Looking at the Formula E battery pack (here) (which is admittedly slightly over-engineered for reliability), it weighs 200kg, and has a useable energy storage of 28kW.hrs (100.8MJ) and has a maximum output of 200kW. If you were using the full 200kW output that battery pack would give you just 8.4 minutes of full power use! If you factor in a couple of red flags and therefore a couple of re-runs at one of your events, I wouldn't want to have a battery pack much smaller than this at one of the longer venues....andylaurence wrote:Given that the longer events are up to 140 seconds in length and that a day's racing consists of 3-7 minutes behind the wheel, I'd rather bet on 15C discharge in real terms. I could go for something like these cells, which have a greater energy density but a lower peak power output. To match my current engine, I'd need ~80kg at 10C, which would let me run a whole event without recharging, but that pack would be capable of 450bhp peak, which is somewhat over-specced. My current engine is 69kg, but by going electric, I can ditch the engine, gearbox, exhaust, ECU, fuel tank, radiator, coolant, oil, etc. All that's needed to replace all of that is a motor, controller and battery pack.
As we've established a few pages back you also wouldn't want to be chucking out the gearbox if you want to maximise performance... and you'll still need the heat exchanger and coolant....
Add the weight of the motor of 40kg (5kW per kg according to this source, and the weight of the controller ??kg, and you're probably looking at somewhere around the 280 to 300kg mark for a reliable electric propulsion system giving 200kW of power for 8.4 minutes. Maybe 200kg total weight if you pared down to 5 minutes of full power?
....I don't think I'd be throwing your ICE away just yet....
Now someone like Autogyro will probably say it is all a big conspiracy and the Formula E battery weights could be much lower than this if the series weren't a fixed spec formulae... hopefully in year two the weight rules will be made such that the bare chassis must weigh something like 450kg, but with no lower limits to the battery weight... (with say a 200kg maximum battery weight). That would really promote battery development.
(In defence of the Formula E battery pack; the battery pack in the Drayson-lola LMP1-based EV supposedly has a capacity of 30kWhrs (108MJ) (source here), and weighs approx. 300kg (source here). In short: I don't think scaling up those RC batteries gives a fair representation of the actual weight of pack required for full-scale automotive use...)