WoodlandHills
Well-known member
Very interesting article about Nissans plans for longer range EVs:
http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1100775_nissans-60-kwh-200-mile-battery-pack-what-we-know-so-far
A couple of quick takeaways: they decided to go with dozens of smaller cells (like Tesla) since there had been zero problems with connections in the smaller packs used in the current Leaf and also that air cooling was sufficient. Not only that but they ruled out forced air cooling by fan too, so perhaps heavy liquid cooling systems are not really necessary for long battery life. (the new battery is rated at 90% after 5 years, not 80%)
Lastly, the new 60kWh battery pack weighs only 220lbs/100k more than the 24kWh battery it would replace: that's just a brother-in-law heavier than the existing one. I would be willing to swap the weight of a REx or a single passenger in exchange for a 200+ mile range.....
If Nissan can successfully bring a passively aircooled 60kWh battery powered Leaf Mk2 to market in the next few years that will certainly shake up the business!
http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1100775_nissans-60-kwh-200-mile-battery-pack-what-we-know-so-far
A couple of quick takeaways: they decided to go with dozens of smaller cells (like Tesla) since there had been zero problems with connections in the smaller packs used in the current Leaf and also that air cooling was sufficient. Not only that but they ruled out forced air cooling by fan too, so perhaps heavy liquid cooling systems are not really necessary for long battery life. (the new battery is rated at 90% after 5 years, not 80%)
Lastly, the new 60kWh battery pack weighs only 220lbs/100k more than the 24kWh battery it would replace: that's just a brother-in-law heavier than the existing one. I would be willing to swap the weight of a REx or a single passenger in exchange for a 200+ mile range.....
If Nissan can successfully bring a passively aircooled 60kWh battery powered Leaf Mk2 to market in the next few years that will certainly shake up the business!