Samuel Hyde
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2022
OK, I'm not an electrical engineer so this might be a smooth brained question. But for someone more familiar with the topic I stumbled across something a bit confusing and maybe you could shed some light.
Teslas are what is sometimes called "battery electric" meaning they have a big battery or a big array of small batteries which the vehicle draws power from. Batteries of this kind are inherently direct current. Electric motors in contrast can be alternating current or direct current depending on the which makes the most sense for the application. On big consideration is what type of power source you have for the electrical device. For example, most appliances use induction motors(AC) because they plug into a wall while many battery powered devices like hand tools have brushless direct current motors(DC) because the power source is a battery. Obviously there are other considerations like size and weight but if you try to mix and match AC and DC you need things like bridge rectifiers or inverters.
Aren't Teslas wasting energy using induction motors over BLDCs considering Teslas need honkin' big inverters considering how much electricity is required to power an EV? Wouldn't Teslas be lighter, cheaper, and have better range if they had BLDCs instead of induction motors?
Teslas are what is sometimes called "battery electric" meaning they have a big battery or a big array of small batteries which the vehicle draws power from. Batteries of this kind are inherently direct current. Electric motors in contrast can be alternating current or direct current depending on the which makes the most sense for the application. On big consideration is what type of power source you have for the electrical device. For example, most appliances use induction motors(AC) because they plug into a wall while many battery powered devices like hand tools have brushless direct current motors(DC) because the power source is a battery. Obviously there are other considerations like size and weight but if you try to mix and match AC and DC you need things like bridge rectifiers or inverters.
Aren't Teslas wasting energy using induction motors over BLDCs considering Teslas need honkin' big inverters considering how much electricity is required to power an EV? Wouldn't Teslas be lighter, cheaper, and have better range if they had BLDCs instead of induction motors?