Auto, thank you for some good technical input.autogyro wrote:A conventional planetary geartrain requires an operating system and a direct engagement clutch. If the system chosen is mechanical, pneumatic or hydraulic then it will be heavier, bulkier and more complex than the current layshaft control systems. This thread is in general terms and in such terms the planetary geartrain would not be chosen.
I must say; I disagree with your thought that an electrically actuated epicyclic gearbox would be lighter than a hydraulically actuated one however (which is implied in your answer, but not actually written).
I am looking at a similar problem at work at the moment; we need to power 6 winches. The winches are used one at a time (I.e not simultaneously), and each is about 7kW. we can either fit hydraulic motors or electric motors to them. The hydraulic motors are far smaller and lighter (roughly 1/5th of the equivalent electric motor weight).... but of course they do require a hydraulic pump, tank, fluid and piping to power them. since we only want to power one winch at a time, it means we only need one 7kW (plus a little for system losses) hydraulic pump unit. The hydraulic system works out far lighter and a lot less volume than the all-electric solution. Plus we can place the hydrualic pump unit wherever we want so we can package the system better whereas the electric system has to have a big heavy motor right there on each winch....
Replace "winch" for gear ratio and its basically the same engineering problem... e.g like my winches; we only want to change gears one at a time so we can use one hydraulic pump for the whole gearbox rather than one electric motor for each ratio . in fact an F1 car already has a hydraulic pump so the weight gain for hydraulic actuation of the planetary is even less...
now I know you'll say the electric motors in your gearbox serve a dual purpose; being also the KERS motor/generators, but I think this makes the situation worse.... imagine the scenario where all but one of the gearboxes stages is freely rotating... that means only one motor can be providing KERS power/charging and that means it must solely be sized for the full KERS output.... the result is that every other electric motor is merely an extra weight to the car.... don't you agree?