- Joined
- Aug 9, 2021
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- #136
Ya but this particular issue is manufacturer independent and will affect all off-road EV's that don't have mechanically locking diffs.GM's regular on-road traction control in the Hummer is horrible compared to what Rivian does. I don't trust them to have their shit together for their virtual locker either.
The easiest way for me to boil down is; when you have three locking diffs, the entire driveline is working in unison independent of traction. Therefore, any tire that contacts the ground will have forward force to propel the vehicle forward, no matter the traction.
With an "E-locker" setup that the Hummer EV has and that could be implemented in the Rivian, the driveline is not working in unison as each motor to maximize traction has to react to the traction.
The proposed "solution" mentioned in this thread is to just tell each motor to spin at the same RPM. Except that's not how it works in reality. It may take 1 Amp of current to one motor to spin "X" wheel at 10 RPM, but it may take 80 Amps of current to another motor to spin "Y" wheel at 10 RPM. So the system is still trying to react to ever changing current demand to each of the four motors, which carries a delay as the computers are constantly trying to adjust the current stepping up and down to match that wheel RPM as traction is ever changing.
And that's not even talking about the current limits of each motor and stalling/lugging under great demand as they proceed through transient envelopes.
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