Specialist electromagnetic design company Elektro Magnetix (EMX) of Brighton
developed and tested the motor-generator for Lotus Engineering’s EVE(Efficient,
Viable, Environmental) Hybrid. This is a technology demonstrator that is showcasing
many of the medium term solutions that will be used to reduce vehicle emissions.
Jonathan Bremner of EMX explains that the mapping was essential, but could not be
done in-house. “We are a design house, so tend to sub-contact testing to other
organisations. With this project we needed to plot out the full range of performance,
but had only a tight time window to do all the work.”
So EMX worked with a test house to design a simple yet effective test rig. It was not
long before the specialist engineers had settled on using a TorqSense torque sensor
from Sensor Technology as they could design a rig around it very easily, and then it
was very quick and simple to use.
“Normally when taking torque measurements you can spend more time fitting the
transducer as they have to be mechanically coupled and use either slip rings,
inducing drag, or induction coils that can have high inertia” says Bremner. “leading to
inaccuracies that it can be very frustrating. But TorqSense is different; as it is a noncontact
measurement sensor it monitors the sensor by use of a radio frequency (RF)
link. It can be set up in moments, leaving us to concentrate on the analytical work in
hand.”
And because TorqSense is digital, its outputs can be fed directly into a computer,
where calculations are performed automatically. The result is highly refined
information, produced in real time, which designs out the data processing and assessment phases of the test programme.
TorqSense, made by Sensor Technology in Bicester, can be described as a plug-and-play digital torque sensor, which interrogates and analyses a radio signal from a
miniature piezo electric detector on the rotating shaft being monitored. The sensor is
fully self-contained, can be set up in minutes and generates outputs that can be read
locally by a technician or transmitted to computers and control systems for data
analysis.
Unlike other torque sensors TorqSense is mechanically simple with its sensors fixed
to the shaft and a rotating RF antenna used to allow non-contact coupling with its
digital electronics offering immunity from magnetic fields, so there is no need for
complicated and delicate slip rings or large transformer assemblies to obtain signals,
making it a very cost effective, drag free, low inertia sensor.
Clean motoring
Lotus Engineering believes that hybrid technology is a key route for CO2 reduction.
In the medium term it may remain more viable to integrate hybrid technologies into
existing model ranges than to develop completely new vehicles.
The EVE Hybrid programme is focused on establishing the processes for integrating
hybrid technology with minimal development time and cost. Engineers from Lotus
and its parent company Proton have produced the EVE Hybrid demonstrator, based
on a Proton Gen.2 compact midsize car with a 1.6litre gasoline engine. This currently
showcases a 'micro-hybrid' start-stop system, a full parallel hybrid drive and Continuously Variable Transmission.