Nix
Well-Known Member
There is a lot going on in this video.
There are some choices he pointed out he made just to demonstrate the drivetrain, that wouldn't actually be good choices for hardcore wheeling. Stock tire PSI, stiff suspension, large diameter rims, and AT tires vs. MT tires in soft dry dirt is not at all optimal for wheeling on that specific trail. Both vehicles could have performed better just changing those factors.
None of that is helping, but setting that all aside and focusing on just the drivetrain and programming, I'm seeing a couple of problems.
1) Too much tire acceleration way too quickly. The tires are going from not turning to spinning quite hard at what appears to be the slightest jab of the pedal. A low geared off-roader would allow the tires to slowly scratch their way forward instead of spinning fast with no chances of regaining traction.
2) It wants to go too fast when it does hook up with traction. As soon as it hooks up, the driver must quickly let off the pedal. It isn't letting him moderate the power smoothly, and it isn't just his driving style. It isn't allowing him to keep applying steady moderate power.
3) Electric motors appear to be overpowering the spinning wheels, where brakes would normally lock up the spinning wheels in modern advanced traction control systems. Normally the idea would be to keep a moderate throttle and let the brakes overpower the spinning, and let the system find traction.
I have no knowledge of programming EV's. But I would be interested to see this test again with much less power going to the motors and much slower throttle response. It might not perform as well as a fully locked low range geared off-roader. But it seems like there is a lot of opportunity for significant improvement just through programming.
(my background -- lifted and locked Jeep TJ with re-geared axles and transfer case for extreme low range gearing, and two sets of wheels with both AT and MT tires)
There are some choices he pointed out he made just to demonstrate the drivetrain, that wouldn't actually be good choices for hardcore wheeling. Stock tire PSI, stiff suspension, large diameter rims, and AT tires vs. MT tires in soft dry dirt is not at all optimal for wheeling on that specific trail. Both vehicles could have performed better just changing those factors.
None of that is helping, but setting that all aside and focusing on just the drivetrain and programming, I'm seeing a couple of problems.
1) Too much tire acceleration way too quickly. The tires are going from not turning to spinning quite hard at what appears to be the slightest jab of the pedal. A low geared off-roader would allow the tires to slowly scratch their way forward instead of spinning fast with no chances of regaining traction.
2) It wants to go too fast when it does hook up with traction. As soon as it hooks up, the driver must quickly let off the pedal. It isn't letting him moderate the power smoothly, and it isn't just his driving style. It isn't allowing him to keep applying steady moderate power.
3) Electric motors appear to be overpowering the spinning wheels, where brakes would normally lock up the spinning wheels in modern advanced traction control systems. Normally the idea would be to keep a moderate throttle and let the brakes overpower the spinning, and let the system find traction.
I have no knowledge of programming EV's. But I would be interested to see this test again with much less power going to the motors and much slower throttle response. It might not perform as well as a fully locked low range geared off-roader. But it seems like there is a lot of opportunity for significant improvement just through programming.
(my background -- lifted and locked Jeep TJ with re-geared axles and transfer case for extreme low range gearing, and two sets of wheels with both AT and MT tires)
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