bill318
Electrical
- Sep 11, 2004
- 43
I have used numerous EV battery spreadsheets and calculators and always came up with very different conclusions. What I really wanted to find out is how the average EV conversion performs in real life under average driving conditions/terrain. I have entered over 40 real EV conversion stats into a spreadsheet and they do seem to have a trend when it comes to Watt-Hours/weight/distance.
I’m a bit unsure of the numbers I’m getting; do the following calculations look reasonable?
Converted Electric Vehicle Gross Weight - 4200 lbs. (1905 kg)
Batteries – Qty 24, Trojan T-125, 6V FLA, 240 Ah (20hr rate)
Known range of 50 miles (80.5 km) over average terrain with combination city and highway driving.
Average speed over 1.25 hour trip = 40 MPH (64.37 km/hr)
Battery bank depth of discharge (DOD) at end of trip = 65%
Due to shorter discharge period (1.25 hrs) and Peukert effect, the battery amp hours need adjustment. A flooded lead acid battery has about 52% the Ah capacity when discharged at a 1.25-hour rate vs. the normal 20-hour battery rating.
240Ah * 52% = 124.8 Ah per battery at 100% DOD
Since we only drained the battery to 65% DOD, then the actual Ah used from each battery would be.
124.8 * 65% = 81.12 Ah per battery
So the total Watt-hours (Wh) used from each battery would be…
81.12Ah * 6volts = 486.72 Wh per battery
Since we drained all 24 batteries during the trip, the total power consumed would be:
486.72 Wh * 24 batteries = 11681.28 Wh
To get the Wh/pound/mile (Wh/kg/km)
11681.28 Wh / 4200 lbs / 50 miles = .0556 Wh/lb/mi
11681.28 Wh / 1905 kg / 80.5 km = .0762 Wh/km/kg
When collecting the data, I had no way to tell how deep each owner discharged their battery banks for the mileage they reported. Since most discharge anywhere from 50% to 80% DOD, I chose 65% DOD for all vehicles as the average. Out of the 40 vehicles I entered into the spreadsheet, the values seem to lie between .045 Wh/lb/mi (.0616 Wh/km/kg) and .065 Wh/lb/mi (.089 Wh/km/kg) with the average being .055 Wh/lb/mi (.0753 Wh/km/kg).
There are so many variables to average out like terrain, weather, vehicle losses, depth of discharge, optimistic mileage & weight specs, battery life, average speed, etc… Anyways, perhaps it could tell if the vehicle is performing above or below average and be used in reverse to see what different battery chemistries may do to performance.
Any thoughts/corrections would be appreciated. –Bill-
I’m a bit unsure of the numbers I’m getting; do the following calculations look reasonable?
Converted Electric Vehicle Gross Weight - 4200 lbs. (1905 kg)
Batteries – Qty 24, Trojan T-125, 6V FLA, 240 Ah (20hr rate)
Known range of 50 miles (80.5 km) over average terrain with combination city and highway driving.
Average speed over 1.25 hour trip = 40 MPH (64.37 km/hr)
Battery bank depth of discharge (DOD) at end of trip = 65%
Due to shorter discharge period (1.25 hrs) and Peukert effect, the battery amp hours need adjustment. A flooded lead acid battery has about 52% the Ah capacity when discharged at a 1.25-hour rate vs. the normal 20-hour battery rating.
240Ah * 52% = 124.8 Ah per battery at 100% DOD
Since we only drained the battery to 65% DOD, then the actual Ah used from each battery would be.
124.8 * 65% = 81.12 Ah per battery
So the total Watt-hours (Wh) used from each battery would be…
81.12Ah * 6volts = 486.72 Wh per battery
Since we drained all 24 batteries during the trip, the total power consumed would be:
486.72 Wh * 24 batteries = 11681.28 Wh
To get the Wh/pound/mile (Wh/kg/km)
11681.28 Wh / 4200 lbs / 50 miles = .0556 Wh/lb/mi
11681.28 Wh / 1905 kg / 80.5 km = .0762 Wh/km/kg
When collecting the data, I had no way to tell how deep each owner discharged their battery banks for the mileage they reported. Since most discharge anywhere from 50% to 80% DOD, I chose 65% DOD for all vehicles as the average. Out of the 40 vehicles I entered into the spreadsheet, the values seem to lie between .045 Wh/lb/mi (.0616 Wh/km/kg) and .065 Wh/lb/mi (.089 Wh/km/kg) with the average being .055 Wh/lb/mi (.0753 Wh/km/kg).
There are so many variables to average out like terrain, weather, vehicle losses, depth of discharge, optimistic mileage & weight specs, battery life, average speed, etc… Anyways, perhaps it could tell if the vehicle is performing above or below average and be used in reverse to see what different battery chemistries may do to performance.
Any thoughts/corrections would be appreciated. –Bill-