Formula E to use Qualcomm technologies in electric cars

http://sidepodcast.com/post/bernie-batman-and-battery-powered-racing
Bernie, Batman and battery-powered racing An introduction to Formula E and
its Formula One connections
by Ross Ringham  5 September 2013

[image  / Formula E Holdings
http://a.sidepodcast.com/content/2013/09/formula-e-prototype-berlin.jpg
Formula E Prototype car takes to the streets of Berlin - Di Grassi takes in
the sights and sounds of Berlin
]

Formula E, the FIA’s new all-electric, open-wheel racing series, has begun
to generate (pun only slightly intended) genuine interest from all corners.
Formula 1 devotees are beginning to pay attention too, which is not as
surprising as it may at first seem.
Formula E Prototype car takes to the streets of BerlinDi Grassi takes in the
sights and sounds of Berlin

Connections between Formula E and Formula 1 are really very close; almost
nepotistic. To illustrate: in the inaugural season, a customer car is being
provided to alleviate development and operating costs for prospective teams.
The car is being built by a consortium led by a new company called Spark,
which is headed by Frederic Vassuer. Heard the name before? He is a
co-founder of the ART team, which competes in F1 feeder series GP2 and GP3.
(The other ART founder is Nicolas Todt, son of former Ferrari boss and head
honcho at the FIA, Jean, and whose management company looks after Felipe
Massa.)

The consortium building the car also includes titans of F1 McLaren (motors),
Williams (batteries) and Renault (technical overview). The chassis is from
Dallara, wearing French rubber stamped Michelin. (The Mercedes F1 chaps were
involved in the globe-trotting prototype.) The rear-wheel drive machine is
expected to have a better power to weight ratio than the bonkers all-wheel
drive AMG SLS E Drive that awed Jeremy Clarkson. It will be unveiled at the
Frankfurt motor show next week; Jean Todt is expected to be in attendance.

Then there’s the fact that the Formula E development driver, Lucas di
Grassi, is a former F1 racer and the current F1 Pirelli tester. And Formula
E’s partnership with TAG Heuer, which will provide timing for the
battery-powered series as it does to McLaren.
Agog at Agag
Alejandro Agag, Formula E Holdings

Not enough connections? Enter Spanish businessman and Formula E promoter
Alejandro Agag, who has said repeatedly that the new series is a completely
different proposition to F1, and that it complements rather than competes.
His F1 interests include the rights to Spanish TV F1 coverage, purchased
with ex-Renault F1 principal Flavio Briatore, and ownership of the Addax
GP2/GP3 team.

Oh, and he was part-owner of English football club Queen’s Park Rangers –
along with Briatore and a certain Bernie Ecclestone. In a typically complex
set of deals, Tony Fernandes was eventually left holding the shares – that’s
the same Fernandes who has Caterham F1 in his toy box.

At one time, Agag was even touted as a potential successor to the FOM
throne, which he publicly dismissed. Instead, his outfit FEH now owns
Formula E in the same way that FOM has snared F1.

Scratch the surface and it’s quickly evident that Formula E is as much a
plaything of the rich and famous as F1. There are big bucks and bigger names
behind Formula E: that doesn’t guarantee success, but it’s going to take a
spectacular derailment to slow this gravy train down.
Tackling technology

Here’s a 10 second overview of Formula E.

The basic concept is this: open-wheel, single-seat electric cars race around
city street circuits. The fun kicks off in 2014, with the calendar set to
include 10 destinations across the globe visited between September and June
the following year. First year locations are London, Berlin, Rome, LA,
Miami, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Beijing, Putrajaya and Bangkok.

The grid will feature 10 teams, each fielding two drivers. Three have so far
been announced, which include one headed by former UK science minister Paul
Drayson and leading IndyCar racing dynasty Andretti Autosport.

Practice, qualifying and the race itself will all take place in a single
day. Latest indications are that qualifying will be just two hot laps, and
the race itself an hour long. We’re expecting low levels of downforce and a
single all-weather tyre that will last the whole race: together, ingredients
that add up to promise races dictated by driver skill. Quite an old
fashioned concept for such a futuristic endeavour.

    Bluebird of land speed record fame has already announced its interest
with a fantastic, sinuous beast

Battery technology is expected to be the limiting factor. Battery swaps were
ruled out early on by the FIA for safety reasons.

Instead, each driver will have two cars: car A to be driven for about 25
minutes, returned to the pits and recharged for 25 minutes while car B is
being ragged around the track, and then car A picked up again for the final
sprint. It’s clumsy but it’s a start.

Recharging will be tough too. For a start, recharging big batteries fast
requires portable heavy duty machinery that doesn’t yet exist. Then there’s
the fact that cities will need to beef up their power supply and
distribution infrastructure or risk blacking out entire districts. Then
there are the limitations of the batteries themselves, which physically
can’t be charged too fast.

The second season is expected to introduce other constructors, which is when
we would expect to see an explosion in engineering innovation. Bluebird of
land speed record fame has already announced its interest with a fantastic,
sinuous beast that looks like it has driven straight out of a Batman film.
(Officially, the car is being launched late in September by the UK business
minister Vince Cable at the Sustainable MotoExpo.)

In fact, expect the whole series to evolve like Batman, moving from the
storyboarded pages of imagination to the camp, overweight and
self-consciously daft TV series but growing into the brutal, efficient
machinery of the Nolan/Bale franchise. We won’t mention Clooney. Or rubber
nipples.

Much has been made about other details, but the fact is that most of what we
know at this point is conjecture, marketing fluff and good intentions. Agag
will be submitting his plans to the FIA’s World Motor Sports Council this
month, which will chew through the minutia before green lighting anything.
[© 2007-2013 Christine Blachford]



http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24013661
Formula E to use Qualcomm technologies in electric cars
9 September 2013 - The FIA international motorsports body plans to launch
the electric-car competition next year as an alternative to Formula 1.
Qualcomm will provide ...




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