Hi
Silverado,
Yes, Capstone turbines and the Wrightspeed drive-train have been discussed in the thread, from page 50 onwards; see post #491 at
http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...igid-Torsion-Free-Frame?p=1650993#post1650993 and following; and for Wrightspeed in particular, see post #496 at
http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...igid-Torsion-Free-Frame?p=1652223#post1652223 , and post #505 at
http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...igid-Torsion-Free-Frame?p=1652505#post1652505 .
Personally, I am still somewhat open to the idea of a microturbine generator as opposed to a more traditional diesel generator, but only if a microturbine could run on diesel fuel. I would be even more open to a microturbine generator if it were multi-fuel capable. But there have been practical problems with implementation of microturbine-based hybrid solutions. For instance, see post #495 about the problems with the NYC prototype transit buses made by DesignLine, at
http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...igid-Torsion-Free-Frame?p=1652222#post1652222 .
On the other hand Wrightspeed seems to be a more competent and serious company than DesignLine, and Wrightspeed just received an order for 25 drivetrains from Federal Express, which will test them in a rigorous pilot program -- see
https://www.wrightspeed.com ,
https://www.wrightspeed.com/news/ , and
https://www.wrightspeed.com/products/the-route/ . Ian Wright is a cofounder of Tesla, so he has serious credibility in the automotive industry --
http://www.thestreet.com/story/1312...focus-from-sports-cars-to-garbage-trucks.html ,
http://www.fool.com/investing/gener...founder-putting-jet-tu.aspx#commentsBoxAnchor , and
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/forge...ion-is-electric-garbage-trucks-175357428.html . Although DesignLine was doing quite well when it was still a New Zealand-based, New Zealand owned-and-operated company, DesignLine went to hell when bought out by some American yahoos from North Carolina, and DesignLine filed for bankruptcy in 2013 -- see
http://www.bizjournals.com/charlotte/news/2013/08/16/charlotte-hybrid-busmaker-designline.html . One American-built DesignLine bus spontaneously caught fire, allegedly because its battery bank overheated, and the battery bank most probably overheated because it was located beside the microturbine at the back of the vehicle.
There is also the issue of practical build-ability. As
Iain suggested, the ideal solution for the base chassis of the TerraLiner will be a rigid frame and 6x6 configuration together with a hybrid drivetrain all built by just one manufacturer. MAN and IVECO-Astra both have enough competence in-house to be able to do the complete job. Wrightspeed does not have this total competence, and on its website Wrightspeed emphasizes that it is
only a drivetrain company, and that it does
not build vehicles -- see
https://www.wrightspeed.com/about/. For a bad-road and occasionally off-road capable TerraLiner, the devil will be in the engineering details, and adapting the Wrightspeed drivetrain to a 6x6 bad-road application may prove very complicated and costly. As suggested by
Iain, the TerraLiner should be innovative mostly in terms of how it combines technology that is already available "off the shelf". Or technology that only entails a certain degree of customization of an existing product, for instance, customization of a torsion-free base-chassis manufactured by MAN or IVECO-Astra. But I would not want huge amounts of energy and capital spent getting bogged down in the R&D required to create a completely new road-worthy drivetrain, or a completely new sort of single-piece tubular space-frame chassis.
The camper body will still be a very rigid "semi-monocoque" tubular space frame construction, one in which the aluminum skin works in concert with the aluminum frame (and the steel roll-bars embedded within the frame) to create a structurally integrated whole, much like the Airstream camper body in the following vintage movie (skip ahead 7 minutes into the video):
No, I would not want the aluminum skin merely riveted to the frame, and much more advanced methods of aluminum-skin-to-aluminum-frame fabrication are now available, even though Airstream does not use them, and still rivets its campers. For instance, Newell seems to weld aluminum skins onto its aluminum frames, with fiberglass end-caps, so that the camper body can have a more curvilinear appearance:
The general point here is that the camper body
versus the underlying "base chassis" should be developed separately, and that creating a sophisticated camper body and its interior fittings should be where most of the R&D money gets spent. As per the Airstream video, this camper body would then get bolted to a base chassis that's also very rigid, but that is made of steel instead, and not aluminum. Once combined, the two would become a single unified rigid space frame. This seems to me by far the best solution from a materials point of view, and this is also the solution that Kimberley uses, in its "hybrid" two-material chassis. It's also the best solution from a logistical point of view, because it allows one manufacturer to focus on creating the base chassis made out of steel along with the hybrid drivetrain, while a second manufacturer focuses on creating the camper body.
With that said, however, yes, I am still somewhat open to the idea of a microturbine-generator based hybrid drivetrain, even if this might involve quite a bit more R&D....:ylsmoke: ... The question here would be just how much more R&D, and how much it would cost.
As for Tatra, the problem there is that the drive-train
is the torsion-free Tatra backbone tube, and the torsion-free backbone tube
is the drive-train. In Tatra trucks, the torsion-free chassis and the drivetrain are one and the same thing, and cannot be separated. Whereas in a hybrid solution with three electric motors, one would probably have no use for the Tatra backbone tube as drive-train. One still needs the torsion-free chassis, but one does not need the backbone tube drivetrain. Some have suggested that one might insert electric motors along the length of the Tatra backbone tube, but I am not quite sure what they meant by that, or whether the idea has any value. You seem to be in favor of Tatra, so how would you configure a Tatra backbone tube with three electric motors?
Tatra also does not seem to have in-house competence when it comes to hybrid drivetrains, and does not have massive competence when it comes to electric and hybrid buses, as per MAN and IVECO.
In any case, many thanks for your post, because it returns the thread discussion to the discussion of power, and the TerraLiner drive-train. I am still wondering what the efficiency loss might be for just three cross-axle transmissions driven by three electric motors.
Iain has been calculating that the efficiency loss for the transmission in a conventional diesel truck driving 3 axles is at least 30 %, especially in an AWD 6x6 configuration.
Haf-E then suggested that the efficiency loss for three merely cross-axle transmissions would be much less than that. But I wonder how much less?
All best wishes,
Biotect