http://www.theaggie.org/2014/02/14/uc-davis-formula-electric-builds-all-electric-racecar/
UC Davis Formula Electric builds all-electric racecar
by JUNETTE HSIN  February 14, 2014

Engineering students to enter SAE Formula Electric competition

Every week, a group of UC Davis mechanical and electrical engineering majors
gather in Bainer Hall. There, they integrate knowledge from electrical
circuits, dynamics, material properties and many other engineering
disciplines. Their goal? To build the fastest electric racecar they can
under the guidelines of the Society of Automotive Engineers’ (SAE) Formula
Electric competition.

You might know them as the former Formula Hybrid team. This year, they have
switched focus to electrical vehicles. According to several Formula Electric
members, electric vehicles are the way of the future.

“You can do more with a bigger electric motor. With a hybrid, you are
constrained by the chassis and how much power you can put out,” said Jeff
Bouchard, a fourth-year electrical engineering major.

The general overview of how electric vehicles work starts with the motor.
The motor turns electrical energy into mechanical energy, propelling the
vehicle into motion. The motor receives commands from a computer called the
motor controller. A person may input different commands to the motor
controller, such as throttling. The battery supplies energy to the entire
car.

Formula Electric’s racecar consists mainly of the chassis (the frame) and
the power train (motor and motor controller), which is also a senior design
project for some members. The work is divided among teams. The chassis team
cuts and reshapes steel tubes for the frame, the electrical team does the
circuitry and programming for the actual controls and the ergonomics people
work on steering, seats, the acceleration pedal, brake pedal and gas pedal.

“(There are) a lot of different parts, there (are) different deadlines.
We’re aiming for finishing in March, since our competition is in June,” said
Kimberley Carr, a third-year mechanical engineering major.

Formula Electric is using a motor from Zero Motorcycles, an electric
motorcycle company based in Santa Cruz. In January 2012, Pike’s Research, a
market research and consulting firm, ranked Zero Motorcycles the highest
among electric motorcycle manufacturers.

“Battery technology is now getting to a point where it is really viable. The
more you can put into this new battery technology, the better performance
you can expect from them. You cannot just fit more, you can fit better,”
Bouchard said.

Even among electric vehicles, UC Davis Formula Electric’s car is trying
innovative technology. A new direction with electric vehicles that has taken
the spotlight is torque vectoring. A traditional electric car like a Tesla
uses one giant battery with one giant motor that goes all to the back
wheels. In the Formula Electric car, there are two motors for each of the
back wheels.

“There’s (also) a sensor network and a control module on our car, which
determines what the sensors are telling, and this is what should be done
with the motors,” said Lucas Bolster, a fourth-year mechanical engineering
student.

The sensors look at dynamic data such as wheel speed, tire temperature,
shock displacement, steering angle and throttle and brake position. The
control module takes that data and dynamically allocates power to each
wheel. The varied allocation of power increases efficiency so the car can
get through corners with high speed while using less energy. Currently, they
project that the car can go 0-60 mph in about three seconds. The top speed
is expected to be around 70-90 mph, but according to Bouchard, the team is
focusing more on acceleration than top-speed. The driver will likely be a
member of the team.

“I think it’s pretty cool to work on the racecar. There’s always room to
apply what you learn in class to what you do physically. There’s application
like in ENG 104, you learn all about stresses and strain and heat
deformation. You have to think about when you’re welding. Maybe you’re good
at test taking, but you need to be able to retain the knowledge in a way
that you can practically apply it,” Carr said.
[© 2013 Creative Media]
...
http://www.ucdformularacing.com/
UC Davis Formula Racing
https://www.facebook.com/UCDFormulaHybrid



[dated]
http://www.davisenterprise.com/local-news/ucd/uc-davis-students-build-a-hybrid-car/
UC Davis students build a hybrid race car  March 20, 2012

[images  
http://www.davisenterprise.com/files/2012/03/hybrid1W.jpg
Alejandro Hernandez, right, a fourth-year mechanical engineering student at
UC Davis and team captain of UC Davis Formula Hybrid, shows a visitor the
features of the gas- and electric-powered car the team is building on
campus. Fred Gladdis/Enterprise photo

http://www.davisenterprise.com/media-post/hybrid-car-photos/attachment/hybrid1w/
] ...

Although the team is just three years old, it is good. UCD has placed in the
top five in the New Hampshire Motor Speedway annual Formula Hybrid
competition against at least 20 schools in each competition. Last year, the
team also competed in a special race celebrating the 100th anniversary of
the Indy 500. The race included top teams from the New Hampshire competition
just days earlier ...




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