Of that micro turbine for range extenders?strad wrote:do you guys even watch the video???
Of that micro turbine for range extenders?strad wrote:do you guys even watch the video???
According to the video it can be scaled up or down depending on the application.WhiteBlue wrote:Of that micro turbine for range extenders?strad wrote:do you guys even watch the video???
Hmmmm high-powered All-Wheel-Drive electric F1 Cars with a jet-turbine sound track ...... Im so there!xpensive wrote:I would love it on my part, imagine hearing low-downforce 750 Hp tyre-screaming?
Why would that necessarily be the case? The unit would probably have a fundamental design like the Chrysler with a free power shaft, and an MGU for moderation that would produce electricity for a transaxle electric drive.autogyro wrote:The transmission for a car running a turbine as prime mover in performance applications would be a very big problem.
The fact you need very large reduction ratios make the gears unreliable without making the gearbox overly large, or having a multi stage transmission.WhiteBlue wrote:Why would that necessarily be the case? The unit would probably have a fundamental design like the Chrysler with a free power shaft, and an MGU for moderation that would produce electricity for a transaxle electric drive.autogyro wrote:The transmission for a car running a turbine as prime mover in performance applications would be a very big problem.
WhiteBlue wrote:Current consumption is 150 kg/race. Target for 2013 is 115 kg.
it´s pretty close I would say, and does not even include KERS.WhiteBlue wrote:That looks more interesting. It sounds like the engine has a free power shaft but no variable vanes.
It is a bit overpowered. And the weight at 110 kg without regenerator is high due to the excessive power.
At 0.175 kg/hp/h and 488 hp average power I find 114 kg of kerosene for an 80 min race. The drivability without variable vanes to control the power turbine could be poor. Coming closer.
It would definitely not be the next formula after the 2.4 V8 which I think is the issue of this thread. A new thread for a future turbine option would just make more sense IMO.747heavy wrote:Why is it OT, the opening thread and the thread title did not talk about 2013, it is looking for future alternatives in general.
But you don't. The project 747 mentioned had shaft speed of 8000 rpm. The Chrysler turbine also ran low speed by virtue of variable vanes that did the primary torque regulation.xxChrisxx wrote:The fact you need very large reduction ratios make the gears unreliable without making the gearbox overly large, or having a multi stage transmission.
I would not exactly call it current. It is announced and the introduction of the super sports car has been delayed for several years.747heavy wrote:it´s pretty close I would say, and does not even include KERS.
not too shabby for current technology
The way the 747's post reads is that 8000rpm is the shaft spead after reduction gearing. It doesn't really make any sense for a gas trubine to be running that slowly.WB wrote: But you don't. The project 747 mentioned had shaft speed of 8000 rpm. The Chrysler turbine also ran low speed by virtue of variable vanes that did the primary torque regulation.
No, I don't think it has a reduction gear with the efficiency quoted. It has a free power shaft with a turbine that is designed to run slowly. Note that the other shaft runs very fast.xxChrisxx wrote:The way the 747's post reads is that 8000rpm is the shaft spead after reduction gearing. It doesn't really make any sense for a gas trubine to be running that slowly.WB wrote: But you don't. The project 747 mentioned had shaft speed of 8000 rpm. The Chrysler turbine also ran low speed by virtue of variable vanes that did the primary torque regulation.
Especially not a small one. It's just the same as a turbocharger, the smaller you go the faster they run.