Efficiency? Think Racing Cars, Not Hybrids 1320
Gordonjcp writes "A renowned racing car designer has said that car manufacturers should be looking at making cars lighter to improve efficiency, rather than adding complex drive trains. In this article on the BBC News website, Professor Gordon Murray explains that a weight saving of 10% in a normal car would make more difference than switching to a hybrid engine and motor combination. Could this be the next nail in the SUV's coffin?"
In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
Not only that, but Murray also worked to finalize the design of the (already nearly complete) Caparo T1 [wikipedia.org], which is even quicker (0-60 in 2.5 seconds), and with less horsepower than the F1. How? It weighs about half a ton.
A different hybrid drive train can lower weight (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A different hybrid drive train can lower weight (Score:5, Informative)
I'd size it a little bigger than that, unless you can really cut down on weight. 70mph up a 15% grade is 4.7m/s of vertical lift. If the car weighs 1000kg, that's 61hp [google.com], not counting air drag or rolling resistance.
Re:A different hybrid drive train can lower weight (Score:5, Informative)
Geo metro only has a 51 Hp engine (Score:4, Informative)
Now imagine making it lighter and hybrid. No Doubt 20 Hp is sufficient.
Re:A different hybrid drive train can lower weight (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the reason flywheel energy storage is not used in vehicles. The flywheels turn at super-high rpms, amplifying this issue. AFS Trinity (formerly American Flywheel Systems, I think...) worked on the AFS-20 as a prototype flywheel car back in the mid 90s. They never got it working. The problem is that when you are driving, and you turn, precession causes a large amount of friction against your flywheel bearings as it resists the turn.
Last I heard, they were working on magnetic bearings, instead of physical ones, but there's been little progress released to the public so far.
The main advantage of a flywheel is that it can handle rapid charge / discharge, but ultracapacitors are another way to gain that benefit without the disadvantages of flywheels.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
On a real track or road, with full aerodynamic gear, an F1 car would smoke the Bugatti. For an idea of what an F1 can do, see this comparison [youtube.com] of Formula 1 Car vs Ferrari 550 Maranello vs Fiat road car.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
-safe
-cheap
Pick any two.
You can make a safe, lightweight car, such as a Formula 1, but it's going to cost you. Carbon composite isn't cheap. You can make a safe, cheap car. Just add a few hundred pounds of metal to the frame to strengthen it. But your fuel efficiency is going to be lousy. You can make a light, cheap car. Just strip away the frame until there's almost nothing left, but if you get into a serious crash, it's gonna be a coffin on wheels. There are other compromises too. Comforts like well-padded seats, and sound insulation that keep noise down, also result in increased weight. A larger engine is going to increase weight. And so on.
That's not to say that we couldn't find some relatively inexpensive, safe ways to improve mileage. We may not be able to fill the highways with cheap cars that get 50 mpg and survive like a tank in a crash, but shaving a few mpg off every new car produced over the next 5 years would do a hell of a lot to reduce consumption and emissions. And of course the other question is, are there other ways to get to our destination other than driving?
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Interesting)
Take a look at this picture [bridger.us]. Same speed. Same impact.
The Mini crumpled its whole engine bay. A total write-off. But the passenger compartment is barely touched.
The F-150 has a beautifully intact engine. It's unfortunately inside the cab where the people-puree would be oozing out.
Add on pickups having a consistently 20% higher fatality rate per million miles driven and you suddenly realize that stupid engineering combined with being in a hulking great target that can't get out of the way really doesn't compete with a small, light, quick to accelerate car that's simply not where the accident happens in the first place.
Case in point: About two weeks ago, my wife was in her Mini Cooper S in a parking lot, looking for a space. A Dodge (oxymoron if ever there was one) Ram (ah, far more accurate) reversed out without looking, straight at her. Had she been in an SUV, the back end of the Dodge would have gone through the side of it before the idiot had time to react and hit the brakes. The Dodge would have been trashed, she'd be dead or in a coma from the injuries. In the Mini, he put her foot down and was somewhere else while her SUV driving friend in the passenger seat asked, "How the hell did you do that?"
So, given the choice, I'd rather be in a well built car that folds the parts I'm not in when it gets hit, light enough to avoid more of the accidents anyway, than the hunk of American steel that deforms that steel in to right where I'm sitting.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Interesting)
It uses 2 clutches, a split fly wheel (inner and outer), and two input shafts. It can always keep 2 gears engaged with only 1 clutch engaged. Up-shifting takes a tiny fraction of a second as the two clutches switch states and the newly disengaged input shaft engages the next gear to be shifted into. Down shifts can take a hair longer, but are still in the sub-second range.
The down side though is that you can't (currently) feed it much over 250 ft-lbs of torque since the surface area on the flywheel is split between two clutches, you'll slip the clutch in no time with too much power and weight. But for a commuter car that isn't going to be taking a tuned engine and hard launches, the DSG is an amazing piece of engineering.
-Rick
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Informative)
You do realize that all the "entry level" cars, such as the Hyundai Elantra, Toyota Corolla, Honda Civic, etc. all come with manual transmissions standard, right? On all these cars, getting an automatic transmission is an option that adds to the cost of the car.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
When was the last time you bought a car? I bought my '07 Hyundai Elantra last year, and I can tell you that there were at least as many manual on the lot as there were automatics. I shopped Toyota Corollas and Honda Civics too (not as extensively), and they too had plenty of manuals on the lots.
As for incentive packages, I don't think I've ever seen an incentive package for one of these cars that said "You have to get the automatic version", in the fine print.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
More specifically, it's not the SUV's I worry about so much, it's the huge jacked up pickup trucks where their bumper is at approximately the level of my head in the Talon TSi I used to drive. All the crush space between my bumper and me will do me absolutely no good if the first thing to hit the other vehicle is my windshield pillar because the rest of the car goes *under* the other vehicle...
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
I remember a lecture from one of my profs who used to work with the NTSB. He mentioned crash fatality studies where moving from a car-car collision to a car-suv collision made little change on the probability of death to the SUV driver, but significantly increased the probability of death to the car driver. thus, according to that metric, the bigger vehicle only serves to increase the other person's chance of dying without making you any safer.
Watch this... (Score:4, Interesting)
http://pl.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1NHXiGd0rQ [youtube.com]
Which driver suffered more?
Re:See: mid/late 80s - early 90s cars (Score:4, Insightful)
I can assure you, living in the SE of the US, like in New Orleans, AC is not a luxury...pretty much a necessity if you wish to arrive at work, or anywhere else, and not look like a sweat soaked beggar. Most professional offices kind of frown on that.
Hell, down here...you turn on the AC at home basically in early April...and it really doesn't go off again till November.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
SC: I'm a smart car
SUV: And I'm an SUV
SC: You look a little thirsty, SUV.
SUV: I am. Ever since the price of gas went up, my owner started rationing my gas consumption.
SC: Aww, that's too bad, SUV.
SUV: Tell me about it. I mean, I was thirsty enough before. I could drink gas like there was no tomorrow.
SC: Well, SUV, if you kept drinking gas like that, there probably would be no tomorrow.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
Gas prices increasing to the point where driving a light, efficient car is the only option is not going to happen you say? I beg to differ. Here in The Netherlands, it's already happening. There has been an extreme increase in gas pricing the past year. You now pay E 1.65 per liter, which is about $ 9.21 per gallon. Yes, you read that right. For a full tank in a small to medium sized car (40 liters), you easily spend over 60 euros. That's $ 100 for a tank of gasoline.
Over here, even in the rich suburbs people are selling their SUV's and buying small cars like Mini's and Fiat Panda's. The number of SUVs sold is dropping rapidly. It was recently in the news that last year, the amount of SUV's sold was only 1/5 of the year before that.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Interesting)
It's the weight and the high center of gravity that play against the safety of the trucks. The mid-sized cars can swerve better and brake faster, and the cars are far less likely to roll over than trucks & SUVs. Basically, while trucks & SUVs can better protect the passengers in the event of a collision, they're more likely to get into collisions.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Giant SUV hybrids tend to get 2-3mpg more than their non-hybrid counterparts. They're a joke. And lots of midsize cars don't get much better gas mileage than SUVs. I drive a pickup truck which gets 15mpg. My wife drives a midsized GM car (I forget the model.) She gets 3mpg more than my truck.
The options for efficient cars really are pretty limited, and those which do exist are pretty highly sought after these days. There are waiting lists at all of the major dealerships within a 50 mile radius of me for any car which exceeds 30mpg.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Insightful)
That sounds ridiculous, and it is. Accidents happen. People who fail to realize that the world is a chaotic place outside the control of civilized or even uncivilized society will only be upset when they are shown evidence of this.
Cars do not cause accidents, guns do not cause murder, pencils do not cause spelling errors and pie does not cause obesity. The actions undertaken with the use of the "tool" is the cause and the perpetrator is to blame, not the devices. If there were no car, there would be carriage accidents. If no gun, there would be knife attacks. If no pencil, then coal would be used to misspell things on cave walls. If no pie, they would simply have to eat cake
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
You get in a Mazda Miata, drive off the road at 30mph, you run through a mailbox and crash into a light pole. You do the same thing in a Ford Excursion at 30mph, you go through the mailbox, pole, the two kids in their plastic wading pool, grandma whose watching them from a lawn chair, and crash in to the house, maiming mom and dad who were watching tv sitting against the wall you just drove through.
Bigger car = more potential for harming others.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Interesting)
Odd - slashdot managed to eat my post during preview.
In any case, here's the equation you want: E=0.5m*v^2. Know that the weight of a Miata is 940 Kg and that of an excursion is 3261kg. For the Miata to have the same kinetic energy as the Excursion at 30 mph, the Miata has to drive at 55 mph.
Who is the idiot who is driving 55 in a 30 mph zone?
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Funny)
most of the dipshits around my neighborhood.
The cops wont do anything, the neighbor guy throws full pop cans at the cars that are speeding and hits them (they typically have a fart can and skyhook wing). He's an ex boxer and huge, the snot nosed brats that get out of their car to have words almost piss themselves when he get's up.
One of these day's i'm going to go over on a saturday and join him in throwing pop cans at speeding cars.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I am also an avid cyclist... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Not to be rude, but maybe you should take the lack of visibility to heard and stay away from the backs and sides of SUVs? You can't expect that just because you are poorly protected and virtually invisible people will be extra careful about preserving your safety. You can hope they will, and you have every right to demand they will, but most drivers are end users and it would be folly to expect anything of them. These are the people who made it illegal to talk on the phone while driving, you know.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you ever considered that some truck drivers drive like grandmas because they understand the limitations of the vehicle? Should we give all bike riders the death penalty because some of them ride on the sidewalk?
But here I am trying to reason with a guy that wants roughly half of the driving public dead.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
These morons (or cagers as we motorcyclists car eto call them) come in all shapes and sizes and so do their vehicles.
in fact i can provide anectodatal evidence of everythign from a fucking little college girl who ran a buddy off the road while merging off an off ramp, to the time a farmer pulled his combine onto the road directly in front of a group of 20 bikes.
None of that means a shit to anybody but the people who were there, yet i can say that i'd much rather we prosecute idiots who arent paying attention than go after a specific type of vehicle.
FYI, this isnt exactly a new situation for motorcyclists. We've been complaining about this longer than SUV's have been a mainstream vehicle.
How about instead of trying to lump people by the type of vehicle, we instead start issuing "distracted driver" tickets to all those morons deserving of them.
I'm fairly certain every state in the union has a distracted driving law on the books.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
In the UK Accords are 'family' sized cars towards the large end of the spectrum. I know the 93 version is a little smaller than a modern Accord, but it's still pretty big by our standards. If you want a proper example of tiny, consider the original Mini, or more modern "super minis" - which are actualy still larger than the original Mini. I'd hate to see one of them get into a fight with an SUV..
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
I have a 1998 Jetta VW that can haul 4-5 people. A weekend of luggage and still get 45 MPG. Even with diesel pushing $5/gallon it's still cheaper per mile than any gasser OF THE SAME SIZE.
"Heavier Diesel". You talk about it like it adds 2 tons to the vehicle. A diesel engine may add a few hundred pounds at most.
VW has a PRODUCTION car that they sold that got 78 miles per US gallon. There is nothing more frustrating than hearing about the 'amazing' 30 MPG that some small cars get while in Europe they're doing double that.
Center of mass, manuverabilty (Score:4, Informative)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Insightful)
The safety equipment argument is a load of hogwash pushed by the American auto industry.
A 2008 Chevy Aveo has a curb weight of just over 2300lbs. A 1997 Geo Metro has a curb weight of just over 1800lbs. How much of that 500lb difference (a lot less than 500kg) comes from the fact that the Aveo has a 1.6L I4 while the Metro had a 1.0L I3? Certainly not all of it, but what mileage would the Aveo get if you dropped in a 1.0L engine and took out the air conditioning? I would imagine it would be quite a bit better than the pathetic EPA 24 City 34 Highway it is rated for now.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Interesting)
I did a UI course back in 2002 and we happened to be talking about steering wheels as the UI input device. The prof happened to be a Psychology/Comp. Sci. cross, and he went off on a tangent wrt a certain thought experiment:
The hypothesis says: the higher the chance of death, the lower your speed. If the chance of death in a moving car were 100%, no one would drive. If the chance of death were 0, then everyone would drive as fast as the car could go.
What happens if you put a spear sticking out of the steering wheel aimed at your chest?
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Sales of hacksaws would increase dramatically?
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is amusing because most of those SUVs are over half crumple-zone by volume. There was a time when an SUV was a 4x4 vehicle made of steel that you drove because you needed to be able to go off road or lug all your belongings somewhere in the snow. Those days are long gone. Now it doesn't snow here anymore and an SUV is a minivan with a six-liter v8 purchased for ostentation and to satisfy latent napoleon complexes.
Re:In the US no one wants to buy light cars (Score:5, Informative)
A good example of this is an F1 car - they are designed with crashes in mind. They have strong central component to protect the driver with everything else breakable to take energy away from the tub that the driver sits in. Take Robert Kubica's accident in the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix, for example, After contact with Jarno Trulli, his car hit a bump, lifting it and rendering him unable to steer. His car hit a safety wall at approximately 28G decelaration and then tumbled down the track, finally coming to rest against another safety wall on its side. Most of car was strewn along the track, but the tub protected the driver. He not only lived to race again, but suffered little injury.
Noted, these are very, very expensive cars, are single seaters, don't have doors (making the carbon-fiber tub that the driver sits in much easier) and not really designed to run on the street, but the concept of sheddable body around a strong central area still could apply
Of course this makes the car more costly to fix which will annoy insurers and leaves a nasty very sharp mess on the street if you use the baked carbon fiber that they use on F1 cars, but if you want to make cars lighter and still protect the driver and passengers, it's worth looking at...
Re:Why the safety assumption? (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately it's not a myth, and it wasn't created by marketing.
The crash compatibility topic (big car vs. small car) was first brought up by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety in a 1998 news release that stated:
The basic findings reinforce whatâ(TM)s long been known about vehicle size and occupant death rates. As vehicle weight decreases, the number of occupants killed in crashes increases.
and
Lighter vehicles have higher occupant death rates in two-vehicle crashes, and within each weight class, cars and pickups have similar occupant death rates.
Here is the link http://www.iihs.org/news/1998/iihs_news_021098.pdf [iihs.org]
Re:Why the safety assumption? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why the safety assumption? (Score:4, Insightful)
That doesn't mean that lack of weight is fundamentally unsafe, just that we need to reduce the weight of all those safety features (and the rest of the car, while we're at it) without compromising, uh, safety. Probably a tall order tho.
Seriously? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Seriously? (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
People are still buying SUVs
Well, err, they are but sales are falling. As an example, this quote from the NYT [nytimes.com]
Ford, which last month abandoned its long-standing goal to be profitable in 2009, has been hurt by the shift in U.S. consumer demand toward smaller, fuel-efficient vehicles and away from large trucks and SUVs.
Ford relies heavily on sales of its SUVs and full-size pickup trucks in the U.S. market, but the U.S. demand for the large vehicles has been shrinking for several years and the declines accelerated in the last couple of months as gas prices rose above $3.50 per gallon.
It's a question of weight ratios (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's a question of weight ratios (Score:5, Funny)
Two things (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Two things (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Two things (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, the Kammback [wikipedia.org] is better than a teardrop, aerodynamically and functionally. It's more aerodynamic, because it still has the same smooth flow as a teardrop, but it doesn't have all the surface drag. It's more functional because it's shaped more like a box.
We're already seeing lots of them. Expect more.
Because it's actually better (Score:4, Informative)
And especially if you read the RTFA, weight is a big problem. Increasing the car's weight with a useless tail would negate any aerodynamic benefits anyway. If you save, say, 0.5 litre per 100 km in aerodynamic drag with a tail, but pay 1 litre per 100 km to move that extra weight, it's not worth it.
Kammback (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Two things (Score:4, Informative)
For comparison, the drag coefficient of a water droplet is 0.04, a Honda Prius is 0.24, an H2 Hummer is 0.57 and an open parachute is 1.75. Smaller numbers represent less drag, obviously.
Here are a couple articles about cars that have been designed to be shaped like water droplets, one from Mechanical Engineering Magazine [memagazine.org] and one from from Popular Science [popsci.com]
The Saturn Philiosophy (Score:3, Interesting)
(I had a crack in my radiator - sure enough, part of the manifold for the radiator was made out of black plastic as well. Surprised the engine block itself isn't black plastic, at times.)
Weight and cost savings. Nothing new (my car is a '97 Saturn; alive and well with 160k miles and between 30-40 MPG city).
What about 10% weight savings in the driver's seat (Score:5, Insightful)
It might be helpful.
Re:What about 10% weight savings in the driver's s (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What about 10% weight savings in the driver's s (Score:4, Interesting)
Surprising (Score:5, Funny)
This is going to revolutionize everything!
Maybe if we drove cars in space we wouldn't have those pesky problems.
How about doing both? (Score:3, Insightful)
Partially right... (Score:4, Insightful)
GM is on the right path with the Hybrid Silverado they are making, but I would like to see something a little smaller, along the lines of a Ranger or S-10/Sonoma (I LOVED the 1994 Sonoma I drove through college). Americans are going to buy small cars in the near future, but the REAL money will be made when we can drive larger SUV's and trucks that get 30+ MPG's.
Re:Partially right... (Score:5, Interesting)
This amuses me to no end, and I've heard it repeated from people at the Budget rental place as well as talking heads on TV. What possible use is seeing over traffic if you're still stuck in it? Are you following too closely and not paying attention to your surroundings or something?
Re:Partially right... (Score:4, Insightful)
You also see brake lights a little sooner so you know traffic is slowing ahead.
In other words, you can see more of what's going on around you. You can't "pay attention" to something if you can't physically see it to start with.
The downside of course, is that the more tall vehicles there are on the road, the more people think they need tall vehicles to see clearly.
Re:Partially right... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Partially right... (Score:5, Insightful)
You have to understand that getting a higner car to see the traffic has the effect that everybody around you sees less of the traffic.
It harldy sounds like a solution to me.
Re:Partially right... (Score:5, Insightful)
Most smaller cars have a lot more head and foot room, especially for the driver, than you give them credit for. I'm 6'2" and drive a 2001 Toyota Corolla. I have plenty of head room without slouching over or anything, and leg room is not an issue either. Heck, I have two kids and they fit just fine in the back seat of the thing, so the hauling kids excuse is silly too unless you happen to have 5 kids or more. It makes me crazy when people with 2 kids say they need an SUV to "haul the family around".
As for seeing over traffic, I have no problem seeing the traffic ahead of me so long as I keep a safe distance between me and the person in front of me (2 second rule, remember?), and have only even been close to having an accident (which I was able to maneuver to avoid) once in my 15 years of driving.
The hauling stuff excuse may be valid for some people, but you have to ask yourself how often do you really need to haul around so much stuff that you require an SUV. Most people haul stuff like that so rarely it would be far more cost effective to simply rent a pickup truck when they need to do that rather than spend all that money on the SUV full-time. Even small cars like mine can fit a surprisingly large amount of stuff in them.
I wish people would just admit that they really wanted an SUV, so they came up with reasons why they should get one, rather than insisting that no other type of car could possibly work for them.
Re:Partially right... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm entirely unbothered by what you want; having cars that are taller than average for the purpose of getting a better view is antisocial.
Who knew? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who knew? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Who knew? (Score:5, Interesting)
Our public transport is OK, not great, but it costs $15/day and takes 45 mins on the train, compared with $35 fuel, $15 congestion charge and $25 parking to drive - for 1 hour 50 mins.
(And the housing beyond insane - you could not buy a home of any sort for less than $1 million within 30 miles of my office)
You will get this eventually in your big US cities. LA is the size of London, and starting to run of space to build 10 lane highways. New York is probably already like it.
Hopefully a watershed moment, the oil "problem" (Score:3, Insightful)
Lotus Elise (Score:5, Informative)
Put a little 1 liter, 60 horsepower engine in there and it'll probably get 50 mpg, but have regular car performance.
The secret? Weighing only about 1,650 lbs.
Re:Lotus Elise (Score:4, Funny)
Regenerative Brakes (Score:5, Interesting)
Hybrids get their benefits in two ways: reclaiming power that would otherwise be lost during braking, and the fact that electric motors have a flat torque band. You generally can't do either that with an internal combustion engine alone.
However, there are a few ways to do both the above without an electric motor. One way is to have a flywheel connected to a CVT on the drive shaft. When you hit the brakes, the flywheel spins up. You can then release that power again when you accelerate. The flywheel will also act as a gyroscope, so you need to have some way of tilting it so you can go through corners with it spun up (which has the side effect of increasing handling). This method is being put on F1 cars soon.
The other way is to have an air compressor, which again is run off the drive shaft when you hit the brakes. On acceleration, the compressed air could either run the drive shaft, be dumped into the intake to increase boost, or dumped into the exhaust manifold to eliminate turbo lag. This is probably easier to design than a tilting-flywheel system, though it won't make handling better.
The compressor could also run off turbines using inlets around the car's body that are opened when braking. This particular use is probably illegal for F1 and other types of race cars (which often ban variable body shape systems), but could easily be used in road cars.
Both the above don't require any particularly exotic materials (though carbon fiber or nanotubes would be nice for the flywheel), and shouldn't be as heavy as an electric motor/battery system.
SUV's not going anywhere (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:SUV's not going anywhere (Score:4, Insightful)
Create a new thing: A Commuter Car (Score:4, Interesting)
My point is really this. We need a small, commuter-only vehicle, unfettered from the legal burdens that add weight and reduce gas mileage. And yet still capable of highway speed and 200 mile range. Take an F1 car, make it 3-wheeled with a Jet cockpit. End of problem. It's not rocket science...
To chop weight, get Rid of all the Crap in Cars... (Score:4, Funny)
a) get rid of the catalytic converter
b) shorten the tailpipe and shrink the muffler
c) get rid of airbags
d) get rid of power heated super seats
e) get rid of side impact safety beams
that right there gets you some good weight savings.
Water Powered Car - no joke! (Score:5, Funny)
"A closed mind is a good thing to lose"
Main Website: http://waterpoweredcar.com/ [waterpoweredcar.com]
Videos:
Genius US Inventor (water car): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZOsOB3z3IE [youtube.com]
From Australia: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXzK-zrWDgI&feature=related [youtube.com]
Water Car Inventor Murdered -news channel report: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L6yRn4IAsrU&feature=related [youtube.com]
Ford Conversion: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-piMEZ2WcQU&feature=related [youtube.com]
From Japan: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1OWDcWoXHs&feature=related [youtube.com]
Company selling water cars: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4mz7MPSquU&feature=related [youtube.com]
WAKE UP AMERICA, your government lies to you! Well, ok, so does every other government, but this particular issue (water car) is worth fighting for.
Re:Water Powered Car - no joke! (Score:4, Informative)
the word stupid comes to mind (Score:4, Insightful)
problem is, this guy has no knowledge of real world driving, formula one cars spend all there energy accelerating and decelerating like crazy and have ridiculously low drag coefficients. Because of this weight effects them tremendously. Many times more than any average car.