hambrook said:Does anyone know what electric power the REX generates? On the Chevy Volt the ICE makes more than driving power.
ChrisC said:... and careful with the units, hambrook. You wrote "REX Engine kWh output", when it was kW you were looking for. It's a common mistake.
And welcome to the forum
hambrook said:ChrisC said:... and careful with the units, hambrook. You wrote "REX Engine kWh output", when it was kW you were looking for. It's a common mistake.
And welcome to the forum
I was looking at the kWh figure. 25 kWh seems low as my LEAF currently has an 80 kWh motor so 25 kWh would struggle to get it up a hill....
Stevei3 said:Hi Grant,
I think what Chris means to say is that you want to look at the kW figure and not at the kWh rating if you want to know something about the cars power output.
kW = energy delivered at a given moment (i3 electric motor 125 kW peak / 75 kW nominal, REx engine 25kW)
kWh = energy delivered over time (1 kWh = 1 kW delivered during 1 hour = 3,6 MJ (megajoule) of energy)
So, for the REx, if it delivers 25kW (*) and it runs for an hour, it has delivered 25kWh.
Keep in mind the REx works in combination with 20% charge remaining in the battery. The battery will supply the electric motor with all the power it needs at any given moment. The REx tops up the battery when power demand < 25kW.
Greetings, Steven
(*) PS: not to doubt Toms expertise, but as far as I know the engine itself is rated 25kW. I expect this means that generator and charging losses have to be taken into account, so I expect that around 20kW actually reaches the battery, but do correct me if I'm wrong here.
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