The US has the NEDRA. Its electric drag racing. Electric cars currently work better for races that are ~400mgray41 wrote:I enjoyed it, I took it for what it was, don't compare it to other racing categories unless you can point me in the direction of another fully electric series.
And you want to compare a national drag series to FE?Pierce89 wrote:The US has the NEDRA. Its electric drag racing.gray41 wrote:I enjoyed it, I took it for what it was, don't compare it to other racing categories unless you can point me in the direction of another fully electric series.
Yes the tone would get very harsh in different camera views. It was only harsh when there were multiple cars, a single car didn't seem to generate the bad sound. I think Mnzo (sp) above may be right, it could be the reduction gears, and something about the high end sound there and when multiple cars are all generating that at the same time.Andres125sx wrote:I´m not sure if I get it, but I think you mean the tone was too high and even when it was not high in volume it was harsh on your ears?theblackangus wrote:I agree with all of your points except this one. I'm not one to complain about sound, yeah I like the sound of a good v6/v8/v10/v12 or even the quiet thrum of the desiel lemans prototypes. I liked the sound of the Formula E cars from the initial youtube videos. However when I watched the race on a good TV with good speakers the sound was overwhelming (much like being next to a 20k rpm v10 when its reving, but just quieter) to the point where it just hurt my ears. Certain camera/mic positions were ok, but many were very harsh on the ears the way a non-electric motor just isn't. I don't mind quiet cars I mind the harsh sound.
I hope either via sound engineering (in production) or engineering of the actual electric motor itself the sound can be made less harsh.
Did you test with different modes? There usually are different modes: spectacles, sports, cinema, music... and they handle different tones in different ways
They must be using sensible microphones to record as much of the sound as they can, not an expert about sound, but that could be a problem. When you hear something through TV low tones almost dissapear, while high ones are much easier to replicate. I guess they (TVs) also need some experience for a good FE broadcasting, there were many things they could have done much better, as camera positioning
Wow! If you read, my whole point is that current tech is much better suited to drag racing. At the moment full EVs aren't suitable for racing. They should've gone for series hybrids more efficicient and less complex than a parallel hybrid. A series hybrid would still only have electric drive, you just use a low constant rpm ICE to generate electricity.Andres125sx wrote:And you want to compare a national drag series to FE?Pierce89 wrote:The US has the NEDRA. Its electric drag racing.gray41 wrote:I enjoyed it, I took it for what it was, don't compare it to other racing categories unless you can point me in the direction of another fully electric series.
Apples to oranges, drag races are under 10 seconds, so battery is not a problem when that´s the main challenge for any other electric racing series
I read it... nowPierce89 wrote: Wow! If you read, my whole point is that current tech is much better suited to drag racing. At the moment full EVs aren't suitable for racing. They should've gone for series hybrids more efficicient and less complex than a parallel hybrid. A series hybrid would still only have electric drive, you just use a low constant rpm ICE to generate electricity.
richard_leeds wrote:How much do they weigh? I can't help thinking that splitting those into say 2 or 4 units would enable a "refuelling" pitstop rather than swapping cars.
http://www.fiaformulae.com/en/guide/car.aspx?page=1334RESS
A Rechargeable Energy Storage System (RESS) is a system that is designed to propel the car via the electric motor. In order to comply they must be:
- FIA Standard
- The maximum weight of the Battery Cells and/or Capacitor of the RESS must not be higher than 200kgs
- All Battery Cells must be certified to UN Transportation Standards as a minimum requirement
I'm wondering about how much power would it be? Significantly more than what a motor's (which was only designed with propulsion in mind) peak power would be?autogyro wrote:Electromagnetic braking is great if you can find somewhere to send all the electrical energy instantly.
Wheel motors increase unsprung weight.
Sorry I did not reply earlier about rim motors, I am still looking.
I suspect there's a chance the desired braking power might exceed what's needed for propulsion. Though maybe they can handle it for short bursts.Andres125sx wrote:Electromagnetic braking.....
I wonder how effective it is. If it works, that´s the future hands down.
Regenerative braking at the four wheels and get rid of brake disks, wich are the best way to waste tons of energy
But I´m not sure if electromagnetic braking is enough to stop a car similar to brake discs, or if it will be able to be similar some day wich is the important point.
I'm aware. (see also: 1 2 ) You're missing the point. I didn't disagree with that. What I say is that gears, especially gearboxes waste a LOT of energy. I doubt it can be close to being less wasteful than a well designed, direct drive motor.machin wrote:As far as I know efficiency loss from a gearbox is anything but "slight". It negates anything efficiency wise and takes a bunch more.
I disagree, an electric motor efficiency map is anything but flat (e.g. http://www.neweagle.net/support/wiki/do ... /PP150.pdf), which is where the multispeed gearbox comes in (by allowing the motor to run in the "highest efficiency zone" for more of the time, despite the fact that the gearbox introduces an additional inefficiency.
In weight and size it's probably inherent, by laws of physics that they are heavier since gears multiply torque.machin wrote:Whilst it is true that they are getting lighter, I've yet to see an application where it is not better ( in terms of weight and size) to use a higher speed motor and gearbox combination, (even for in-wheel applications):-
- RC planes (as per Andres125sx post)
- Starter Motors (one of my previous posts; look up Brise starter motors for info)
- Formula Student (AndyL's previous post)
- Formula E (Let's not forget that Williams and McLaren, who are responsible for the arrangement used on Formula E, are not stupid).
- Drayson-Lola (one of my previous posts)
Capacitors?autogyro wrote:Electromagnetic braking is great if you can find somewhere to send all the electrical energy instantly
They don´t need to be at the wheel, a drive shaft solve it, specially if you still need brake discs. If not a drive shaft would be problematic to apply too much braking torque, but if it´s not the case why not?autogyro wrote:Wheel motors increase unsprung weight.
autogyro wrote:Sorry I did not reply earlier about rim motors, I am still looking.