EV general discussion

thanks yes so they nearly doubled capacity , but battery weight only went up 25%
https://www.whichev.net/2019/11/21/...ing-you-need-to-know-2019-2020-race-calendar/




car weight impact
I'd like to see a an overlayed lateral G&speed for the Taycan, versus a 900+kg lighter, ICE sibling, on the Nürburgring

unless the Taycan has much bigger contact patch on the tyres, or, much lower CofG, it must be be able to go around corners, versus its sibling, limited by the ratio of the weights,
so the taycan would be 40-50% slower, yes it will accelerate faster on the straight, but that G feeling you get going round a nice corner/roundabout will be diminished,
a cars active downforce can impact this issue too, but that's going with square?cube? of speed.

Obviously that lower weight also means additional passive safety margin for the car leaving the road in the wet, say .... you can't overrule the laws of physics.

Why would you like to see that ?

What an utterly odd post - predicting a Taycan can limit G at circa ~0.6G is so wide of the mark its not even worth entertaining the discussion.

So has a double decker bus.

You were closer with bus, why edit to double decker? your not quite as punchy with your posts as you think.

Lets see, maybe 'cos its not a Porsche and doesnt demand the attributes associated with the brand. When exactly are you gonna wind your neck in - its so boring having the Masher report everyday.
 
A 981 Cayman s isn't designed for racing.

It’s also not a huge 4 door GT car or even remotely comparable when considering weight. To clarify what I meant, you are not going to find an ICE car in the same class as a Taycan which is 900kg lighter, like I said a Panamera which is as close as you are going to get is only 200kg lighter.

Another example is a Model 3 Performance is 1850kg and a BMW M3 is just over 1600kg.
 
It’s also not a huge 4 door GT car or even remotely comparable when considering weight. To clarify what I meant, you are not going to find an ICE car in the same class as a Taycan which is 900kg lighter, like I said a Panamera which is as close as you are going to get is only 200kg lighter.

Another example is a Model 3 Performance is 1850kg and a BMW M3 is just over 1600kg.

You've just moved the goal posts! Keep them steady.
 
You've just moved the goal posts! Keep them steady.

Yes, when you ignore half of a 2 line post where I am talking about cars in the same class you could say that I moved the goal posts...

Lets also consider what the post I was responding to said:

thanks yes so they nearly doubled capacity , but battery weight only went up 25%
https://www.whichev.net/2019/11/21/...ing-you-need-to-know-2019-2020-race-calendar/




car weight impact
I'd like to see a an overlayed lateral G&speed for the Taycan, versus a 900+kg lighter, ICE sibling, on the Nürburgring

unless the Taycan has much bigger contact patch on the tyres, or, much lower CofG, it must be be able to go around corners, versus its sibling, limited by the ratio of the weights,
so the taycan would be 40-50% slower, yes it will accelerate faster on the straight, but that G feeling you get going round a nice corner/roundabout will be diminished,
a cars active downforce can impact this issue too, but that's going with square?cube? of speed.

Obviously that lower weight also means additional passive safety margin for the car leaving the road in the wet, say .... you can't overrule the laws of physics.


The poster specifically refered to an ICE sibling of the Tycan. I don't know about you but I wouldn't class a Cayman as an ICE sibling as of a Taycan, they are completely different classes of car. No one would consider an Audi TT to be a sibling of an Audi RS7, particularly when comparing weight.

Could you compare the Kona Electric vs Kona Ice, yup, Tycan and the Panamera, yes absolutely, Model 3 vs 3 Series, yes while technically not the same class because the Model 3's cabin space is larger despite having similar external dimensions, Ford Mustang Mach E vs Ford Mustang, no don't be silly.
 
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The relative power of the lighter/sibling car versus the Taycan is not so important , at, say 60mph, you could take a curve in a 1200KG car that would overturn/understeer a 2000kg car, unless, the cofg. or contact patch, of the heavier car, countered that.
You could counteract the understeer/inadequate-friction I guess, unlike the car flipping due to high cofg.

[ now, looking up the centre of mavity height sensitivity
Maximum speed (v) = [rgb/h]1/2 http://www.schoolphysics.co.uk/age16-19/Mechanics/Circular motion/text/Cars_cornering/index.html
radius(r), track(b) , cofgheight(h)
... so if cofg were 8" as opposed to 12" you'd increase speed by 20%
but, LOL so ability to flip the car and unload the inner tyre is independant of the car mass !
]
 
Guy buys a Porsche EV and loves it as much or more than his ICE Porsche, random nonsense debate ensues, OCUK motors at its finest.
 
Guy buys a Porsche EV and loves it as much or more than his ICE Porsche, random nonsense debate ensues, OCUK motors at its finest.
Which ICE Porsche was it anyway. You didn’t even say what car he replaced in the original post, let alone that he used to have a Porsche.

Was it a battered old boxster or a nearly new panamera V8?
 
The relative power of the lighter/sibling car versus the Taycan is not so important , at, say 60mph, you could take a curve in a 1200KG car that would overturn/understeer a 2000kg car, unless, the cofg. or contact patch, of the heavier car, countered that.
You could counteract the understeer/inadequate-friction I guess, unlike the car flipping due to high cofg.

[ now, looking up the centre of mavity height sensitivity
Maximum speed (v) = [rgb/h]1/2 http://www.schoolphysics.co.uk/age16-19/Mechanics/Circular motion/text/Cars_cornering/index.html
radius(r), track(b) , cofgheight(h)
... so if cofg were 8" as opposed to 12" you'd increase speed by 20%
but, LOL so ability to flip the car and unload the inner tyre is independant of the car mass !
]

You cant really compensate for mass (or lack of it). Everything gets better when you remove weight. You can try and counter it but you wont get the agility, feel or responsiveness of a lightweight.
 
rule britannia this is the problem with deprecation of STEM skills, would be a regular coffee machine discussion at our workplace

Using schoolText book age 16-19 Links?

I would hope the stuff you were quoting is somewhat closer to vehicle dynamics than some STEM stuff. But it wasn’t, and truthfully you know that was the case.
 
Yes, when you ignore half of a 2 line post where I am talking about cars in the same class you could say that I moved the goal posts...

Lets also consider what the post I was responding to said:




The poster specifically refered to an ICE sibling of the Tycan. I don't know about you but I wouldn't class a Cayman as an ICE sibling as of a Taycan, they are completely different classes of car. No one would consider an Audi TT to be a sibling of an Audi RS7, particularly when comparing weight.

Could you compare the Kona Electric vs Kona Ice, yup, Tycan and the Panamera, yes absolutely, Model 3 vs 3 Series, yes while technically not the same class because the Model 3's cabin space is larger despite having similar external dimensions, Ford Mustang Mach E vs Ford Mustang, no don't be silly.

Could you show me where you mentioned cars of the same class?
 
What ever the tax scenario is, it will also likely apply to ICE vehicles, effectively they will be double taxed off the roads. Taxation (even when very mild) is often a very effective tool for nudging behaviour change in this country. It worked for diesel let alone things like carrier bags and fizzy drinks.
 
What ever the tax scenario is, it will also likely apply to ICE vehicles, effectively they will be double taxed off the roads. Taxation (even when very mild) is often a very effective tool for nudging behaviour change in this country. It worked for diesel let alone things like carrier bags and fizzy drinks.
"Oh the drinks are a DIY job? Yeah I'd be having diet... *Cough*"
 
It's arrived

saxTgNM.jpg
 
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