paximperium
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 30, 2008
- Messages
- 10,696
Que?ICE not Fuel Cell.
Que?ICE not Fuel Cell.
That car you linked to is an internal combustion engine not a fuel cell which can't be run at low temperatures.Que?
It's been invented, but it's still one of those "Look what we can do" prototypes. Part of what the inventors had in mind was parking in tight spaces. You could stop the car next to the parallel parking space you want to get into, turn all four wheels 90°, and slide into the spot straight sideways. Also, the one they invented has some strange tilting up and folding down trick to decrease its length after the people are out of it, so a bunch of them could be packed even tighter.What I'd really like to see is a car with four in-wheel electric motors, getting rid of all the driveline weight. ETA - Also means you get full traction control for nothing, and you have motor redundancy.
Very few are still being made. The minivan killed them in the late 1980s.How about a good station wagon?
"ICE" does not mean "ice". It means "Internal Combustion Engine".Que?
http://www.teslamotors.com/models/index.php
Further to the Tesla Roadster, Tesla have unveiled their new model S-Type.
Specs seem very promising: 300 mile range , 0-60 in 6 seconds
Very nice looking motor, would buy one if I had a bit of spare cash ($57,000)
What I'd really like to see is a car with four in-wheel electric motors, getting rid of all the driveline weight. ETA - Also means you get full traction control for nothing, and you have motor redundancy.
That is probably wrong. The materials used in motors are more exotic than the materials used in your average engine. I remember reading that neodyinum magnets were actually developed by the automobile industry because of the problem sourcing the materials needed for sarium cobalt magnets.In the long term I see electric cars becoming cheaper than conventional motor vehicles.
Once batteries become mass produced, costs will plummet.
An electric car drivetrain is far simpler, basically an electric motor coupled to batteries.As opposed to a complicated combustion engine, gearbox, radiator,exhaust, oil pump, water pump etc. Simpler, less parts, therefore cheaper.
From a maintenance perspective electric vehicle would also be cheaper.
My glimpse to the future would be that you could choose motor size and battery capacity when purchasing vehicle.
Do you see any future for Hydrogen Internal Combustion Engines?That car you linked to is an internal combustion engine not a fuel cell which can't be run at low temperatures.
The problem is that many of them had virtualy no hybrids made for them. There were what a 100 Yukon Hybrids made?
technoextreme said:That car you linked to is an internal combustion engine not a fuel cell which can't be run at low temperatures.
That is probably wrong. The materials used in motors are more exotic than the materials used in your average engine. I remember reading that neodyinum magnets were actually developed by the automobile industry because of the problem sourcing the materials needed for sarium cobalt magnets.
Strangely enough, I don't actually have any use for a car that can do 0-100 km/h in 4 seconds. I currently drive a Suzuki Jimny, which has a seriously underpowered 1.3 litre engine. It doesn't use huge amounts of petrol, can carry all my camping gear, utilising the roofracks, and I never have to worry about getting bogged.How about double or nothing?
I am trying to remember the reason why you don't see them in cars. Though thanks for rebooting that memory because I have seen reluctance motors before.Variable reluctance motors only require iron and copper/aluminium.
Wrong. First of all saying you can run a fuel cell at low temperatures is a bit on the dumb side because it doesn't mean you want to do that. Second of all I would like some sources because the biggest problem is carbon monoxide poisoning.Not true. All the major manufacturers have been able to run fuel cells at low temperatures. The biggest problem was the seals would be damaged by the water freezing, but they have overcome this issue. However, there are still limits, and extreme temperatures (-15 F) still make it impossible to use.
I am trying to remember the reason why you don't see them in cars. Though thanks for rebooting that memory because I have seen reluctance motors before.
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Thanks.The biggest problem to overcome is torque ripple. The most straightforward approach is to use a sensor to provide feedback on the rotor position and modulate the drive accordingly, but the sensor raises reliability and cost issues, so more advanced methods are being developed which can deduce the rotor position without a discrete sensor by using the currents / voltages in the phases of the motor windings.
My camping gear is a lot more than fifteen grocery bags' worth. Large tent, big tarp for shade with attendant poles, ropes, pegs, etc, queen size self-inflating mattress, esky, second tent for #girlfriend's son, drums, guitar, tables, chairs, assorted food & drink paraphenalia, etc.It holds plenty of cargo - certainly enough for my camping gear. I think the real drawback is that its just a two-seater. The Tesla easily has it beat in terms of people carrying.
lol.. not what I'd call "camping", but we each have our own definition. For Ms Madurobob its "anything less than a four-star hotel".My camping gear is a lot more than fifteen grocery bags' worth. Large tent, big tarp for shade with attendant poles, ropes, pegs, etc, queen size self-inflating mattress, esky, second tent for #girlfriend's son, drums, guitar, tables, chairs, assorted food & drink paraphenalia, etc.