Zero-60 in 3.1 Seconds, Batteries Included 230
FloatsomNJetsom writes "Popular Mechanics has a very cool video and report about test-driving Hybrid Technologies' L1X-75, a battery powered, 600-hp, carbon-fiber roadster that pulls zero-60 in about 3.1 seconds, and tops out at 175 mph. Of course, there are few creature comforts inside, but that's mainly because the car's 200 mile range is meant for the track, not the road. Nonetheless, Popular Mechanics takes the car for a spin up 10th Avenue in NYC. Oh, and the car recharges via a 110 outlet. They also test-drove Ford's HySeries Edge, a hydrogen fuel-cell powered, plug-in series hybrid that, unlike the L1X-75, is unfortunately at least 10 years away from production and nearly 100 mph slower."
Not bad at all. (Score:5, Insightful)
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The bike (singular) is even faster (Score:5, Interesting)
Since then, it was repowered with A123Systems' LiFePO4 cells. It now does 0-60 in 1.5 seconds [typepad.com] and the quarter mile in 8.16.
Electrics need not be slow, and their range is growing by leaps and bounds. The ICE has received its terminal diagnosis; the future is electric.
Faster than jumping out of a plane (Score:2)
18m/s^2
Re:Faster than jumping out of a plane (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Not bad at all. DISPENSE (Score:4, Funny)
Just dispense with the front wheel altogether and race a unicycle. All the weight over the wheel, and no way to lift it off.
Or put the wheels side-by-side Segway style.
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One axis of stability is fun.
Zero is
Re:Not bad at all. DISPENSE (Score:4, Funny)
You know, putting the wheels side by side just might revolutionize transportation.
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Seven years ago I saw an electric bike built for an engineering student project with similar acceleration and very good handling. They pulled the motor out of a dead suzuki bike and replaced it with a batteries and an electric motor to give almost the same centre of mass (slightly lower) and set the gearing to give very good acceleration from 0-80kph and get there in a couple of seconds, faster acceleration than when the thing ran on petrol. It took off like a rocket and looke
Wrightspeed X1 (Score:3, Informative)
More info at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrightspeed_X1 [wikipedia.org] and http://www.wrightspeed.com/x1.html [wrightspeed.com]
Few creature comforts... (Score:2)
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Actually, it's only 0.88g. Which is still a LOT for acceleration in a car, but nothing like the 6-10g that people can handle momentarily before they start to black out.
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Actually, it's only 0.88g. Which is still a LOT for acceleration in a
car, but nothing like the 6-10g that people can handle momentarily before
they start to black out.
How about the rest of the story? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, and in how many days to pass that much energy back into your car. Not exactly a candidate for a quick pit stop, unless they can swap the entire battery pack in 10 seconds.
Re:How about the rest of the story? (Score:5, Funny)
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Even the older VRSLA batteries (like those used to start your ICE) used in most home-brew conversions can be recharged in 3-4 hours off a 30A circuit (dump charging from one battery
electric (Score:2)
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Now if we can just get them to string overhead wires on the Interstates...
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Actually, I'd go farther and have autopilot too, so the cars can draft on each other safely. But then you have to convince people that an automatic system that occasionally fails and kills people is better than a manual system where you're only as safe as the worst driver on the road and which routine
Make electric cars cool (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/7.03/drag_pr.h
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Re:Make electric cars cool (Score:4, Interesting)
So, I'm a wierdo. But I did manage to find a wife who agrees with me on noise, so I'm not alone, just outnumbered.
Less glibly: I would love to be able to eliminate my motorcycle tailpipe and make it completely silent. I've heard that this would make me less safe, but I've noticed that when driving, I've never heard a motorcycle coming up behind me. Even the ones with loud pipes.
Regards,
Ross
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Oh, man, think of the choices! Without the noise of a combustion engine, you can hook up a sound system and generate whatever sound you want -- UFO, pod-racer, F-4 on afterburners, TIE fighter, you name it...
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John's website is http://www.plasmaboyracing.com/ [plasmaboyracing.com] . There you can find videos of his latest races (and other escapades). This year he expects to be breaking into the mid-11's in the 1/4 mile. Not bad for a 1972 Datsun 1200 with no transmissio
It's all about continuity and safety (Score:2)
Tesla (Score:2, Informative)
More info (Score:5, Informative)
No price mentioned other than "six figures".
Brushless motors have pretty much unlimited power (Score:5, Insightful)
So while you may have 600hp to accelerate, you may only have 50hp of continuous power. This may be exactly what you want in a car, but the term may be somewhat meaningless.
Instead of a gas engines power/torque curve vs rpm, a power curve vs time would give us this information.
When? (Score:2, Insightful)
Free the atoms! Free the atoms!!
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When we have a tested reactor design that is not a 1960s dinosaur that can only break even by selling weapons materials at 1960s prices. For civilian purposes it currently is just an expensive way to boil water. The future is to advocate research into something better and not the current lobby tactic of pushing bad designs for a government handout. It also isn't that the plants are not allowed - it has been
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Very little, even in absolute terms (and especially in relative terms). I'm no mining engineer but I've toured uranium mines and yellowcake processing facilities -- no real difference than any other hardrock mine, and a lot cleaner that e.g. the smelters used to burn the sulphur out of copper ores.
Recall that a uranium fuel pellet the size of your thumb can provide the energy equivalent of
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Plus the amount of energy needed to transport it to all of the coal-fired power plants.
MSRP? (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm all for green power, green transport, et. al. But if it costs me more than my house, what's the point? Nobody will buy it because nobody can afford it, good intentions or not.
Now if all automakers would suddenly convert over to pure carbon-fiber bodies, CF production costs would (eventually) plummet to the point where it's the same cost (or cheaper) than steel. But that's not likely to happen anytime soon.
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Porsche, Ferrari, Lambo. . . (Score:2)
Yet, somehow those companies manage to stay in business. I wonder how that is possible?
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So. . . He says nobody will buy them. That's demonstrably untrue, since over 350 people have already put down deposits to reserve Tesla Roadsters. In the world where I live, nobody means nobody, it doesn't mean 350 people. I don't know wh
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Ford Hybrid (Score:4, Insightful)
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If I were Toyota, I'd be cutting back US sales, because if things get bad enough for GM and Ford, both the unions AND the money will be lobbying for tariffs and other protective measures. And don't think Toyot
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And? (Score:2)
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the corvette does all that with only 100HP? that's amazing.
Context please (Score:2)
For those of us who are not total gearheads, how is 3.1 seconds for 0 to 60 compared to internal combustion engines? Anyone have a chart of 0 to 60 times for Ferrari, Lamborghini, Porsche and various types of race cars?
some context (Score:3, Informative)
The Veyron is the so-called "most expensive production car", so 3.1 seconds would be considered very good. All speed numbers from Wikipedia. Anyone in the world can write anything they want about any subject -- so you know you are getting the best possible information.
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So you watch The Office too?
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Thank you for the information. If one is into cars, I assume "0 to 60" times of various automobiles are pretty much encoded into one's DNA.
Why no Solar Cells? (Score:2)
I know solar cells have a dubious enviromental advantage but a small set on a spoiler or on the roof (silicon or the new type which is less efficent) would pr
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I don't get it. (Score:2)
Noone really want to go 0-60 in 3.5 seconds and reach 175mph, unless they're looking to die, and do it as fast as possible.
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Second, people who want a stable, safe, efficient vehecle doesn't mean they'll also want it to be slow.
Lastly, just because you don't want to do a 3.5 second 0-60 to reach 175, doesn't mean that "noone" wants to. Open you eyes.
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I'll open my eyes just in time for someone to drive me over at 175mph.
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Most production cars and SUVs are in the 6-10 second range as far as 0-60 acceleration is concerned. 3.5 is overkill. 5-6 would feel "fast" to the average consumer, and let them concentrate on efficiency.
"..doesn't mean that "noone" wants to. Open you [sic] eyes."
Hope that was intentional...
Add regenerative braking! (Score:2)
Electric Car Roundup (Score:4, Informative)
Tesla Roadster: http://www.teslamotors.com/ [teslamotors.com]
Tango: http://www.commutercars.com/ [commutercars.com]
UEV Spyder: http://www.universalelectricvehicle.com/spyder.ht
Wrightspeed X1: http://www.wrightspeed.com/x1.html [wrightspeed.com]
ZAP-X: http://www.zapworld.com/ZAPWorld.aspx?id=4560 [zapworld.com]
Silence: http://www.silenceinc.ca/accueilEN.htm [silenceinc.ca]
VentureOne: http://www.venturevehicles.com/ [venturevehicles.com]
Phoenix SUT & SUV: http://www.phoenixmotorcars.com/ [phoenixmotorcars.com]
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Just remember though, that sets of lights you can get through at 40mph you can also get through at 160mph!
Re:quarter mile time? (Score:4, Informative)
Because you can play games with gearing and traction to get a good 0-60 time. But 1/4 mile trap speed is hard to fake, and trap speed (even more than 1/4 mile E/T) correlates with how fast a car "feels" to drive in the real world or on a racetrack.
My car does about 11.7-8 @ 124 mph in the 1/4. I can pick up half a second of E/T just by going to sticky tires, but improving my trap speed is much harder. I've driven cars that are "as fast" as mine when you look at 0-60, but they don't feel anywhere near as fast in practice. Yeah, they'll keep up from 0-60 by dumping their clutch at high RPM. But coming out of a 40 mph turn on a track into a long 150 mph straight, I will totally obliterate them.
b
Re:quarter mile time? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Nor do internal combustion engine driven cars, with continuously variable transmission [chttp]. Williams tested it [cke-tech.com] in the early 90s - there's video of Coulthard accelerating from a standing start with the engine steady at peak revs the whole way, but it was banned by the FIA.
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What I would really like to see is a diesel on a CVT. In a sports car. No, seriously...by modulating the transmission ratio rather than the throttle you'd h
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Pfft.. my '92 Eclipse has NOS stickers, a CF spoiler, and a 6" tailpipe and it'll SMOKE that shit all day, any day.
Some concepts are closer to reality (Score:3, Informative)
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I would agree with your assessment on a normal market playing field. Auto manufacturers are no longer auto manufacturers; they are owned, run, influenced by holding corporations or corporations that influenced by many areas. Look and see where GM made most of its money in past years; not in making cars, but in the fincancing of cars; theirs or others. You know, make money on the razor blades, not the razor.
Another I watch is G.E. - they make nothing, directly, anymore. Good or bad company? I'm not sure.
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Apparently you watch them so well you don't bother to go to the "products" page on their website? For some examples, they make most of the world's jet engines, nearly all of North America's diesel-electric locomotives, and have a big chunk of steam turbine and wind turbine markets for power generation. Their primary work over the last decade or more has been increasing the efficiency of such systems, so I'd
Re:American car companies are tanking (Score:3, Insightful)
I used to have a 74 dart, held six adults, roomy trunk, I tried it once it would actually do 110 mph with the six banger in it, and it got around 25 miles per gallon, w
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Lightweight materials (like carbon fiber) allow you to built very strong frames.
The only catch is that it is very expensive.
Price, not strength, is
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Re:I'm guessing not a family car.. (Score:5, Insightful)
We can't even get people to wear seat belts and observe traffic laws - what are the odds we can get them to spend years developing high speed driving skills, to wear nomex garmets, full-face helmets, neck braces, undergarmet cooling systems, four point harnesses - and not have head-on collisions - and be willing to spend the several hundred thousand dollars for the carbon fiber bodies that F1 cars are using?
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Also the car bodies are expensive because they are one off handcrafted things - when it comes down to it they are polyester and the same sort of carbon fibre that is in an inexpensive fishing rod. Mass production isn't difficult - building the first set of moulds is the expensive bit.
Yeah, hydro dams do that (Score:4, Insightful)
It is caused by the water dropping down, releases ton of carbons. As for wind power, those blades are made of carbon and they just evaporate in the sun. Nasty stuff.
When will people finally get it into their head that the move to electric/hydrogen cars means that you break the direct link between your source of energy, and the energy to put in a moving vehicle?
A wind powered car would be inconvenient, by an electric car whose electricity comes from windpower isn't.
A country like greenland could use geothermal energy to create hydrogen and ship it to the rest of the world.
But yeah, some power plants currently use carbon based fuels, so electricity causes carbon pollution. We wouldn't want to confuse you.
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Your response was rude and hardly very enlightening.
Why is this red herring moderated up? (Score:5, Interesting)
You concentrate on the worse case scenario without even looking into it. You can look up carbon content per megajoule of energy today and do the comparison numbers.
You will still produce much less net emissions by using an electric car because of it's much higher efficiency.
Under no circumstance is an electric car producing more net emissions. This long tailpipe argument is an old unsupported red herring.
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Re: Global Warming (Score:2)
Without digging into the production details and uncovering the carbon footprint, there is no way to know - my guess...not by any means, or they would have mentioned it.
Wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
REFERENCE: http://www.evadc.org/pwrplnt.pdf [evadc.org]
Re:Global Warming (Score:4, Insightful)
If all your electrical power comes from coal-fired plants, that's the dirtiest source of electricity we have, and the electric car still comes out slightly ahead on pollution. When you bring in other sources of any energy -- any other sources -- the numbers get better. You can burn natural gas, or run nuclear plants, you can do wind, solar, geothermal, hydro power, and your cars don't have to change.
And here's another fun fact. . . Many electrical power plants in the USA produce excess energy at night, when demand is low. It's not practical to shut the plants down and "cold start" them again the next morning, so they sit idling and producing power that is wasted. If we charged electric cars at night during that time, we could power tens of millions of them without having to build a single new generating plant.
Re:Mod parent -1 troll (Score:4, Funny)
It's shocking that a gasoline car advocate would add fuel to the fire by igniting an argument with electric car advocates. Maybe he doesn't have the capacity to understand the power of electric vehicles.
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Doesn't work, refer back to Newton, Faraday et al (Score:5, Informative)
You also have to accelerate the batteries as well as the rest of the vehicle, and of course the more batteries you have, the greater the mass to be accelerated. In fact, it doesn't take a genius to see that once you reach a certain size the weight of the driver is hardly a factor and any increase in power will scale precisely with increase in mass, and hence acceleration will rapidly asymptote to a nearly constant value.
The only way you can really improve this is to either produce batteries and control electronics which can produce more power for a given mass, or improve the efficiency of the drive chain significantly. Modern brushless motors and FET controllers are better than the old systems but there is not a lot more to gain. Battery technology - minimising internal resistance, developing polarisation free chemistry, finding completely reversible cycles that can handle high oxidation rates - is the key to producing high acceleration electrical vehicles.
Unfortunately, such are engineering tradeoffs that long life and high discharge rate rarely go together, and these experimental vehicles seem largely to be about either getting publicity or bragging rights. One thing is certain: factor in the battery manufacture and recycling costs, and they are no solution to global warming. I believe there is a claim that, when total life cost is taken into account, even some small SUVs are actually lower energy impact than a Toyota Prius.
Re:Doesn't work, refer back to Newton, Faraday et (Score:2, Informative)
Wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
I've seen this claim before. If this is "for certain", then I suppose it should be easy for you to produce some actual evidence to back it up. And please, don't bother linking to this [cnwmr.com] discredited [autobloggreen.com] study.
Re:Doesn't work, refer back to Newton, Faraday et (Score:4, Interesting)
No, the whole idea is to have all the pollution happen elsewhere - like at the top of a very tall stack instead of at ground level in the centre of a city. It's the same with hybrids - they are the solution to a city traffic problem and have a different transmission system that has benefit.
As for the SUV thing - yes you can cherry pick stuff and say that a one litre Suzuki Seirra is still an SUV but it all comes down to big heavy vehicles requiring more energy to move about whether they have a tonne of batteries or are just big to look impressive. A minivan with the aerodynamic properties of a brick can carry more people for far less energy than what I would normally call an SUV.
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More recently... (Score:2)
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There is even an EV racer out there competing with the gas cars in SCCA rac
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http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,2109194,00.a
Re:What is the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now I happen to think there's room in the transportation world for glorified golf carts that are capable of typical commuting trips. But not everyone agrees with me.
So you have to educate people that the electric drive trains have a variety of possibilities.