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Featured Speculative 2-speed EV transmission

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by bwilson4web, Apr 24, 2024.

  1. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    . . . Amsted’s Dynamic Controllable Clutch technology can be used to include a two-speed transmission in an EV’s drivetrain, which provides both improved performance and increased driving range.

    The challenges of shifting gears with a high-torque electric motor have meant that only the Porsche Taycan has used a 2-speed transmission so far. It was the plan of Tesla founders Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning to include a 2-speed transmission in the company’s original Roadster model, but they couldn’t achieve the necessary reliability then and Tesla has shied away from multi-speed transmissions ever since.
    . . .

    Technically a way to increase the range of low-speed to high-speed for an EV, it does add weight and complexity. Still worth considering if the expanded range makes sense. Personally, I would like to see it in light aviation.

    At takeoff speeds, the engine can't rev high enough to produce maximum power for a prop pitched for cruise speed. In contrast, a climb pitch prop gets off the ground faster and climbs fast but at cruise speed, the engine is unable to turn it fast enough for higher cruise speed.

    As Tesla learned, reliability is important and that is even more true for light aviation.

    Bob Wilson
     
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  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    Agreed. It has to make sense. If Toyota did it, I’d give it a try
     
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  3. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Toyota is doing simulated gears for an EV.
     
  4. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Meaning what, exactly? Anything like actual gears that would change the torque/speed relationship from motor to wheels? Or just something to make the driver feel like there are shift points?
     
  5. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    The latter, but with physical clutch pedal and shifter.
    https://www.motortrend.com/news/toyota-lexus-bev-on-demand-manual-transmission-ev-tech/

    Dodge had a true multi-speed transmission in an EV concept, but it looks like car going to market will have a two-speed like the Taycan.
    https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a60076112/dodge-charger-banshee-ev-details-confirmed/

    Continental AG has a two speed EV transmission. I think they supply Porsche.
     
  6. Danno5060

    Danno5060 Member

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    To me, one of the real advantages of an EV is that it doesn't need to shift gears. Electric motors have wider RPM ranges, have torque all the way down to 0 RPM, and can reverse electronically.

    It's only in something like an F1-type race car, or some other hyper-super-richstupid-car application where you'll be willing to ignore speed limits that this would even be worthwhile. Other than that, why add the extra complexity?
     
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  7. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    [QUOTE="Danno5060, post: 3446125, member: 206820" Other than that, why add the extra complexity?[/QUOTE]In a word, range.

    Among the other causes when going faster, the motor itself can lose efficiency at higher rpms. A reason why the Taycan beats its EPA range is because it never actually shifts within the test cycles.
     
  8. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    Certainly range is a big deal, but it has to be a difference maker, and cost and reliability will be the deciding factors.
    Or perhaps it might allow for smaller batteries which would be good economically and environmentally
     
  9. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    True but a motor at lower rpm will have more torque since motor torque diminishes at higher rpm (I’d wager more rapidly than an ICE?).

    This could allow for smaller motors with less torque. Toyota did that with the Prius, reducing the torque from MG2 but supplementing it with a reduction gear. The Gen 2 Prius’ MG2 had 295 lb-ft from 0-1200rpm. I believe the Gen 3/4 are down to around 150 lb-ft? I can’t remember now.
     
  10. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The spec you quote is the same that I find in the 2004 New Car Features manual on page TH-27, and what it really shows is that the torque behavior of the motor is pretty darned simple:

    it's a straight line at 295 lb-ft (400 Nm) all the way from zero out to 1200 RPM. Right at 1200 RPM, it changes to a decreasing concave-up curve (the same shape as a y = k/x curve), right on until the limiting RPM for the motor, where it goes to nothing.

    [​IMG]

    I got that image from L. David Roper's Physics of the 2005 Prius page, but it's recognizably the graph on page TH-28 of the NCF with numbers overlaid for clarity.

    So why that sudden change from constant torque to decreasing torque at 1200 RPM (about 21 MPH, for gen 2)?

    Well, the specs on page TH-27 also say MG2 is a 50 kilowatt motor. 1200 RPM is the very spot where 400 Nm of torque and 1200 RPM work out to 50 kW.

    Below that speed, even at the maximum torque, the motor is at less than max power, so you get the max torque.

    Above that speed, you can't have the max torque, because that would exceed the motor's power spec. Instead, you just slide down the y = k/x curve, the locus of all points where the RPM times torque works out to the 50 kW max power.
     
  11. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Minor edits of the torque curve to show what a 0.5x second gear could achieve:
    upload_2024-4-25_2-51-0.png

    Bob Wilson
     
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  12. Danno5060

    Danno5060 Member

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    That edit shows both a torque increase as well as an RPM increase at the same time.

    Yeah, no. I'm not buying that a transmission adds power to a mechanical system, (Unless there's another motor involved in the transmission.)

    Whatever you've added to the Torque, you've gotta remove from the RPM, or vice versa.
     
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  13. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Yes but: transmissions have long been a thing. They didn’t add power with traditional engines either. And yet they were considered useful.

    addendum: ok see your point, something is not adding up in the graph, never mind.
     
  14. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Yeah, looks like any point on that added curve is both above and right of the original, so will have torque ✕ RPM coming out to more than 50 kilowatts.

    Where's that power going to come from?
     
    #14 ChapmanF, Apr 25, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 25, 2024
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  15. FalconSeven

    FalconSeven Member

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  16. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I took the original torque-rpm line and cut the vertical height in half, 0.5x, to reflect the reduced torque of a speculated gear change. Then I anchored the 'shift point' where the slope of the reduced torque reached about -1. So the graph show the primary effects of a 2-speed gear I would design. I've also ignored the time to slow the motor down and brief interval of clutching to change the gear ratio.

    Feel free to propose another curve.

    Bob Wilson
     
  17. Isaac Zachary

    Isaac Zachary Senior Member

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    Hyundai has come out with a similated "dual clutch" EV (no real multi-gear transmission). Not something I'd buy, but seems neat and terrible at the same time, at least to me.

    For me, I like EV's, but I also like drving a manual. A two speed manual EV would be a dream come true for me, regardless of power.

    Like I said, I like EV's. But I dislike how they feel. That's about the only thing I dislike about them in general. It's very dissengaged, more like an appliance. It's like the trigger on my drill. And adding noises and simulated gears just seems silly, kind of like when they put a flatplane crank in the Mustang yet made variously lengthed primaries to try to make it sound like a crossplane crank.

    To me EV's are kind of like iPhones. They work and they work great, that's the point. But as an amateur radio operater, I get a bit of a grin when I'm able to get my antenna and radio setup just right to make that contact in Australia or some other country far away. I don't get the same feeling when making a phone call, even though admittedly cellphones are more practical.

     
    #17 Isaac Zachary, Apr 25, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 25, 2024
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  18. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    A different maker than who?
    I've only seen initial news about development of these two speed EV transmissions from 2 or 3 major auto part suppliers, not from an automaker. Porsche and Dodge could be using the same part.
     
  19. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Is it not the case that all the points of your added curve are both above and right of the original curve, and therefore have coordinates whose product exceeds 50 kW?

    How should that be explained?
     
  20. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    You increased total motor power output, without actually increasing its power capacity. A violation of Conservation of Energy.

    Convert that chart to torque vs RPM at some other point, e.g. wheels. For Gear 1, the shape would be the same, just the axes scaled different.

    For Gear 2, the torque cap is cut in half, RPM of the upper corner is doubled. At the right-hand end, the same k/x curve is continued out to twice the red-line RPM of the G1 curve. I.e. similar to having the same power motor without reduction gear, but doubling its red-line RPM.

    In the operating range between the corner where Gear 2 changes from torque-limited to constant power, to where Gear 1 hits its red-line max RPM, they share the very same power curve.
     
    #20 fuzzy1, Apr 25, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 25, 2024