Smedders is launching two new kart series, which are electric. One of the advantages is that it's easier to make all the karts exactly equal, and it'll be cheaper. And to help get it noticed he mentions Lewis, obviously
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Great idea
lol, well electric is terrific to drive. What's unequal in your series? The drivetrains or is it something else?flynfrog wrote: ↑10 Jan 2020, 16:59I have been taking part in a local electric kart series. https://www.k1speed.com/challenge-gp.html That being said I can assure you they are not all equal. During qualifying you have the option of removing your kart from the pool. But the electrics do make for great tight circuit karts. Low end grunt out of the corners helps cover my terrible driving skills.
It's mostly down to handling but also charge state and general battery state. We had some karts that just get walked on the straights. Its all just for fun anyway.izzy wrote: ↑10 Jan 2020, 18:22lol, well electric is terrific to drive. What's unequal in your series? The drivetrains or is it something else?flynfrog wrote: ↑10 Jan 2020, 16:59I have been taking part in a local electric kart series. https://www.k1speed.com/challenge-gp.html That being said I can assure you they are not all equal. During qualifying you have the option of removing your kart from the pool. But the electrics do make for great tight circuit karts. Low end grunt out of the corners helps cover my terrible driving skills.
yes if it's more serious i suppose they can fit some kind of regulator, for the power side of things
They mostly (if not all) have regulators already. They have speed controllers for the fleet that set the karts "regulators" to a given power output.
oh, interesting. Still, i bet there's scope to do it more precisely, if there's money for it. They can measure torque and power can't they, tractive effort, and feed that back to the motor control, so ultimately they can reduce the tolerance to something insignificant. With speed, it must depend on driver weight and how you come out of the previous corner for example, plus assume all the carts can get to 40 at the same ratetheblackangus wrote: ↑11 Jan 2020, 14:36They mostly (if not all) have regulators already. They have speed controllers for the fleet that set the karts "regulators" to a given power output.
For instance on the out-lap at our local place all the karts are set to about 10 mph until everyone is on the track as which point they are set to about 40. Even with this system some kart will still be slightly slower straight line.
I agree with the right monetary incentive you could likely do it. I'd bet there a likely systems that can already do it just too costly for the average karting market (at least in the US).izzy wrote: ↑11 Jan 2020, 15:06oh, interesting. Still, i bet there's scope to do it more precisely, if there's money for it. They can measure torque and power can't they, tractive effort, and feed that back to the motor control, so ultimately they can reduce the tolerance to something insignificant. With speed, it must depend on driver weight and how you come out of the previous corner for example, plus assume all the carts can get to 40 at the same ratetheblackangus wrote: ↑11 Jan 2020, 14:36They mostly (if not all) have regulators already. They have speed controllers for the fleet that set the karts "regulators" to a given power output.
For instance on the out-lap at our local place all the karts are set to about 10 mph until everyone is on the track as which point they are set to about 40. Even with this system some kart will still be slightly slower straight line.