Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑02 Mar 2019, 00:16
....... Maybe with unlocking the full low end torque potential of an electric motor it will be uncontrollable?
Offtopic: For this efficiency reason Tesla switched in the Model3 to PM motors.
the induction motor works quite well uncontrolled eg by switching the (AC) mains on or off as in the traditional vacuum cleaner
it has inherently 'soft start' ie the starting torque is low so is useless for a gearless EV
the IM works much better 'inverter-driven' - whereby the 'supply' frequency and voltage are variable (as Tesla S)
this is of course open loop
any (AC) PM motor will be more efficient than the IM and controllable in the same way
so the EV doesn't need 'closed loop control' ie feedback from the motor to its drive
though the F1 mgu-h and mgu-k have this (I'd bet)
there's EM low end torque potential if the motor's field is strong - as it will be with a permanent magnet field
such a motor isn't normally uncontrolled ie on-off - the supply voltage will be controlled to vary the torque (eg toy train set)
the mgu-k is PM so has 'LET' characteristic but is always finely controlled eg to keep torque consistent with 120 kW power limit
usually motors are in torque/rpm characteristic inherently stable (or stable by control) - important where load isn't stable
stability means in EVs as in F1 the motor torque variation as road grip falls, somewhat emulates traction control and ABS
a motor can combine wound and PM fields - eg the Tesla 3 has a PM switched reluctance motor
ie a 'stepper' (open-loop) motor - (but unlike existing hybrid steppers, which have a PM in the rotor)
https://cleantechnica.com/2018/03/11/te ... -in-depth/