Dylan,
"I would like to see support from your statement that the combustion cars are NOT doing accel "properly". On top of that, support that the electric cars ARE doing accel "properly"."
Right and wrong ways:
C-cars.
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1. The fact that times have been static for ~30 years strongly suggests that something is very wrong. In open competitions of almost any type, the times always steadily drop.
2. Watching FSAE Acceleration first in 2002, and again last year, ALL the cars smoke their rear tyres at the start-line, keep them smoking for the next 5 to 10 metres, but NEVER make a great deal of forward progress. Having seen lots of other cars accelerating hard, it is blindingly obvious that the FSAE "wrongness" is a lack of rear grip, due to lack of rear weight.
When I question a team about this the response is usually something like:
"Well, this year we turboed the engine, so of course the tyres are going to be spinning more than last year..."
Then another team member adds,
"Yeah, but next year we're going to add Traction Control, so that should fix it..."
To spell out the multi-level-wrongness here.
1. Start with nowhere near enough grip from the driving wheels, for a MEDIUM powered FSAE engine.
2. $pend re$ources to add even more power...
3. $pend even more re$ources to SWITCH OFF the power you added in step 2!
E-Cars.
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1. They must be doing something right because they are a half-second, and half of the 75 points, faster than the C-cars.
2. On the other hand, this thrashing of the opposition might be quite "wrong". The general rule in motorsport is that as soon as you start winning too easily, all the other teams start whingeing and moaning to the Organisers, who then change the Rules to ban whatever advantage you have. Yes, FSAE is not supposed to be "motorsport", but this nobbling of the E-cars is (part of) the topic of this thread.
I would much rather see both C- and E-cars competing on their merits. Restrict both to the current 85-90 kW for safety reasons. Let the E-cars have their perceived advantage of 4WD, because IMO they have a possible (?) disadvantage of heavy batteries. Certainly, if the Enduro is made much longer, then the E-car battery mass will become a problem.
The two areas in the Rules where the E-cars really do seem to have an "unfair advantage" is Cost, which doesn't seem to reflect their expensive batteries (? corrections welcome), and Fuel, which reads like a fairytale!
Given that the E-car energy is likely coming from a coal-fired steam-engine, with umpteen transmission/conversion losses between there and the car, I honestly can not see how they can be rated as using less than half the CO2 of the C-cars. You can grow ethanol (E85) in the back paddock. Fully sustainable, closed-loop carbon-cycle, etc. But perhaps best to leave that argument for another time.