Not seen the series but the principle is one that some clients of mine were developing some 15 or so years back. They were a small independent family run tech/motorsport business that were trying to bring back an old & historic British motoring name by developing not only an electric super car but also a very simple, very basic modular system for electric driven vehicles.Does anyone else watch mutch from that canafian fella, Edison trucks.
Theyre building electric logging trucks as well as heavy haul and drilling well rigging trucks.
Their also working on retro fitting kits for pick ups.
Stick 2 electric axles in and either use the engine or stick a smaller generator motor in instead and it powers the batteries.
From wot ive seen seems to be working and seems a far cleaver idea esp for rural pick ups/work horses.
I've no axe to grind in the EV vs ICE debate. Have both, each have their strengths/ weaknesses. Day to day motoring my EV is a far better car than its ICE friend beside it on the driveway. Haven't seen any EV close to being able to replace your typical pick up though. If we get the Slate here that could be interesting (for me). Don't think it can carry or tow big weights though.
The way its being built is interesting what I don't know is exactly how power is delivered to the ground. I run Komatsu mining trucks with electric wheel motors and I assure you when it gets slick they can be treacherous.
A million mm gets you 1kmIt would be nice to have the worlds economy laid out in plain English for everyone to see.
I've watched a clip on YT this morning (The Greatest Financial Crash in History) about the 2008 crash and how the central bank printed trillions to "Save Us"
You can only wonder what is in store.
Forget trillions... it's quadrillions now![]()
Just watched a couple of his videos on YouTube - the one about pick ups & the first load hauled in ‘Topsy’ the electric truck. Both very impressive but left me with some reservations re the pick ups.
The pick ups use two motors, one driving into the differential on each axle so no gearbox, transfer box or prop shafts to worry about getting damaged by the torque (UJ’s are apparently a very weak link in normal EV conversions).
What did strike me about the pick ups was that there was a LOT of space needed for batteries, controllers, coolers, etc. On the Dodge these were all visible below the bottom of the chassis rails making them a hindrance to ground clearance & a risk of damage due to grounding in anything that doesn’t have sufficiently high clearance. In the 79 series LC there was a MASSIVE cooler in the pick up bed which they said was from a truck & would be down sized so it could sit between the chassis rails behind the rear axle, but it’s still a lot of ‘gubbins’ to have sat in an area that is likely to get whacked when properly off road & covered in mud too.
As others have said too, I’m not sure how they’ll work with modern trucks that have traction control etc rather than mechanically locking diffs etc.
Any hoo will certainly be watching a few more of his videos when there’s naff all but repeats or carp films on the gogglebox over Xmas!
the Komatsu does not have a differential, and that is the problem when applied dynamic braking ( think locomotive reverse polarity) easy to spin . Off camber situations make things more interesting.From wot i can gathertheir just using standard electric axles that other EV cars use.
Really the way i understand it theonly difference between a nirmal EV is u have a mobile chargibg generator with u and it can charge as u drive.
Wot do u mean too much torque?
Just spinning wheels when things are slippy?
I think EV cars may have that problem already.
I mind asking an FC forester why he didnt follow me down a mossy but hard road. Both in 2wd wee vans, he said his EV would never get back out.
And heard similar from local polis they have some EVs now and say terrible in the snow.