Yeah, the analogy to the diesel-electric & the Volt isn't quite right... you are building a backyard Honda Insight, I think.
Yeah, that may be closer to the truth. FWIW, the idea in all of this is to avoid ending up with the layout typical of hybrids currently - packaging batteries into the vehicle and dragging around their weight isn't something I really want to get into. What actually gave me the idea of the assist motor on the rear driveline was looking into wheel hub motors: they make a lot of sense in vehicles that were designed to accept them, but trying to retrofit them into an existing vehicle isn't something I'm convinced is practical at the moment. But putting what is essentially one onto the rear driveline... You can see where this was going.
You are going to run into tech challenges when you try and control this motor with the gas pedal without opening the throttle, finding a big enough alternator (and then mounting it and finding the right pulleys / belts) finding a motor beefy enough to move the Jeep... Then somehow the motor needs to spin the drive shaft but not the engine, right? because if the throttle opens, you are burning gas. If not, spinning the shaft is fighting the engine's compression...
Agreed on all of the above. What I'd like to find is a motor that is internally-clutched or similar, running fully-disengaged when no power is applied; this would more or less solve the motor selection equation, at least as far as which one is transmitting power to the driveline at any given moment.
You'll need the motor to disengage from the driveline and re engage smoothly,
the alternator will cause a good amount of drag on the engine, i'd think
Finding a suitable alternator is proving tricky; outputs in the ranges necessary aren't common in automotive applications. One idea was to run the alternator for the assist motor on a clutched pulley similar to an A/C compressor; keep the stock alternator in place for running the 'normal' systems. Again, not entirely certain this is practical.
I don't know, man. If you do it, be sure to document it. I like the idea, I just don't think it is going to be practical / cost effective on any reasonable timeline.
I have to admit that I'm in agreement with you regarding the practicality of it. Something I'd like to see happen is that someone develops a kit for vehicles like ours that could be used to do a retrofit, but I'm not holding my breath on that one.
You can buy an Escape or a Highlander in a hybrid. Not solid axles or anything, but just fine for a camping / "where does this dirt road go?" sort of rig...
Understood, and I'm in agreement with you on that - part of what got me thinking about this was that I was toying with the idea of a Tracker/Vitara/Sidekick for exactly that kind of trail use, but with 25mpg economy. But I don't really
want another vehicle, and that got the left-field idea in my head that it may be possible to come up with something for an XJ for around the cost of a used Suzuki.
Now that I think of it, GM and Chrysler use a hybrid system like that the F/S GM SUV's and it had been offered on the Aspen and Durango in conjunction with the Hemi Motor. There were a couple motors built into the trans that would operate the trucks up to 30mph on electricity, then it would kick on the gas after that if you were to exceed that speed. They had this Hoover like howl to them from the motors that sounded kinda cool, but odd at the same time since I would normally hear a LS motor growling instead under the same circumstances ......
Yep - there're a couple of (IIRC) Tahoe hybrids running around town that have that quality to them. It's kind of interesting to hear it, but totally not what you'd expect from a vehicle like that.
only thing is see is the "big alternator" is going to require extra rpms out of the motor to turn it over enough to move the jeep. the extra rpm requires more fuel eliminating the idea of better gas milage.
That's been exactly one of the things running through my head on this. However, if the drag of running that giant alternator during electric assist operation is less than what the drivetrain would have to absorb running gas-only to move the vehicle off from rest (where my off-the-cuff observations indicate the worst economy is), there may be enough of an offset to make it worthwhile. But it is understood that that's completely theoretical for right now.
ive had pretty good luck with stock jeeps to get just at or barely over 20mpg.
i atribute it to low rpms@ normal driving speeds.... which for me is 70+
i imagine the best way to go is another 2hi selection where the gearing makes the motor rpm lower than stock. and 'on the fly' changability would be needed when going uphill or around town where you would want the lower gears...
make sense?
Agreed on the above; I can get 19mpg even with all of the weight and aerodynamic disadvantages modifying my Jeep has introduced, and given what it has to work against, 19mpg isn't bad at all. Other off-the-cuff observations have me thinking that replacing the AW4 with a CVT may actually be more effective (and practical) than the electric assist route overall, but I'm not aware of a CVT with a divorced controller that would be anything even close to a drop-in.
EV drivetrain swap with an actual generator seems to be the easiest way. How ever that would be "compromising" according to your definition.
Understood, but I am pretty much proposing using the 4.0 as a generator for the assist motor under certain conditions. I see where you're going with the idea (and agree on the compromise part), but there's a bit more to this:
There is tonnes of electric motor tech out there, the problem would be blending it together with a gasoline motor. All of this hybrid tech is fairly new in the first place.
To be fair, the hybrid technologies we're seeing in production now can trace their roots back to the 1970s - and that's a large part of the reason I'm convinced that manufacturers are doing it the wrong way in this application for the most part. The basic concepts are overall fairly sound, but my gut feeling is that we're still a generation of design and production away from having something workable for vehicles that get used the way Jeeps tend to.
Really the only financially attractrive way i see this happening is you getting a hybrid drivetrain and stuffing it into an xj.
Not disagreeing - just not keen on that approach. The real killer for me is adding battery weight and everything that goes along with it from packaging on up; in a vehicle where you can design around that problem from the ground up it's not as big a deal, but from a retrofit standpoint it's very undesirable. Not to mention that there's something in me that hates the idea of adding weight: it's just countereffective to efficiency.
Hm...if you wanted eco friendly or a gas sipper an XJ is definitely NOT the vehicle of choice.
Yes, but neither of those were the points that I was addressing. To clarify: this is an exercise in what can be done to improve an existing system. I've got other cars that get better fuel economy than my XJ, and know that I could just use them
when practical to do so, but the reality is that I'm behind the wheel of the Jeep most of the time.
Also, by the time you end up spending all that money on fabrication and parts you're going to need to drive your XJ for 20 years before you recoup the cost of the install. lol
Agreed that there would be a break-even point somewhere in the future from doing this, and conversion costs would have to be amortised out across running costs over a period of time. However, if an assist motor would take my average fuel economy from 15mpg to 20mpg, given how much I spend on fuel annually it would take about 3.5 years to recoup the cost of a $3000 installation.
For me, this is acceptable - I don't plan on retiring the XJ anytime soon, and $3000 is about what I would expect to spend on a serviceable older vehicle with better economy. However, by going the electric assist route, I would eliminate maintenance costs on that $3000 vehicle, insurance, and registration. If those are accounted for in the cost of that $3000 car, the break-even point is still around 4 years, given a roughly 23mpg economy average.
Obviously return on investment depends on a lot of factors; in my case, if I can keep to the $3000 figure, it makes sense. For someone else, it may not. The same basic set of caveats apply to buying anything really, though.
ANYTHING is "plausible". This idea is "plausible" however, it is not probable.
Possibly - I'm not in disagreement with you per se, but I'm not convinced that it's
entirely non-probable. Of course, this is all theoretical at the moment, so it's a bit early to call it busted or confirmed just yet.