Which Motor?
Which Motor?
Hi Everyone. I'm converting a 1963 Renault Floride to electric. The car will weigh just under 1,000 kilograms with the battery pack.
I've looked at the HPEVS AC50 motor which they tell me will power the car up hills at highway speed with a 96 volt battery pack. I've also found a Chinese AC motor which is supposed to be equivalent. However, the performance graphs supplied by the manufacturers are presented quite differently and I don't have enough knowledge to make a decision. Can anybody have a look and give me any advise? I would be most grateful
I've looked at the HPEVS AC50 motor which they tell me will power the car up hills at highway speed with a 96 volt battery pack. I've also found a Chinese AC motor which is supposed to be equivalent. However, the performance graphs supplied by the manufacturers are presented quite differently and I don't have enough knowledge to make a decision. Can anybody have a look and give me any advise? I would be most grateful
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- brendon_m
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Re: Which Motor?
I've noticed that a lot of Chinese motors use that style of graph and I assume it's done in order to make it harder to compare them to non Chinese "quality" units. I mean who cares about torque vs kW. Just give me the data vs rpm so I can read what's going on
- jonescg
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Re: Which Motor?
You will definitely need the gearbox - anything under 200 Nm is a bit weak for pushing 1000 kg of car around.
AEVA National President, WA branch director.
- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
Firstly I notice the Chinese motor is a very high spinning motor.
More resembles a large outrunner?!?
At the nominal voltage tested is does 6400RPM!
So to get the claimed power it has to spin much faster.
I probably wouldn't suggest this motor.
Ignoring the high RPM it does have enough torque for a small car using a gearbox.
Do you know what voltage the test was performed at?
The graph is for the motor by itself.
The graph you want is for a complete system.
Unfortunately unless you are buying that compete system the data would be limited.
So the 700kg Handi at 90Nm with a 2.5x for a 1-2 gear ratio is 225Nm.
So yep that does sound right 1000kg with 200Nm sounds weak.
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
Was there a suggestion that this was supposed to be direct drive?
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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Re: Which Motor?
Thanks for your help guys.
It's difficult to get good information out of China. This motor and controller is only 1/3 the price of the HPEVS but it's not worth anything if it doesn't do the job.
I'll keep looking in the hope that something more suitable comes up. The HPEVS is not available in Perth but I'm sure there's one (or an equivalent) somewhere in Australia.
And yes, I'm keeping the original gearbox and assumed that it would run in 2nd or 3rd. It's very hilly here in Bridgetown and although the car is only going to be used locally I want to have highway speed capability just in case.
It's difficult to get good information out of China. This motor and controller is only 1/3 the price of the HPEVS but it's not worth anything if it doesn't do the job.
I'll keep looking in the hope that something more suitable comes up. The HPEVS is not available in Perth but I'm sure there's one (or an equivalent) somewhere in Australia.
And yes, I'm keeping the original gearbox and assumed that it would run in 2nd or 3rd. It's very hilly here in Bridgetown and although the car is only going to be used locally I want to have highway speed capability just in case.
- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
I Like Bridgetown!
So a motor that has 34kW@5,500RPM and 74Nm@3,500RPM.
Rod is just round the corner - can't you get a Motenergy system off him to do that?
Is the diff really 4.37:1?
So a motor that has 34kW@5,500RPM and 74Nm@3,500RPM.
Rod is just round the corner - can't you get a Motenergy system off him to do that?
Is the diff really 4.37:1?
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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Re: Which Motor?
Yes, I contacted him. Their motor is too small for a car in a hilly area.
I'm still looking, so any suggestions for alternatives are much appreciated
I'm still looking, so any suggestions for alternatives are much appreciated
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Re: Which Motor?
Generally you will have two parameters for a motor:
Torque and power/RPM
You can calculate the power as follows:
p= 2*pi*rpm*t/60
where:
p = power in watts
pi = 3.14...
rpm = motor speed in rpm
t = torque in Nm
Electric motors tend to be a torque machine meaning that the size of the motor depends on the torque they put out. Then the power will depend on how fast you spin them.
For a brushed motor (not a good idea for an electric car imo) the speed is limited by the brushes.
For an ac machine the speed is generally limited by how well balanced the rotor is and how fast it can spin before it flies apart and of course the speed rating of the bearings.
Within limits (under 60krpm for a 2pole motor) you can double the speed without significantly increasing the electrical loses.
The next consideration for how fast you can spin the motor is the back emf (for a permanent magnet motor) or the magnetising current for an induction motor.
So if a motor runs at say 3500rmp with a 100v supply you will need 200v to make it spin at 7000 rpm.
I am currently doing a conversion and I have bought some Chinese pm motors and I am in the process of building the inverter. The motors I have will do 260Nm at 5500 rpm from a 400v battery. If you are not in a big hurry I may be able to help you with the motor/inverter
Torque and power/RPM
You can calculate the power as follows:
p= 2*pi*rpm*t/60
where:
p = power in watts
pi = 3.14...
rpm = motor speed in rpm
t = torque in Nm
Electric motors tend to be a torque machine meaning that the size of the motor depends on the torque they put out. Then the power will depend on how fast you spin them.
For a brushed motor (not a good idea for an electric car imo) the speed is limited by the brushes.
For an ac machine the speed is generally limited by how well balanced the rotor is and how fast it can spin before it flies apart and of course the speed rating of the bearings.
Within limits (under 60krpm for a 2pole motor) you can double the speed without significantly increasing the electrical loses.
The next consideration for how fast you can spin the motor is the back emf (for a permanent magnet motor) or the magnetising current for an induction motor.
So if a motor runs at say 3500rmp with a 100v supply you will need 200v to make it spin at 7000 rpm.
I am currently doing a conversion and I have bought some Chinese pm motors and I am in the process of building the inverter. The motors I have will do 260Nm at 5500 rpm from a 400v battery. If you are not in a big hurry I may be able to help you with the motor/inverter
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Re: Which Motor?
So for the graphs you have the Chinese graph is clear as to what you are getting. What it does not tell you is what voltage you need and you will need this info for choosing the inverter.
The HPEVS graph tells you it runs of 96v but the vertical scales are not clear so you really can not tell for sure what the value is.
For example on the right it says torque and power so not sure if 30 means 30kw or 30Nm.
The HPEVS graph tells you it runs of 96v but the vertical scales are not clear so you really can not tell for sure what the value is.
For example on the right it says torque and power so not sure if 30 means 30kw or 30Nm.
- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
Ah its both.francisco.shi wrote: ↑Mon, 17 Sep 2018, 17:04 For example on the right it says torque and power so not sure if 30 means 30kw or 30Nm.
Only the colour of the line makes the distinction between kW and Nm.
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
Well that would be enough for direct drive in this case - hills included.francisco.shi wrote: ↑Mon, 17 Sep 2018, 16:42 The motors I have will do 260Nm at 5500 rpm from a 400v battery.
400V maybe too high though for direct drive on something that only had 70kW.
200-300V would be ok.
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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Re: Which Motor?
If you run the motor at lower voltage you will get less power. The torque will be the same but the max rpm will be less.
I have made a page that can help you to calculate the power of the motor you need depending on what you want the car to do.
It is a bit rough and I have not checked everything thoroughly but the numbers seem reasonable. The motor power and top speed calculations are correct. I just did not check the max slope thoroughly.
the address is http://www.becman.com/MotorSport/index. ... calculator
I hope it helps.
The motors I have will give you 150kw at 400v or 300kw after rewinding. After rewinding the torque will remain the same, just the rpm will be 11000 at 400v.
If you run it at 200v you will get 75kw or 150kw. The torque will remain the same but the rpm will be half so you will need higher gearing.
I have made a page that can help you to calculate the power of the motor you need depending on what you want the car to do.
It is a bit rough and I have not checked everything thoroughly but the numbers seem reasonable. The motor power and top speed calculations are correct. I just did not check the max slope thoroughly.
the address is http://www.becman.com/MotorSport/index. ... calculator
I hope it helps.
The motors I have will give you 150kw at 400v or 300kw after rewinding. After rewinding the torque will remain the same, just the rpm will be 11000 at 400v.
If you run it at 200v you will get 75kw or 150kw. The torque will remain the same but the rpm will be half so you will need higher gearing.
- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
The car in question only had 34kW.
200V / 75kW would be plenty - no rewind and no gearbox.
How much does the motor weigh?
200V / 75kW would be plenty - no rewind and no gearbox.
How much does the motor weigh?
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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Re: Which Motor?
The motor weighs 50kg and the inverter will probably add another 10kg. So I am expecting a total weight of about 60kg.
- Richo
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Re: Which Motor?
Well that is impressive.
That kind of performance is like a $10k motor...
That kind of performance is like a $10k motor...
So the short answer is NO but the long answer is YES.
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Re: Which Motor?
I am hoping I can make them for less than 10k for motor and inverter. I am still working on the system so I am still not sure how much it will cost to make but I am hoping it will be around 7k or maybe a little less.