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9 Posts tagged with the hybrid tag
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In a new marketing effort to promote its pure-electric Focus, Ford says it will make history this month, as the battery-powered version of its compact hatchback will become the first all-electric pace car to lead the pack at a NASCAR race.

 

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The new Focus Electric, which rolled off the production line in December at the company's Michigan Assembly Plant, will perform all pace care duties for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at the Richmond International Raceway on April 28.

 

The Focus Electric pace car will make its public debut at the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond on April 25.  "Ford research shows the majority of Americans would consider buying an electrified vehicle but do not yet understand the different technologies," said Mark Fields, president of The Americas. "Highlighting the Focus Electric as a pace car is a fun way to educate consumers about the kinds of benefits our electrified vehicles deliver."

 

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Ford noted that according to research, around 35 percent of new car intenders are motorsports fans and 78 percent of them support NASCAR. The company added that Ford race fans are 67 percent more likely to consider Ford products than general market consumers.

 

Via Carscoop

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(via AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

 

Two of my favorite car companies have partnered together, Ford and Toyota, to work on my favorite drive topology, rear-wheel drive, with everyone's favorite engine system, the hybrid.

 

● The partnership sets the two companies on equal footing in an effort to create and advanced hybrid system for rear-wheel drive light trucks and SUVs.

● The goal is to deliver greater fuel efficiency while not compromising the performance of the vehicles.

● The team will also work towards developing the next-generation standards for in vehicle internet and digital communication systems.

● Ford and Toyota pledge to deliver the new tech within the coming decade.

 

I like where their minds are at. However, I would like to see this same hybrid RWD system come to consumer and sport cars. I believe I am not the only one. Perhaps market demand with usher in a new revival for RWD. We can only hope.

 

Cabe

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HEV Solutions Guide is intended to help you explore TI's IC solutions as the various sectors become increasingly electrified on a path toward energy efficiency and sustainability.

Guide includes: System block diagrams, followed by details about key devices and support functions

 

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Self taught, Terry Hope has made his own solar power generating electric bicycle. Hope fitted the stock Specialized FRS 18 speed bike with a front grill and windshield for mounting eighteen 6"x6" mono crystalline sollar cells. Approximately 4 watt (@ 8.7v) output on each cell. Totaling 72 watts if all conditions are ideal. A 24V motor controller moves the 1 HP motor at the core of the project. Batteries are 6s1p 5000mah LIPO as the main, and two 4s1p LIPO 5000mah as "booster packs" which are wired in series. I assume he uses the "boosters" to overdrive the motor. Across the handle bars are several buttons used to turn the solar on or off for direct use, button for the booster, and the all important red E-stop. Hope added toggles to use solar for battery charging.

 

The motor itself drives the main sprocket. As with most multi-speed bicycles, the pedals are not engaged by the motor. The drive system is very unique compared to other electric bicycles. However, this is not ready for mass production. It is still very much a labor of love. I like the smaller electric bicycle Hope has made more than the 18 speed, see his launch page.

 

Can we do better? Help me build an electric bicycle with the rest of the community.

 

Cabe

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Kinergy Flywheel

 

 

A weighted 9" disc spins at 60,000 rpm, who's surface is traveling twice the speed of sound, may just power hybrid vehicles in the near future. British company Ricardo has designed a flywheel energy storage system to use in future hybrid vehicles. The system called Kinergy, stores the energy in breaking into the carbon fibre laced flywheels. The energy stored is then used as a torque assist in accelerating the vehicle. The flywheel is house in a vacuum sealed container and placed on magnetic bushings to reduce all friction to the near zero. A magnetic gearing and coupling mechanism gathers the energy from the flywheel and applies it, with no mechanical contact, to the transmission. Each flywheel produces approximately 30 kW of power from the 4.5 kg discs.

 

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Flybus with Kinergy system, rear cutaway

 

Currently the Kinergy system is being tested on Flybus buses at airports, with a goal of 20% fuel savings. Another test involved using a Kinergy storage system paired with a Torotrak Continuously Variable Transmission on a Optare Solo bus. The future has Ricardo leading the KinerStor project with a consortium of other companies to bring the Kinergy system to other hybrid vehicles with a goal of 30% efficiency increase.

 

Flywheels already help regulate large volumes of power, by not in cars too?

 

Eavesdropper

 

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Here is a perfect example of, "I can not believe this has not been done already."

 

Aalto University in Finland is testing the use of hybrid technology in non-road, mobile industrial machinery. Think Prius versions of cranes, bulldozers, tractors, and diggers. Their concept is to capture of the energy from the work being performed by each machine that is lost when in operation. Like in hybrid cars, deceleration, braking energies are being absorbed as well as energy from such tasks as lowering a load. For the record, no one has attempted making hybrids in this area.

 

Head researchers Professor Jussi Suomela spoke of the impetus of the project, "These heavy duty machines are operated for long periods of time, so by the end of the day emissions and fuel consumption have added up. Being able to target them is a significant improvement." From recent experimental data, Suomela has show that involving such combustion/electric hybrids in work machinery has the potential to save 50% of the fuel costs in stand alone operation, and even more if the system is plugged into the power grid.

 

Now it is not a question of can it be done, but when can it be implemented. Great work, Aalto University.

 

Eavesdropper

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by Jim Bridgwater

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Last week I attended the ITU’s Fully Connected Car Workshop which takes place within the environs of the Geneva Auto Show. It was an excellent opportunity to check out all the new cars on display, but also to see what is happening in the world of infotainment. Although most of the emphasis was on new model announcements and “green” cars of all descriptions, there were a few notable infotainment displays.

 

Perhaps the most significant news is that Ford will launch its second-generation Sync technology in Europe in the 2012 Focus hatchback. This system offers high-end infotainment features such as “one shot” speech recognition and navigation with 3D points of Interest at a relatively modest price on an affordable family car. The Sync system runs on a Microsoft software platformand has enabled Ford to steal a march on its competitors in the North American market with over 3 million units shipped to date.

 

At the other end of the scale, BMW showed off its next generation Connected Drive system which includes practically every infotainment and safety feature you could imagine, from Google maps via panoramic “birdview” camera system to night vision.

 

 

Interested? Read the complete review

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Scooters are dangerous. The small front wheel in more prone sudden twisting when one hits a bump or object in the road. But it is hard to resist riding a Fremont Motors all electric scooter "Fido." At speeds of up to 45 miles per hour, this scooter can get you to distances up to 35 miles. This is definitely meant for short trips. However, the battery in easily removed for swapping and external charging. So, if a second or third battery is carried, distance is multiplied. Also, the storage compartment under the seat can be worn as a backpack. Although in the prototype stage, Fremont Motors plans to start selling by the third quarter of 2011 at the $5000 price point. See more at Fremont Motors' website.



What is particularly inspiring about this scooter is not the design, but that fact that one person, Jeb Gast, has entered the automotive industry. Electric scooters already exist. Battery powered motor systems exist. Jeb Gast had an idea for a better electric scooter and rolled with it, so to speak. The most unique part of the scooter is intentional on Gast's part, recharging unit is removable for charging elsewhere. "You should be able to carry everything you need in the glove-box and be  able to charge your battery in your 3rd floor apartment without dragging  the scooter up the stairs or hanging an extension cord out the window." He is focused on a niche market and demographic, and he is poised to succeed. His Do It Yourself message and acheivement is inspiration to us all.



Eavesdropper

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A driverless "POD" is whisking students to the other side of the campus at Masdar City (near Abu Dhabi). These EV vehicles go 25Mph and can reach a range of about 37miles on a single charge. So, charging every hour then? Built by a dutch company called "To Get There," these cars are trying to fill Masdar's dream of being a "zero carbon, zero waste, car-free city." RFID and other onboard sensors help the Personal Transportation System (PRT), keep it on task and able to avoid obstacles. Although this "city" provides a 1600 meter round trip for these PODs, they are setting a good example for everyone else.

 

Eavesdropper