No, only FIA approved cells.chaoticflounder wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 01:38Speaking of battery design, are battery and cell development open for the 2026 regs? I would have thought that would be quite appealing for the OEM backed teams to support, imagine that would be seen as money well spent. Thoughts?
Present lithium battery technology sits at about 350 Whr/kg so a 350 kW formula car will need a 1000kg battery to run for 1 hour.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 13:25Hmm not really. As i said, depends on the pace each MJ can unleash over a lap, above the normal electrical deployment, current battery capcity and how quickly you can swap a battery in a pitstop.
It may not need to have much more battery density than what we have now... The ever immiment solid state battery tech might coincide with 2026.
Agreed. Until the teams come up with an aerogel-like battery technology that they can house in the honeycomb spaces of the chassis layup, it's just going to be too heavy, IMHO.gruntguru wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 05:18Present lithium battery technology sits at about 350 Whr/kg so a 350 kW formula car will need a 1000kg battery to run for 1 hour.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 13:25Hmm not really. As i said, depends on the pace each MJ can unleash over a lap, above the normal electrical deployment, current battery capcity and how quickly you can swap a battery in a pitstop.
It may not need to have much more battery density than what we have now... The ever immiment solid state battery tech might coincide with 2026.
2 hours - 2000 kg
2 hours @ 700 kW - 4000 kg.
Batteries in the laboratory are about twice as good, so perhaps F1 could get that down to a 2 ton battery.
wuzak wrote: ↑08 Aug 2023, 02:32That day is a very long way away.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑07 Aug 2023, 20:20The idea is that once there is a large enough battery capacity and a net charging deficit over the race, there is a cross-over point where swapping the battery during a pit stop can give a shorter race time.
It doesn't matter about battery technology.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 13:25Hmm not really. As i said, depends on the pace each MJ can unleash over a lap, above the normal electrical deployment, current battery capcity and how quickly you can swap a battery in a pitstop.
It may not need to have much more battery density than what we have now... The ever immiment solid state battery tech might coincide with 2026.
You're saying 350kWh battery for a 1 hour race? Obviously 1 hour at full power.gruntguru wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 05:18Present lithium battery technology sits at about 350 Whr/kg so a 350 kW formula car will need a 1000kg battery to run for 1 hour.PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑09 Aug 2023, 13:25Hmm not really. As i said, depends on the pace each MJ can unleash over a lap, above the normal electrical deployment, current battery capcity and how quickly you can swap a battery in a pitstop.
It may not need to have much more battery density than what we have now... The ever immiment solid state battery tech might coincide with 2026.
2 hours - 2000 kg
2 hours @ 700 kW - 4000 kg.
Batteries in the laboratory are about twice as good, so perhaps F1 could get that down to a 2 ton battery.
That calculation couldn't be more naive... As if motors are constantly working at their peak power, and re-gen doesn't exist.gruntguru wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 05:18Present lithium battery technology sits at about 350 Whr/kg so a 350 kW formula car will need a 1000kg battery to run for 1 hour.
2 hours - 2000 kg
2 hours @ 700 kW - 4000 kg.
Batteries in the laboratory are about twice as good, so perhaps F1 could get that down to a 2 ton battery.
That's that's mutually exclusive with reality. Material makes a battery, and most of an aerogel is air.
Formula E has exclusive rights to open wheel electric racing cars until then, or later (may be 2037).
The info we have on that is on a rumor level. We don't know any details, if any.
Sometimes, I wonder if my humor is really that hard to understand. My point was -exactly- that it would never happen by being overly obviously ridiculous...mzso wrote: ↑11 Aug 2023, 16:38That calculation couldn't be more naive... As if motors are constantly working at their peak power, and re-gen doesn't exist.gruntguru wrote: ↑10 Aug 2023, 05:18Present lithium battery technology sits at about 350 Whr/kg so a 350 kW formula car will need a 1000kg battery to run for 1 hour.
2 hours - 2000 kg
2 hours @ 700 kW - 4000 kg.
Batteries in the laboratory are about twice as good, so perhaps F1 could get that down to a 2 ton battery.
That's that's mutually exclusive with reality. Material makes a battery, and most of an aerogel is air.
The 2026 rules are set enough that 6 manufacturers are deep in development for their power units.