Monday, May 25, 2009

Getting the power to the road

Having thoroughly discussed wheelmotors on here, I think it’s time to change subject completely and talk about wheelmotors.

Yes, you did read that right, and no I haven’t lost it.

Several home-built EVs, especially ones done for-cheap (For instance, Forkenswift), they’re done with DC motors taken from old forklift trucks. Usually the “drive” motor is used, and all is well. But flicking through the Princess Auto catalog a little while ago (What else do you do at 2:30am when you can’t sleep?), I came across a few interesting things, not least were some small, but reasonably spec’d Hydraulic motors. (I can’t link to them, their website is stupid – If products have the same name, you can only see one of them!) A little more digging, and I find a set of things called “Inline Axial-Piston” motors, which have great characteristics (Torque up to 83 ft-lbs (each!), top speeds of 3-4000 RPM). So my thinking is that, perhaps, one could take the “Pump” motor from a forklift, hook up some high-pressure hoses, and have the basis for a very space-efficient vehicle. With no need for drive shafts at all, it gives all kinds of space for batteries, and if you were custom-designing your vehicle, you could have a flat floor with the batteries inside (Using thin cells like LiFePO4 laid on their sides, for example), a small “Engine” compartment with the motor, controller and hydraulic splitter, and just some high-pressure hoses going from there to the wheels. Driving the motors in series/parallel would give reliable performance with behaviour like a limited-slip differential, and the difference in displacement between the pump and motors will act as the gearbox. And the units themselves are reasonably small and light, which completely throws away the whole “messes up the handling” problem.

But I’m no hydraulics expert (Heck, I wouldn’t know where to begin, to be honest), so ideally what I’d really like is for some hydraulics guru to take a look at this and tell me if I’m nuts for considering it. I know hydraulic drive is used in some low-speed vehicles (dump trucks, forklifts, that kind of thing). So why not high(er)-speed situations like this? We don’t need all 3000 RPM (heck, with 15” wheels and average tyres, you reach 120KPH (75MPH) at 1185RPM! 1500RPM would suit perfectly (give a little leeway for the racers out there :) )), but we do need the torque and power. Ideally, this system should also drive backwards. Not only for reversing the vehicle, but to be able to drive the motor ‘round, giving the option of regenerative braking too.

So, someone who has an idea what to do with these pipes and things, drop me a line and let me know if this’ll work or not.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Wheelmotors (yet again) and the Eliica

Yes, I’m going to talk about wheelmotors again. Mainly because I recently saw a video on the Japanese Eliica project. This uses 8 (yes, 8) custom designed and custom manufactured wheelmotors. Which, again, are not available for purchase anywhere. And this was debuted way back in 2004. Over 5 years ago. According to Wikipedia (Not the most reliable source, but it’ll do for this case), there are only 2 in existence, and while they’re fast (370 kph, or 230mph for you old-world proponents), and have a decent range (200km/120miles for the “Speed” version, 320km/200miles for the “Street” version), no-one is anywhere near touching them, or the technology they’re made from.

Just what is happening with the motor industry? It’s obvious the technology exists out there – all my previous posts here show it’s around. All we need is someone to take these disparate parts, put them together into one working shell, and float it on the market. Tesla is leading the way, but we need more. And while Obama’s plan in the US to incentivise EV production may also help the home converter, there’s still a lot of hurdles needed to jump before any kind of EVs really make it into the mainstream. And when the media stops with the whole “Look at this insane person – he took a working car and turned it into a high-speed golf cart” angle, and move closer to “covers all local commuting, costs $0.10 to ‘fill’, built by a novice for less than $5,000, will last for 10 years”, they might start getting the public more interested, and less amused.

On the subject of frozen metals

I have been reliably informed that LiFePO4 batteries will actually warm themselves in use (The internal resistance generates a little heat). This means, with a well-insulated battery box (and plenty of fresh-air cooling for during the summer), using and charging the batteries will keep them nicely within their operating temperature.

Of course, another idea would be to funnel “exhaust” air from the cabin through the battery box on it’s way out of the vehicle, too. As LiFePO4 are sealed, there’s no need to worry about gassing (As you need to with PbA). And at –40, you can bet the cabin heater will be running!

So then all you have to worry about is when the vehicle is sitting idle and not charging, say at a place of work with no available outlets. Then you really do have a problem, and it might be an idea to fit some kind of “command start” system for remote warming, or a temperature monitoring device, to ensure the cells don’t get too cold. And I believe it would be quite simple to repurpose a system for ICE cars (yes, they have them – keep your car nice and warm while you pop into the shops, it just idles the gas engine while it waits. Talk about inefficient!) to do a similar task for a battery box.

So, it seems, for Canadian conditions, LiFePO4 cells are the best bet. For now, anyway.

Monday, May 18, 2009

EV Speeds Calculator

Here is a nice little EV speed calculator…



Tyre Types should be entered using their standard notation (For example: “P175/35 R14”), or you can enter the numbers manually. Gear and Differential ratios are entered in standard x:y ratio format.

If you have any problems with it, drop me a line in the comments, and let me know what browser you’re using.