gruntguru wrote: ↑01 May 2026, 07:56
Badger wrote: ↑28 Apr 2026, 09:14
diffuser wrote: ↑28 Apr 2026, 03:49
The battery density in the Gen4 is 250ish wh/kg. Achieving a 1,000 Wh/kg battery density is expected by the late 2020s to early 2030s, based on current research and industry roadmaps.
WeLion, a Chinese battery developer, has already achieved 824 Wh/kg in lab tests and aims to surpass 1,000 Wh/kg in the long term.
They and other companies like Dongfeng are targeting mass production of advanced solid-state batteries by 2027–2028, though initial deployments will likely be in niche applications like robotics or premium EVs. When they hit the Gen 5 who knows but that's 4 times the energy for the same weight of battery that they currently have.
SSBs have been "expected" for ages, issues constantly come up. We just had that Donut Labs hoax which is typical of the battery industry. Battery chemistry is not magic, it's a compromise between forces that are working against each other. So when you need ultra-high density, high discharge rate, limited cooling, rapid cycling, and a decent lifespan, you are asking for a unicorn product with zero compromises that may never exist, nevermind a few years from now.
https://i.imgur.com/YO9I4yr.png
So if we had 250 Wh/kg batteries 10 years ago, and we had 500 Wh/kg batteries 3 years ago, why is the gravimetric energy density of Formula E batteries only around 165 Wh/kg? Why is the new Gen 4 FE battery only around 160 Wh/kg? Are they stupid? Backwards? They didn’t find the right phone number in the yellow pages? They wanted their cars to be extra heavy and energy constrained?
The problem is you guys throw out numbers with no understanding of the other factors at play. Was it a single cell lab test? What’s the C rate? Did it degrade after 100 cycles? Swelling? Cooling requirements? What’s the fire hazard in case of a crash?
We are talking about a high performance race car here, all these factors matter and the demands are different than for a home appliance. There’s a reason why FE has relatively low energy density in their battery packs and it’s not because they are idiots.