I thought that torque was calculated/measured at the wheels
and to get the highest number, it is typically in 1st gear,
so I would not expect that they can break tires loose on a
dragstrip if they launch in 4th gear even with a standard
diff, let alone with 1:1 diff, because I expect that torque 
was measured in 1st gear, no?

100 MPH is 44.7 meters per second, with tires that are 24"
dia (61cm) the RPM of the wheels is 1400 at 100MPH, you would not
want to gear your car to have the motor lugging that low
at 100MPH! (unless you are actually doing a speed closer to 1000MPH)

Cor van de Water
Chief Scientist
Proxim Wireless

office +1 408 383 7626          Skype: cor_van_de_water
XoIP   +31 87 784 1130          private: cvandewater.info
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-----Original Message-----
From: EV [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ben Goren via EV
Sent: Wednesday, May 13, 2015 10:16 AM
To: brucedp5; Electric Vehicle Discussion List
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: UK's 1000hp 1975 Electric Enfield (v)

On May 13, 2015, at 12:12 AM, brucedp5 via EV <[email protected]> wrote:

> Later in the weekend, the team turned up the wick and the car sprinted 
> through the quarter mile in 12.56 seconds at 101.43 mph.

Quite respectable in and of itself, and most impressive in a car that started 
life as the antithesis of fast!

> The batteries pack delivers 370 volts, 600 kilowatts, more than 2000 
> amps, 1003hp,  and 1200 lb-ft of torque - all while weighing less than 360 
> lbs.

370 V * 2000 A = 740 kW, not 600 kW, and that's going to work out to be much 
closer to about the same numeric value for horsepower rather than 1003, so 
something isn't adding up. Very lightweight, though, for that much power. Be 
nice to know the Ah / kWh capacity...and the source and price....

Regardless, in a vehicle that weighs under 2,000 pounds, he's got waaaaaay more 
power than he'll ever actually be able to put to the ground -- exactly the kind 
of problem you want in drag racing. Just taking that 1200 lb-ft of torque at 
face value...that's well over half the weight of the car, meaning that, 
assuming tires roughly 24" in diameter (give or take), even with no gear 
reduction (fourth gear equivalent and a 1:1 rear differential) he can _still_ 
break the tires loose. Insane! His big challenge is traction, including weight 
and balance management (especially getting the weight to shift to the rear axle 
without going over backwards) since he's not likely to be able to do much more 
with the tires.

Seems like a really fun project, and I bet it's even more fun to drive!

b&
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