Calculating 0-60 mph time for a vehicle

In summary, the conversation revolves around a person's interest in determining the time it takes for a vehicle to go from 0 to 60 mph based on engine power. However, there are many factors that come into play, such as torque, air drag, and friction, making the calculation more complex. The conversation also delves into various equations and theories to help solve the problem.
  • #36
jumpjack said:
Without air friction (not what I am looking for, but useful for comparison and for the example):

$${ t_{60} = \frac{P_{max}}{2 m \epsilon^2 g^2} + \frac{m v_{60}^2}{2 P_{max}} } $$

This equation predicts a 0 to 60 mph time of 7 seconds for the Tesla S performance and 7.2 seconds for the Performance Plus, yet the Plus has significantly more power and torque and the same weight. Something not right there. Tesla claim 5.4 seconds for the Performance and 4.2 seconds for the Plus.
 
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  • #37
craigi said:
You can't realistically derive the contribution from these terms from first principles, but I'd expect there to be a spectrum of terms proportional to different non-integer powers of velocity. ..
If I said I had 4000 kg electric vehicle with a 2 hp motor that did 0 to 60 mph in 3 seconds on the flat without a following wind, you would say that not physically possible. Even if you did not know the drag coefficient or gearing ratio or drive train efficiency of the vehicle, you would still probably think it was bull$3#!. However it appears no one on this forum can present a formula to show the above claim is impossible. There must be simple equation that give the theoretical minimum 0 to 60 time for a vehicle based just on the power, torque and weight before factoring in losses due to friction and drag, surely? Come on guys, get it sorted!

P.S. there is a related thread here https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=746796
 
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  • #38
yuiop said:
However it appears no one on this forum can present a formula to show the above claim is impossible.

Participation in this forum is not compulsory. Some of us can spot the threads where we just don't want to go there - too many errors being made by people with too many fixed ideas.

Proving your scenario is impossible is trivial. A 2hp motor is about 1.5 kW. 60 mph is about 27 m/s.
The maximum work done by the motor in 3 sec = 4.5 kJ.
The kinetic energy of a 4000 kg car at 27 m/s = 1458 kJ.
 
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  • #39
AlephZero said:
Proving your scenario is impossible is trivial. A 2hp motor is about 1.5 kW. 60 mph is about 27 m/s.
The maximum work done by the motor in 3 sec = 4.5 kJ.
The kinetic energy of a 4000 kg car at 27 m/s = 1458 kJ.

Thanks! Now we are getting somewhere. That is a good place to start.
 
  • #40
jumpjack said:
Just help if you can, don't argument.
Thanks.

I reword my question:
I have a vehicle with given power and torque, say 100 kW / 100 Nm motor. Known it's Cd,frontal area , Crr (rolling friction coefficient) and mass, which is the minimum time it can achieve to go from 0 to 60 mph?

There's no point in getting cross when someone points out that this is not possible - by the definition of Power from Torque and speed. You would be better to stop at this point and get your definitions right before moving on.
 
  • #41
yuiop said:
...
##t_{60}=\frac{2.79 m}{P^{0.46}T^{0.72}}##
...

Why not just find out the tyre diameters and try fitting:

t = km/Td

where

t is the time
k is a constant
m is the mass
T is the engine torque
d is the tyre diameter

It's much simpler and actually based on the physics that we've been discussing.

The engines start to lose torque at a certain speed, which I think will be less than 60mph in all cases. I think it's safe to presume that once they start to lose torque, they all output a constant power upto a speed beyond 60 mph, so I think we could construct a more sophisticated forumla. That should provide an even better fit.

We'd be looking to solve a 2 part differential equation:

a = d/2m T where T <= Pd/2v
a = d/2m Pd/2v where T > Pd/2v

where P is the maximum engine power, a is acceleration and v is speed.

The first part solves trivially and provides the boundary condition for the second

Sure there's rolling friction and air resistance etc, but until we've actually got the driving force correct, there's no point worrying about those.
 
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  • #42
craigi said:
We'd be looking to solve a 2 part differential equation:

a = d/2m T where T <= Pd/2v
a = d/2m Pd/2v where T > Pd/2v

where P is the maximum engine power, a is acceleration and v is speed.

The first part solves trivially and provides the boundary condition for the second

Sure there's rolling friction and air resistance etc, but until we've actually got the driving force correct, there's no point worrying about those.

Engine torque and tire diameter are irrelevant until you specify the details of the gear ratio between them. That is one reason that both formulas above are wrong.

If you postulate a fixed gear ratio of one to one and an engine which achieves peak torque from 0 rpm all the way up until it reaches its given maximum power and which achieves peak power at all higher rotation rates then your equations would be closer. But still wrong.

For a fixed torque at the drive axle, acceleration scales down with tire diameter, not up.
 
  • #43
craigi said:
Why not just find out the tyre diameters and try fitting:

t = km/Td

where

t is the time
k is a constant
m is the mass
T is the engine torque
d is the tyre diameter

It's much simpler and actually based on the physics that we've been discussing.

The engines start to lose torque at a certain speed, which I think will be less than 60mph in all cases. I think it's safe to presume that once they start to lose torque, they all output a constant power upto a speed beyond 60 mph, so I think we could construct a more sophisticated forumla. That should provide an even better fit.

We'd be looking to solve a 2 part differential equation:

a = d/2m T where T <= Pd/2v
a = d/2m Pd/2v where T > Pd/2v

where P is the maximum engine power, a is acceleration and v is speed.

The first part solves trivially and provides the boundary condition for the second

Sure there's rolling friction and air resistance etc, but until we've actually got the driving force correct, there's no point worrying about those.

Most of your assumptions are wrong here. I don't mean to mean, they just are. For one, the engine torque does not equal the tire torque. If we are in top gear, then the tires normally have half the torque then the engine, because they are turning twice as fast. The power at the engine is also never constant unless the torque is changing a specific way that only happens with certain electrical engines. Those special electrical engines are never put on vehicles. Some electrical vehicles do try to use constant torque, which means the power goes on a linear climb as the gears get faster until you get so fast that torque and power have to be dropped down to zero to save the car from melting. The gear shift is normally arranged to change before you hit this power drop.

What we can assume is that the power coming out of the engine will be conserved. That work done in a time frame has to go somewhere. On average, you should lose about 16% to the driveline. The rolling friction will change based on a mix of gravity and downforce from aerodynamics. To make things easier, you can just find an average to apply here. The aerodynmics have a cubic increase in power loss as velocity increases. If you take engine power, subtract drive line loss, subtract rolling friction, and subtract aerodynamic drag, then you should have the power at the wheel propelling you forward. If you have the power at the wheels, which will be different than the power at the engine, then you can take the wheel diameter and determine the torque, RPM, and distance traveled per rotation. It's a complicated process that I've just started to break down here:
Test Driving a Car Virtually

I'll be updating it every few days with a few more equations to figure this all out.
 
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  • #44
You know I take that back. Power can be constant on a CVT. A CVT actually constantly changes the gear ratio's to keep the engine at the same speed as the tires change speed. Whether they set it up for RPM's at peak torque or peak power will depend on if they care more about fuel economy or acceleration. The torque at the wheel still constantly changes, because the wheels don't always spin at the same speed. The same power applied over different speeds changes the torque. Though if you made the assumption that you were working with a Constantly Variable Transmission, you could cut out the gear ratios.
 
  • #45
jbriggs444 said:
If you postulate a fixed gear ratio of one to one and an engine which achieves peak torque from 0 rpm all the way up until it reaches its given maximum power and which achieves peak power at all higher rotation rates then your equations would be closer. But still wrong.

That is specifically what we were talking about and it does match the torque and power curves for many electric cars very well. The Fluence Z.E, for instance, has flat torque upto about 25 mph, followed by flat power up to about 70 mph.

You're totally right that there are errors in those equations, without an extra piece of information such as angular speed of the engine at max power or specifics about tranmission, I don't think I can fix them.
 
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  • #46
I cannot imagine why you would want to be working at anything other than as near Maximum Power as you can at all times. This would have to involve a many step / infinitely variable gearbox. Of course, the torque to the wheels will drop off, pro-rata with speed but that's basic Mechanics.
 
  • #47
craigi said:
That is specifically what we were talking about and it does match the torque and power curves for many electric cars very well. The Fluence Z.E, for instance, has flat torque upto about 25 mph, followed by flat power up to about 70 mph.

You're totally right that there are errors in those equations, without an extra piece of information such as angular speed of the engine at max power or specifics about tranmission, I don't think I can fix them.

What you are describing doesn't make sense according to the laws of physics. We know speed is going up, because you say that the car is going from 25mph to 70mph. We know the Flunce Z.E. doesn't have a continuously variable transmission, and you are saying you want to assume it is in one gear. So the engine speed has to increase when the vehicle speed increases. To increase speed at the same power, you have to constantly lower torque. The problem is that you are describing a car with a synchronous electric engine, so in order to have the characteristics you describe, you would have to decrease the electrical charge of the poles in the motor, which means you would be purposely making the motor less efficient. Now motors of this type do have a steep drop off in efficiency at a certain point, but why would they purposely make this efficiency drop off just to maintain a linear torque drop. If what you are saying is true, then the engine in this car is purposely made to run inefficiently.
 
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  • #48
RedRook said:
The problem is that without changing gears either speed or torque has to go down to maintain power. We know speed is going up, because you say that the car is going from 25mph to 70mph.

This is correct. The torque falls off as 1/v when maximum power is reached. It's not a deliberate torque reduction, it's just what happens when you achieve a constant power output.

RedRook said:
We know the Flunce Z.E. doesn't have a continuously variable transmission, and you are saying you want to assume it is in one gear. So the engine speed has to increase when the vehicle speed increases. To increase speed at the same power, you have to constantly lower torque.

If your system can deliver the torque and power curves that we're talking about, there isn't the same need for gearing as with combustion engines.

RedRook said:
The problem is that you are describing a car with a synchronous electric engine, so in order to have the characteristics you describe, you would have to decrease the electrical charge of the poles in the motor, which means you would be purposely making the motor less efficient. Now motors of this type do have a steep drop off in efficiency at a certain point, but why would they purposely make this efficiency drop off just to maintain a linear torque drop. If what you are saying is true, then the engine in this car is purposely made to run inefficiently.

It's moving a heavy load, running off a battery. You're not going to be able to treat your power supply as ideal. I don't think there's a purposely introduced power limit, rather it's a feature of the system when you consider it as a whole. There's undoubtedly circuitry between the battery and the engine. I would suspect that its purpose is to optimise the power output of the engine, without causing damage to the coils.

It's also worth noting that you can make an easy sanity check, without getting involved in deriving the back EMF as a function of angular speed. It's easy to see that in order to keep the torque finite, the power curve for any engine under load, must start at zero and contain no discontinuities. So we already know that the current and voltage of the motor can't be constant and must build up with velocity.
 
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  • #49
craigi said:
This is correct. The torque falls off as 1/v when maximum power is reached. It's not a deliberate torque reduction, it's just what happens when you achieve a constant power output.

Ok, the problem here is the engine power drops off if you start adding a drop in voltage. This is the steep drop off point I mentioned. I'm aware of this point, but this point does not equal constant power. Your torque is dropping at that point, because your power is dropping much faster than the engine is increasing in speed. Torque is not dropping linearly though. From the curves I've seen, Torque drops at an increasing downward curve as your power falls off. Where we might be getting confused here is the power output of the electricity powering the engine compared to the power output of the engine. They are not the same thing. When you reach the maximum power being produced in electricity, you definitely reach a flat power curve for the electrical power output. That does not mean you've reached the maximum power for the engine. The maximum power for the engine can be reached before the maximum power output of the electricity. The inefficiency is generally made possible by slippage. This slippage accounts for the difference in power being applied by electricity and being observed on the rotating engine. You also will notice this car still has a gear box. The reason is that the power curve of this electrical motor does not extend far enough to allow for one gear. Eventually you are going to hit the wall on how much electrical power you can generate. At this point, you can only keep making the car faster by shifting gears. We would only lose the need for a gearbox if you had an electrical engine that could go from 0 RPM's to the amount of RPM's needed for max speed without running out of electrical power. I believe the Tesla amazingly has an engine with this capability. If drag wasn't an issue, even the Tesla could be made to go faster if you started adding gears. The gearbox 5-speed I see listed though means the car you are talking about has 5 gears ratios.

HP = V * I * Eff / 746
HP = power
V = voltage in volts
I = Current in amps
Eff = efficiency


Also if you are talking about the electrical power output, I do see several graphs online that show that curve with a climb followed by a flat spot at the top until the redline for the gear speed is reached. That might be what is making you think there is a flat power curve.
 
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  • #50
RedRook said:
Torque is not dropping linearly though.

Nope. No one suggested that it does. Like I said, when constant power is reached, it drops as 1/v.

RedRook said:
This slippage accounts for the difference in power being applied by electricity and being observed on the rotating engine.

There isn't sufficient energy loss to affect the shape of power curves.

RedRook said:
You also will notice this car still has a gear box. The reason is that the power curve of this electrical motor does not extend far enough to allow for one gear. Eventually you are going to hit the wall on how much electrical power you can generate.

Are you sure about this? The manufacturer's website says that there is no clutch or gearbox.

RedRook said:
Also if you are talking about the electrical power output, I do see several graphs online that show that curve with a climb followed by a flat spot at the top until the redline for the gear speed is reached. That might be what is making you think there is a flat power curve.

I'm talking about the engine power and torque curves.
 
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  • #51
Ok, you might be right about the gear box. I couldn't find the spot on the Renault site that gave the transmission details, so I looked on other sites. I went back to those sites, and I saw they also mentioned a petrol engine. They are obviously talking about a different car. When I finally got to the brochure on Renault, I found that it has a continuously variable transmission. So it doesn't have one gear. It has always changing gears, so that would certainly make sense for a constant power. What you are saying is entirely possible with a CVT. The constant power characteristic wouldn't be coming from the fact that this is an electric car though. A petrol car with a CVT can have constant power as well. The constant power comes from the transmission.
 
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  • #52
yuiop said:
This equation predicts a 0 to 60 mph time of 7 seconds for the Tesla S performance and 7.2 seconds for the Performance Plus, yet the Plus has significantly more power and torque and the same weight. Something not right there. Tesla claim 5.4 seconds for the Performance and 4.2 seconds for the Plus.

Yes, this is not the only wrong formula: also the one which takes into account air drag gives impossible results (more than 60 seconds to go from 0 to 60 mph!)

sophiecentaur said:
There's no point in getting cross when someone points out that this is not possible - by the definition of Power from Torque and speed. You would be better to stop at this point and get your definitions right before moving on.
Ok, I add some clarification and set some basic hypotheses from which to start from.

This is the typical output of an electric car (brushless motor):
bl-speedtorque-chart.jpg


This is the actual, "physical" torque/speed curve for a dc/brushless motor:
motor-image-002.png


Unfortunately, you can't exploit the whole curve from 0 rpm (stall torque) to no-load speed (= 0 Nm torque), because at stall torque you would have something like THOUSANDS of amperes in your motor, which, guess what, would melt it; so a "rated torque" is fixed by electronic (first picture).

When you read "CVT" for electric cars, they just mean "automatic gear", i.e. you have a gear stick with just three positions: Drive, Neutral, Rear ("standard" people does not need technical details about how CVT is accomplished: if by complex mechanics or just by an electric motor directly placed into the wheel (hub motor), or an electric motor directly connected to differential gear).
I know how actually "electrical CVT" work because I drove 6 different electric cars by myself, I own an electric scooter declared by manufacturer as "CVT", and I also wrote a book on this topic.

This said, I think that to solve the original question, we should really simplify the problem.
In a first instance, let's ignore rolling friction: in worst case, it can increase the 0-60 time, but we currently have too LONG time with all equations we found, so it does not help in finding right equation.
Then, let's consider torque as constant from 0 to 60 mph: again, once we'll add real torque/speed data, we'll get a LONGER time, and again we are not looking for a longer time, 60 seconds to go from 0 to 60 mph are already too many!

I think we should work&think about the actual torque applied to wheel and the actual contribution of air drag to the force expression and speed equation, because there must be something wrong here.

We could also fix a lower limit to the 0-60 time be means of energy balance: a 1500 kg car needs amount of energy to go from 0 to 60 mph which is given by:
E = 0.5 * 1500 * 27.9 * 27.8

How do we get 0-60 times for the final-energy vaue?

craigi said:
That is specifically what we were talking about and it does match the torque and power curves for many electric cars very well. The Fluence Z.E, for instance, has flat torque upto about 25 mph, followed by flat power up to about 70 mph.

Where did you get these data?
 
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  • #53
Once we'll find a "best case" result for 0-60 time, we could take into account the real torque/speed curve of an EV:

http://img534.imageshack.us/img534/146/005elecnogears.jpg

Compared to an ICEV curve:
http://img841.imageshack.us/img841/772/004icegears.jpg

Of course this will give longer times, but as I said, we are currently trying to REDUCE time resulting from our current formulas, because even the worst car requires st most 30 seconds to get from 0 to 60 mph, but we get 60+ seconds with our (wrong) formulas.

http://www.energeticambiente.it/vei...re-elettrico-per-veicoli-3.html#post119396037
 
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  • #55
russ_watters said:
May I ask why? What is the purpose of this inquiry?
To be able to check if manufacturers data about acceleration are plausible; for example I read that Start Lab Open Street (a neighbour electric car) is capable of accelerating from 0 to 50 km/h in 3.3 seconds, which I know it's impossible, but only because I drove several vehicles like that one, and I measured that they require up to 20 secs if they carry lead battery and 6 seconds if they carry lithium battery.
I'd like to be able to figure out which real performances of a vehicle are without need to test it...
 
  • #56
yuiop said:
I agree.

Here is my simplified formula (for electric cars) obtained by finding the best fit in Excel:

##t_{60}=\frac{2.79 m}{P^{0.46}T^{0.72}}##
This is an interesting formula... but how did you get to it? "Best fitting" what? And how?
 
  • #57
Found some actual charts:
attachment.php?attachmentid=23100&d=1370283832.png


attachment.php?attachmentid=4000&d=1347276702.jpg
 

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  • #58
jumpjack said:
We could also fix a lower limit to the 0-60 time be means of energy balance: a 1500 kg car needs amount of energy to go from 0 to 60 mph which is given by:
E = 0.5 * 1500 * 27.9 * 27.8

How do we get 0-60 times for the final-energy value?

Basically we equate the input energy over the acceleration period to the final kinetic energy, so;

##Pt = \frac{1}{2}Mv^2##

[itex]\Rightarrow t = \frac{1}{2}\frac{Mv^2}{P}[/itex]

If P is the maximum power and if this could could be delivered right from zero mph then the time given by the above formula represents the absolute theoretic minimum acceleration time, but in practice, as you know, the power has to ramp up with the revs and velocity of the vehicle and so we have to find a reduced value for the power representing an averaged figure and taking losses into account.

jumpjack said:
This is an interesting formula... but how did you get to it? "Best fitting" what? And how?
Basically by trial and error and using the solve function in the Excel software. I have gathered together some more data for electric cars and found a better formula. The new equation is:

##t = \frac{1}{2}\frac{M v^2}{P}+\frac{1}{2}\frac{M^{0.48} v^2}{P^{0.48} T^{0.48}} ##

where v is the final velocity (26.8 m/s), P is the maximum power output in Watts, T is the maximum torque in Nm and M is the Kerb weight plus 75 kgs to take account of the driver's weight. The first term represents the bare minimum possible time and the second term represents additional time due to power ramp up, friction and how the the torque curve relates to the power curve. The table below shows an extended table of electric cars and their 0-60 mph times together with the predicted time (t60 column) and the percentage error of the predicted value from the published time in the yellow columns.

attachment.php?attachmentid=68423&stc=1&d=1396937315.jpg


The average absolute deviation of predicted values from the published values is about 6% which is not bad considering the very wide range of vehicle weights, power and torque outputs in the table. Generally acceleration is considered to be mainly a function of power to weight ratio, but it can be seen that some cars have faster 0-60 times than other cars that have a higher power to weight ratio, so torque has to be taken into account.

I have found an exception to the above formula where the error margin is unacceptable. It is the million dollar RIMAC Concept One super car which has 1088 horse power (!) and 1600 Nm torque. The predicted 0-60 time is 1.5 seconds whereas the actual time is 2.6 seconds. I am assuming that the RIMAC does not have sufficient traction to transfer all of that extreme power to the tarmac efficiently despite having 4 wheel drive. Actually, this video would suggest that traction IS an issue for the RIMAC. A lot of the energy is going into smoking the tires and melting the tarmac. Still, 2.6 seconds is not to be sneezed at!

jumpjack said:
To be able to check if manufacturers data about acceleration are plausible; for example I read that Start Lab Open Street (a neighbour electric car) is capable of accelerating from 0 to 50 km/h in 3.3 seconds, which I know it's impossible, ...

Your neighbours claim may be plausible. he is saying it take 3.3 seconds to go from 0 to 31 mph. Since the kinetic energy is proportional to v^2 the time to get to 31 mph (50 kph) is much less than half the time it takes to go from 0 to 62 mph (100 kph). I would say that 0-31 mph in 3.3 seconds would be consistent with 0 to 62 mph in about 11 seconds which is mid range in the above table.
 

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  • #59
yuiop said:
Your neighbours claim may be plausible.
No it's not: I forgot mentioning it has a 4 (yes, four) kW electric motor! :-)


Thanks for the new equation and table.

About the RIMAC Concept One... it's not easy to keep wheels in contact with the road when they try to give 1.9 g acceleration to the car! (27.8 m/s / 1.5 = 18.53 m/s2)
Even 2.6 secs mean 1g!
I think it's not very comfortable for passengers... ;-)
 
  • #60
yuiop said:
The new equation is:

##t = \frac{1}{2}\frac{M v^2}{P}+\frac{1}{2}\frac{M^{0.48} v^2}{P^{0.48} T^{0.48}} ##

[...]
The average absolute deviation of predicted values from the published values is about 6%

Maybe we could try taking into account the non-constant curve to get better results:
http://www.renault.com/fr/innovation/gamme-mecanique/images_without_moderation/courbe-zoe.jpg
We could suppose that given torque is available only for first 30% of speeds w.r.t maximum declared speed, than conisder linear (or quadratic) decrease of torque, or consider instead power values: 0 to Pmax in first 30%, constant P=Pmax for remaining 70%.

Specifically for this picture:
First 30%: T=220 Nm, P=6.3x
Last 70%: T=0.022 x^2- 5.2x + 357, P = 63000W

But torque at maximum speed is not usually an available data, so quadratic approximation of torque is not usually available and we must rely only on power curve.
 
  • #61
Another way of finding torque at the wheel at top speed is looking at power of the forces resisting acceleration. I have to get to work, so I'll just say that the equations for A and C that you posted in the other thread are exactly what I think is correct. You can replace CRR with a more general coefficient that represents the overall friction rather than just rolling friction, and the power loss from this friction should be directly related to speed. You normally have the top speed posted. The drag coefficient is normally posted, and if you can't find the frontal area affected, one approximation equation I see floating around using a modern car's height and width from the front is:

[itex]Area = ((H * W)/4)^2 * \pi[/itex]

Top Speed = [itex]\sqrt[3]{P_M / 2A+\sqrt[2]{(P_M / 2A)^2+(C/3A)^3}}+\sqrt[3]{P_M / 2A-\sqrt[2]{(P_M / 2A)^2+(C/3A)^3}}[/itex]

Those two equations combined should let you come up with your more generalized coefficient of friction. Then the power of the drag + the power of the friction should roughly equal the power at the engine. The power of drag alone should roughly equal the power being put out by the wheels, and the torques at the wheels can be determined by figuring out RPM's that will be determined by tire diameter that could lead to your force output at the wheels. Also keep in mind that a tire measured in milimeters and rim size measured in inches has a diameter equation of:

(((Width * (Aspect Ratio / 100) * 2)/25.4) + Rim size

The 25.4 comes from the millimeters in an inch. You'll likely have to play with this number depending on what units your tire width and rims diameter are measured. Those are simply the units I'm used to. Basically this is all based on the idea that acceleration stops when the power of resisting forces equals the power of accelerating forces. I have to get to work have fun.
 
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  • #62
jumpjack said:
Maybe we could try taking into account the non-constant curve to get better results:
http://www.renault.com/fr/innovation/gamme-mecanique/images_without_moderation/courbe-zoe.jpg

Actually, I found the power curve diagrams useful to make an improved predicted 0-60 time. Here is how it works. Looking at the curve for the Zoe it can be seen that the power is a linear function of the speed up to a critical speed (##v_c##) which in this case is about 30 km/h or 9.16 m/s. It is fairly easy to show that when the power is directly proportional to the speed, that the acceleration is constant and all the standard equations of motion apply, within the speed range ##0<=v<=v_c##. Using the first equation of motion:

##V=at##
##\rightarrow t=V/a##
##\rightarrow t=M V/Force##

##\rightarrow t_c=\frac{M V_c^2}{P_{max}}##

Note that this is twice the time predicted by the usual formula ##t=\frac{1}{2}\frac{M V^2}{P_{max}}## because the average power over this phase is half the maximum power. For the latter part of the curve from the critical speed ##V_c## to the final speed ##V_f## , where the power is constant (##P_{max}##) and the time is given by the usual relationship:

##t_{cf} = \frac{1}{2}\frac{M V_f^2}{P_{max}} - \frac{1}{2}\frac{M V_c^2}{P_{max}}##

Combining the two times above to gives the total theoretical acceleration time:

##t_{60} = \frac{1}{2}\frac{M (V_f^2+V_c^2)}{P_{max}}##

For the Renault Zoe this works out as 9.8 seconds.

This time makes no allowance for drive trains losses, drag, dynamic losses etc. Using a simple assumption of 15% power loss to encompass all these losses the equation can be written as:

##t_{60} = \frac{1}{2}\frac{M (V_{f}^2+V_{c}^2)}{0.85 P_{max}}##,

where M is the kerb weight plus driver weight in kgs, P is the maximum power in Watts and V is the velocity in m/s. This gives an estimated 0-60 time of 11.5 seconds which is pretty close. Applying the same formula to the 5 electric cars that we have power torque curve data for, gives an average absolute deviation of 5.6% from the published values for this admittedly small data sample.

The data set including ##v_c## is shown in the table below together with the predicted values and percentage errors.

attachment.jpg


The above results suggest the Tesla cars have less losses due to friction, etc than the Renault electric cars. For completeness the diagram below shows power and velocity as a function of time for the Renault Zoe:

attachment.jpg
It can be seen with power plotted as a function of time, that the average power output over the acceleration period is somewhere between 85 and 90% of the maximum power for a typical electric car. The velocity curve is linear to Vcrit as per the magenta line and then follows the blue curve after that.

if you have some more power/torque curves for electric cars, it would be interesting to see how they compare.
 

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  • #63
From chart I calculated that for Zoe we have, for ##v<v_c##, P = k * v (k = 6900 = 63000 W / 9.16 m/s).
But, given that it must also be P = F * v , and given F = 220 Nm... shouldn't I get k=220 Nm ?!?
 
  • #64
jumpjack said:
From chart I calculated that for Zoe we have, for ##v<v_c##, P = k * v (k = 6900 = 63000 W / 9.16 m/s).
But, given that it must also be P = F * v , and given F = 220 Nm... shouldn't I get k=220 Nm ?!?

220 Nm is the torque (T) and and not the force (F) in Newtons.

The force in the example you give is F = P/V = 63000 W / 9.16 m/s = 6877 N so you are right that F = k = Constant for ##V<=V_c##.

The Force can also be found from F=Energy/distance = E/s.

First we need to know the time to accelerate to Vc which is given by tc = M Vc2/Pmax = 1.955 seconds. (The time to Vc in the diagram in the previous post is slightly longer because I was using a value of 85% power to take drive train losses into account.)

The distance traveled in that time is s = Vc*tc/2 = 9.16*1.955/2 = 8.954 metres.

So F = E/s = (1/2)M V2/s = 0.5*1468*9.162/8.954 ≈ 6877 N.

The acceleration in this part of the curve is constant and is given by a = F/M = 6877 N / 1468 kgs = 4.685 m/s2 and ##t_{c}# is given by tc = Vc/a which is 9.16 m/s / 4.685 m/s2 = 1.955 seconds which confirms the earlier result.
 
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  • #65
yuiop said:
220 Nm is the torque (T) and T = F * r where r is a 'leverage' ratio.

The force in the example you give is F = P/v = 63000 W / 9.16 m/s = 6877 N = k = Constant for ##V<=V_c##

P.S. I am still editing this post. Got a bit confused somewhere :P

yes, me too. :-)
Actually I forgot wheel radius, so if T=220 Nm we should consider F = 220/0.3 = 733 Nm, but we're still far from 6800! And by a factor ~10, which is ~same factor between actual 0-60 times (>6 secs) and results I obtain (>60 secs).

I've been suggested the maybe torque is given at motor rather than at wheel, but I don't think the gear ratio is 1:10!
 
  • #66
jumpjack said:
About the RIMAC Concept One... it's not easy to keep wheels in contact with the road when they try to give 1.9 g acceleration to the car! (27.8 m/s / 1.5 = 18.53 m/s2)
Even 2.6 secs mean 1g!
I think it's not very comfortable for passengers... ;-)

You know that feeling is probably the whole point of buying a stupidly fast car in the first place. Why would you NOT wish to experience it? :-)
 
  • #67
jumpjack said:
yes, me too. :-)
Actually I forgot wheel radius, so if T=220 Nm we should consider F = 220/0.3 = 733 Nm, but we're still far from 6800! And by a factor ~10, which is ~same factor between actual 0-60 times (>6 secs) and results I obtain (>60 secs).

I've been suggested the maybe torque is given at motor rather than at wheel, but I don't think the gear ratio is 1:10!

Actually, the overall gear ratio might be something like 10:1. In this chart for the Tesla Roadster that you posted in #57, the overall gear ration is quoted as being 8.28:1 and the revs at 100 mph are about 12000! (Much higher than a geared petrol engine).

attachment.php?attachmentid=4000&d=1347276702.jpg


From the specifications in the Tesla website, the single speed Tesla Roadster Sport (red curve in the above chart) reaches maximum power at 4400 rpm which equates to a critical velocity of 39 mph or 17.4 m/s on the above chart. This is slightly earlier than the speed that the torque drops off from maximum in the chart.

With Vc = 17.4 m/s, a kerb weight of 1335 kg and maximum power of 235 kW, the 0-60 time predicted by my equation (assuming 15% drive train losses and a 75 kg driver) is 3.8 seconds while Tesla claim 3.7 seconds. Pretty good eh!

The outside diameter of a 225/45 R17 tyre as used on the Roadster is 634 mm giving a radius of 0.317 m. The rpm of the wheel at Vc is 17.4/(2*Pi*0.317)*60 ≈ 524 rpm. The engine speed at Vc is about ≈ 4400 rpm (from the chart) giving a overall gear ratio of 4400/524 ≈ 8.4:1 which is close to the 8.28:1 ratio quoted by Tesla.
 
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  • #68
So I must assume that, if not stated differently, a vechicle torque is given at motor and that it's final gear ratio is ~8?
I wonder if there is a database of final ratios available around...

I found this page for Nissan Leaf:
http://livingleaf.info/2010/11/nissan-leaf-electric-motor-and-transmission/

Summary:
Final Drive Ratio:7.9377
Max motor speed: 10390 RPM
Max car speed: 94 mph (151 kmh)
Tyres diamater: 24,9" (31 cm radius)
60 mph = 837 RPM
Curb Weight= 3355 lbs (1535 kg)

From here:
http://techcrunch.com/2010/11/02/nissan-releases-final-specs-on-the-leaf/
Max Power = 80 kW
Max torque = 280 Nm

Curves:
http://img834.imageshack.us/img834/8247/leaftorquehp.jpg

This variant has 107 kW and 187 Nm and goes from 0 to 60 in 0.7, has Cd=0.28 and mass 3291 pounds:
http://www.topspeed.com/cars/nissan/2014-nissan-leaf-ar161509.html

--------

Renault Zoe is sold with tyres having radius 305-310mm ( http://myrenaultzoe.com/index.php/zoe-description/wheels-tyres-and-range/)
65 kW @ 3000-11300 rpm 8http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:uSE2wA2QwfwJ:www.carfolio.com/specifications/models/car/?car=342397+&cd=2&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=it)
220 Nm @ 250-2500 rpm

---------
i-Miev has 47 kW between 3000 and 6000 rpm and 180 Nm from 0 to 2000 RPM ( https://www.sia.org.au/downloads/Divisional/ACT/i-MiEV_presentation.pdf)
Tyres are:
Front: 145/65R15 (28cm radius)
Rear: 175/55R15 (29cm radius) (drive)
Mass is 1100 kg
Final gear ratio 7.065
0-100 in 15.9 secs
Max speed: 130kmph
-------
Ford Focus Electric
0-62mph 11.7secs;
Top speed 85mph;
Kerbweight 1700kg;
Power 143bhp (107 kW);
Torque 184lb ft (250 Nm);
Gearbox Reduction box with ratio of 10:1
 
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  • #69
yuiop said:
For completeness the diagram below shows power and velocity as a function of time for the Renault Zoe:

attachment.php?attachmentid=68488&stc=1&d=1397078157.jpg
How did you get the equation to plot the v(t) graph?
 
  • #70
New data:

Honda Fit EV (http://automobiles.honda.com/fit-ev/specifications.aspx)
Power:
92 kW @ 3695~10320 (sport mode)
75 kW @ 3695~10320 (normal)
47 kW @ 3695~10320 (economy)

Torque:
189 lbft (256 Nm) @ 0 - 3056


Gear Ratios:
1st: 2.185
Reverse: 2.185
Final Drive (axle): 3.688
Overall: 8.05828

Tyres:
P185 / 65 R15 86T (31 cm radius)

Curb weight: 3252 lbs (1473 kg)

0-60 time: 8.7 s

Max speed (limited): 91 mph



$$v_{vehicle} = \omega_{wheel} r = 2 \pi f_{wheel} r = 2 \pi \frac {RPM_{wheel}}{60} r = 2 \pi \frac {\frac {RPM_{motor}} {G_{overall}}}{60} r = 2 \frac {\pi}{60} \frac {RPM_{motor}} {G_{overall}} r = 0.105 \frac {RPM_{motor}} {G_{overall}} r $$

"Typical" value:
$$ 0.105 \frac {RPM_{motor}} 8 0.31 = 0.004 RPM_{motor} = \frac 4 {1000} RPM_{motor}$$

For Honda Fit EV:
v = ##\frac 4 {1000} 3056## ~= 12 m/s = 43 km/h = 26.8 mph
 

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