For family cars we need 4x 30-50 hp units. If the motor can weigh around 7 kg it can be placed directly on wheel. Adding durable brake discs (rarely used) and 2 inverters front ad back and we have the EV platform of the next 100 years
For family cars we need 4x 30-50 hp units. If the motor can weigh around 7 kg it can be placed directly on wheel. Adding durable brake discs (rarely used) and 2 inverters front ad back and we have the EV platform of the next 100 years
Motors in each wheel eats tires.
Personally, I'd rather see FWD with 1 100HP motor in a 2200-lb 4-seater under $20K US, but that will never happen as the supply is artificially constrained to create high-end cachet.
I assumed it was to target the most motivated, price-insensitive buyers while recouping fixed costs.
do we need disk brakes?
As opposed to relying solely on engine braking (or the EV equivalent thereof)?
I'd personally prefer a belt-and-suspenders approach.
Yes, you must be able to stop independently in the case of some kind of total power failure in the drivetrain.
Can regen brakes keep a car stopped? I would think that the braking force diminishes as the rotor speed approaches zero so it wouldn’t keep you in place on a steep hill, but I’m not sure.
In my experience, it’s usually but not always enough for the hills in SF. But more importantly, regen can’t handle emergency braking (it would generate too much current and heat), and you can’t regen at all if the motor loses its path to the battery.
Good point, I guess the motor could be engaged just enough to hold the car still on a slope but there might be heat issues doing that for too long. Mechanical brake will do that easily so also needed for that reason.
At the very least you need something to keep the car from rolling away when it's parked.
well you could have really cheap drum brakes that probably would last the lifetime of the vehicle. Maybe not even hydraulic - electro-mechanical with a mechanical (E brake) fallback.
even better a motor brake already is a thing. Its kinda of like air brakes, requires current to disengage and looks liek a little clutch thats slapped on the shaft or housing.