no they're not wrongAndres125sx wrote: ↑22 Jan 2019, 08:36Sorry but both statements are wrong. Torque needs power, not current, and power can be produced with high voltage and low current, low voltage and high current, or both similar.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑22 Jan 2019, 00:57the FE task helps the designer of EMs and their drives because the rpm and torque range is small as the max speeds are lowAndres125sx wrote: ↑21 Jan 2019, 21:33....... OTOH EMs work at max torque for a much wider range of rpm so they´re infinitely more versatile and the reason except size they the same no matter how different is the task
torque needs current and rpm needs voltage
And rpm don´t need voltage at all either, I fly RC planes with a motor that spins at 40k rpm with a 14V battery. IMHO 40k rpm is high rpm, and 14V low voltage
motor action F=BIL says that torque is proportionate to current
the voltage required to drive 1 Ampere current through a given motor will change proportionate to rpm
roughly .....
car starter motors produce max torque at 0 rpm when given 12 Volts
because the 'back emf' is 0 Volts the armature experiences a pd of 12 V so the current (and torque) is max (huge)
car starter motors produces zero torque at maybe 1000 rpm given 12 Volts
because the 'back emf' is 12 Volts the armature experiences a pd of 0 Volts the current (and torque) is zero
so if you wanted huge torque at 1000 rpm you'd need to give the motor 24 Volts
the drive of your drone motor will have an effect amounting to current managing (invisible to you) whereby .....
the armature doesn't experience anything like the pd changes as above
(the motor isn't on-line to the battery - it's driven by a series of pulses of managed voltage unconnected to battery voltage)
the EV and FE motors will also have internal current managing
that's how they operate at constant torque at low rpm and constant power at rpm above the constant torque range
but whatever the FE current (torque) managed limit is
FE will want to develop rather high torque at high rpm (to go fast down the straights)
so its drive will need to have a 'large' current capability (proportional to the 'large' torque limit) - sometimes unused
and a 'large' voltage capability (like the above starter motor 24 Volt example) - sometimes unused
due to this there is some element of inefficiency or waste
(as you have said regarding the constant torque/constant power ICE)
that element of inefficiency (greater on F1 tracks or LeMans) could be reduced by gearshifts
agreed gearshifts are not worthwhile in FE