24th June 2013 15:31 GMT James Hughes 1
Re: It's a Garage 56 Car
Ah, but when you have a engine running at a constant speed, it's is at its most efficient - always at the top of the HP/Torque curve. That's why its more efficient to use an electric transmission - the petrol part is always at max efficiency - which is how this car works. You also have KERS which is much more easily added since you already have storage for electricity, and could also use the heat recovery and exhaust KERS destined for 2014 F1 cars.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 14:52 GMT Outcast
Kewl Electric
If they can make them this Cool I'm all for it (at a sensible price for us paupers !!)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=YP1O-BpGBBk
Thread that's taken from.... http://forums.overclockers.com.au/showthread.php?t=1042959&highlight=electric+vehicle
Their latest project... http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=z9bPY-xXFCQ
Thread .. http://forums.overclockers.com.au/showthread.php?t=1073960
Yes you'll probably have to join the forum to view the thread. Not much I can do about that other than to say they are kewl projects.
Oh.. And they sound great too.
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Sunday 23rd June 2013 18:12 GMT mrfill
Electric racing vehicles
For 4 years now 100% electric powered bikes have competed at the TT in their own race (TT Zero). The race is one lap (37.73 miles) and the winning speed has gone from 96.82mph to 109.68mph - such is the speed of development. Some of them also look pretty amazing.
Electric vehicle racing is already here and it can only help to advance the development of battery technology.
EVs will be around for a few years until hydrogen cells become more practical. All that's needed is a cheap method of extracting the universe's most abundant element from a source - sea water probably.
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Monday 24th June 2013 07:02 GMT Chemist
Re: Electric racing vehicles
"All that's needed is a cheap method of extracting the universe's most abundant element from a source - sea water probably."
Depends what you mean by cheap. You still need a source of energy at least equivalent to the energy that you are going to get back by 'burning' the hydrogen. And that assumes a method of generating hydrogen at high efficiency and that hopefully doesn't involve carbon. Electrolysis doesn't look too good at the moment even with a lot of development.
Storage and distribution of hydrogen is still a big issue.
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Monday 24th June 2013 00:57 GMT Resound
I've seen that shape before
So that's what they've done with their Delta Le Mans car. There was a fascinating video of Chris Harris driving that a while ago and the fact that it was competitive with much less horsepower than other cars was touted as one of its advantages. I'm guessing that's at least partly down to tiny frontal area. I'm going to be fascinated to hear how this goes.
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Monday 24th June 2013 03:48 GMT Sorry that handle is already taken.
Re: I've seen that shape before
It was a shame not to see the Deltawing again this year, after last year's promising performance, but they weren't offered this year's garage 56 entry. The team that was offered the 56th entry, with a hydrogen fuel cell/electric car, couldn't make it to the grid, and with no reserve entries in the garage 56 program a reserve LMGTE Am car got the nod.
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