Please explain your terms.mogur wrote: By the way, the relative useable efficiency of a ICE and BEV are not that much different if you look at the numbers carefully. It is just that the ICE has a higher level of residual and overall energy loss.
Please explain your terms.mogur wrote: By the way, the relative useable efficiency of a ICE and BEV are not that much different if you look at the numbers carefully. It is just that the ICE has a higher level of residual and overall energy loss.
edatoakrun wrote:Please explain your terms.mogur wrote: By the way, the relative useable efficiency of a ICE and BEV are not that much different if you look at the numbers carefully. It is just that the ICE has a higher level of residual and overall energy loss.
Considering it just sits on two bearings 9000 will not take much more power than 4000.nader wrote:I understand the whole 4-9000rpm motor efficiency thing. In this case it's how much of that electricity is turned into mechanical motion. Are you guys telling me that if I were to put this motor on a dyno and run it at 4,000 rpm and then at 9,000rpm that it's consuming the same amount of electricity? Conventional wisdom tells me that is not the case. Please school me.
Just look at the efficiency plot (far better than your typical dyno plot and even better than most BSFC plots you see for engines which typically only show BSFC at WOT) for the LEAF which I posted earlier from the SAE article:nader wrote:I understand the whole 4-9000rpm motor efficiency thing. In this case it's how much of that electricity is turned into mechanical motion. Are you guys telling me that if I were to put this motor on a dyno and run it at 4,000 rpm and then at 9,000rpm that it's consuming the same amount of electricity? Conventional wisdom tells me that is not the case. Please school me.
At highway speeds, anything you can do to lower wind resistance is going to have the biggest effect on range. Curb weight's effect on highway range (provided the road is fairly flat) is next to negligible unless we're talking about 30% reductions here. As it is - easiest thing to do to increase highway range is to slow down!nader wrote:So the bottom line is, lower the cD, drop curb weight or increase pack capacity in order to in increase highway range. (or all of the above).
A good (if Tesla-centric) general discussion, with illustrative graphics, of BEV efficiency compared to ICE, hybrid, and fuel cell Vehicles, is here:nader wrote:I understand the whole 4-9000rpm motor efficiency thing. In this case it's how much of that electricity is turned into mechanical motion. Are you guys telling me that if I were to put this motor on a dyno and run it at 4,000 rpm and then at 9,000rpm that it's consuming the same amount of electricity? Conventional wisdom tells me that is not the case. Please school me.
Side note: Because of this motor efficiency and lack of transmission I am guessing that drivetrain losses are much lower than a traditional ICEV.
-Nader