When the hybrid 'Vette goes on sale later this year, it will be the quickest of them all.
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Do you not think an additional ~160HP and ~120ftlb torque added by the electric motor is an advantage? The engine alone makes the same power as the regular C8. The huge bump in specs comes from the electric motor. That's not efficient enough for you?
Also mentioned in the article, it can drive on electric only for a short distance and it has start/stop. It's hard to imagine the hybrid not getting at least a small bump in efficiency when they release those specs. More power, less fuel.
How is this any different than the Prius, except that it's in a high performance sports car?
As with many of the high-performance European hybrids, fuel economy, if it improves, is a nice byproduct, but not the intent of the hybrid architecture. As with race cars, the purpose is more power for acceleration and handling, without having to boost the ICE further. The type of hybrid setup in this 'Vette is commonly used for that. See several Porsches, BMW i8, etc.The Prius and similar hybrids are particularly efficient even the battery is depleted. That is important because the battery is tiny and thus gets depleted often.
This is achieved by using a particular hybrid architecture (power split) combined with an engine optimized to to run with that type of transmission (one of the results being the Prius having the most efficient engine in a production car).
This Corvette is a parallel hybrid with a conventional transmission. And of course a gas guzzling high performance engine.
Fuel savings may be... less impressive.
No one is expecting 50mpg. But there's a significant peak power bump thanks to the electric motor without changing the ICE. So you're not going to see the improvement you'd get from switching to a lower power engine running the Atkinson cycle, but I definitely expect a little bump in city MPG. And again, that comes alongside a boost to peak power. That's efficient. To get the same power out of the ICE alone, you'd be burning more fuel.The Prius and similar hybrids are particularly efficient even the battery is depleted. That is important because the battery is tiny and thus gets depleted often.
This is achieved by using a particular hybrid architecture (power split) combined with an engine optimized to to run with that type of transmission (one of the results being the Prius having the most efficient engine in a production car).
This Corvette is a parallel hybrid with a conventional transmission. And of course a gas guzzling high performance engine.
Fuel savings may be... less impressive.
Indeed. Analog style displays are better at conveying certain info but that does not require mechanical instruments. All the info has been available from the vehicles computer(s) for decades, readable by wire or Bluetooth dongle from the OBD port.Any modern "analog" dash is plenty digital, I guarantee it. The dials haven't been directly connected to whatever they're displaying in quite awhile.
Having the instrument cluster implemented on a screen instead of physical dials is a great improvement. You can emulate dials if you want, but it gives you the freedom to do anything. That means the instrument cluster can change to fit specific use cases. Flying around the track? Have a huge tachometer front and center. Cruising down the highway on a long road trip? Get navigation updates right in front of you.
The Prius is a parallel hybrid as well. And despite calling its transmission an CVT, it's pretty much a normal planetary automatic, just with an electric motor shoved into it. Granted that's still very different from the dual clutch in the Corvette.
raxx7 has it right: power-split hybrid. The best description of how it works, including a set of demos and teardowns of each version of it (there are slight variations in how it works), can be found at the WeberAuto Youtube site.No one is expecting 50mpg. But there's a significant peak power bump thanks to the electric motor without changing the ICE. So you're not going to see the improvement you'd get from switching to a lower power engine running the Atkinson cycle, but I definitely expect a little bump in city MPG. And again, that comes alongside a boost to peak power. That's efficient. To get the same power out of the ICE alone, you'd be burning more fuel.
The Prius is a parallel hybrid as well. And despite calling its transmission an CVT, it's pretty much a normal planetary automatic, just with an electric motor shoved into it. Granted that's still very different from the dual clutch in the Corvette.
Seems more like Porsche is an outlier here than the Corvette.Porsche 911 Turbo S 178" x 73" x 50"
What matters isn't HP, but performance. And what matters most on narrow roads is width (and some length). Most of these I left in your post and the 911 are quite a bit shorter and especially narrower than the Corvette. And if you are willing to drop a little straight line performance,
Porsche Cayman GT4 172" x 71" x 50"
As far as performance per dollar, you can go further back-- When the C4 first came out it was pretty impressive:vdiv, perhaps you can remind us how much the McLaren P1, Porsche 918 Spyder, and Ferrari SF90 Stradale cost in comparison? The Corvette, at least since the C5, is about big bang for your buck. It was never intended to beat the world in every possible way. That would be impossible at its price point. Yeah, I do feel sometimes like a defender of the make since my C5 was such a great car in so many ways ("leaf springs?").
There is also some tradition inertia over specifically the Corvette. The C8 was polarizing to the existing ownership community when it was first announced. This is another big step forward for the platform. AWD is a huge first for it. Getting rid of a V8 engine entirely is another leap for some of the intended audience.
We'll see what Porsche creates with the electric Boxster, but at this point, nobody's building electric sports cars because they can't. It's not because they won't, it's not because they're afraid to, it's because if a car weighs 4000lb or more it's unavoidably going to drive like a grand touring car at best, not like a sports car. The Polestar 4 is not going to be a sports car. The MG is not going to be a sports car. The Tesla Roadster, if it ever goes on sale, isn't going to be a sports car. And the electric Porsche 918, I fear, is not going to be a sports car either.I hate this car. I hate this car, and I'm going to rant a little. IMO this is not the time to be introducing a non-plug-in hybrid Corvette. This isn't even the right time to be introducing a pure battery-powered EV Corvette. That time would have been a couple of years ago. The C8 should have been a BEV on a purpose-designed BEV platform.
All the hype about a mid-engine Corvette chapped my hide. GM had absolutely beautiful prototypes of mid-engine sports cars as far back as the 1960s. Even as late as the 1990s or 2000s it could have been a sensible evolution for the Corvette. But in 2020, really? After many other sports car makers have been doing mid-engine for decades, and everybody by that time knew the automotive world is going electric? A dozen years after the original Tesla Roadster shipped, even?
And now we get an old-fashioned, non-plug-in hybrid. What happened to industry leadership, GM? What happened to skating where the puck will be, not where it is now? Or as Lee Iacocca famously said, "Lead, follow, or get out of the way!" GM's sports car strategy seems to be all about getting out of the way.
I'm sitting here with money in hand, and I want a new electric sports car. Electric car, not hybrid. What company am I going to buy it from? Well, there's basically nothing in production at this moment. Tesla are working on one—expensive, long delayed, and still nobody knows when it'll really be produced. Lotus are working on one. Polestar are working on one. MG are working on one. Porsche are working on one. (No, the Taycan is not a sports car, even though they keep calling it one in all their press material. It's a porky sedan.) And GM are. . . not working on one, apparently.
But man, bodging some hybrid bits into a C8 and hyping it like mad; that's something they can do.
Yeah, narrow roads, like Europe tends to have. Makes sense a German company designs around those dimensions. Why should the Corvette, particularly since practicality and usability for American buyers has been a major part of its design brief since day one?Porsche 911 Turbo S 178" x 73" x 50"
What matters isn't HP, but performance. And what matters most on narrow roads is width (and some length). Most of these I left in your post and the 911 are quite a bit shorter and especially narrower than the Corvette. And if you are willing to drop a little straight line performance,
Porsche Cayman GT4 172" x 71" x 50"
Imagine the negative comments if this was a PHEV with a 1.9 kWh battery. Sometimes I find the things people post in comments here to be utterly ridiculous."A plug-in hybrid would have added a lot more weight and cost for diminished performance returns."
This car already has the battery, motor and controller. Adding a plug would be minimal extra weight and cost.
A PHEV doesn't need to have a big battery. I -like- small batteries as they're lighter but adding a plug even at this battery size would make the existing performance more accessible as you could deplete the battery using all that extra front axle power and and then simply plug it in to do it all over again without having to regen the battery the hard way. Not to mention those ICE free short hops that PHEVs are best at.
(I'm a 330e owner for this reason and think BMW has struck a reasonable compromise between battery capacity/range vs weight)
Just the hassle of plugging in the car so that you could be guaranteed to have a couple of miles of electric range... uggh.Imagine the negative comments if this was a PHEV with a 1.9 kWh battery. Sometimes I find the things people post in comments here to be utterly ridiculous.
It's unlikely to be any more expensive than the cost to service the basic 'Vette with the 6.2L V8. Which is the engine in the e-Ray. GM's electrified models in the recent past (~10 years) have been less than reliable, but most of that has been driven by assembly, infotainment, and ICE-related (in hybrids) issues that are common in the rest of their products, not electric-specific.Going to be expensive to service.
The article was very clear that this hybrid system is performance-oriented, and any benefit to fuel economy is welcome but incidental. You probably won't notice it. PHEVs are not done for performance purposes: the weight of the larger battery commonly reduces performance even with a more powerful electric motor than in the standard version. And when running on gasoline (after the short EV time) PHEVs usually struggle to reach the mpg that a "standard" hybrid can do. So since GM was making a performance car, not a high-mpg commuter, the decisions made were appropriate. And hey, if it can do 3-4 miles of neighborhood/parking lot trundle, that's better than a Prius (non-PHEV electric range is usually 1-2 miles, at very low speeds).Just the hassle of plugging in the car so that you could be guaranteed to have a couple of miles of electric range... uggh.
Most PHEVs are like 20-40 mile ranges, if this has an EV range of 3-4 miles as-is, we're talking about a battery that is 5-13x bigger (so 10-25 kWh)... At 5kg/kWh, we're talking about +40-120 kg!
And hey, if it can do 3-4 miles of neighborhood/parking lot trundle, that's better than a Prius (non-PHEV electric range is usually 1-2 miles, at very low speeds).
The link below is where I got 3-4 miles from:
https://www.forbes.com/wheels/news/...de, meanwhile, allows,to 4 miles, said Franz.
"The Stealth Mode, meanwhile, allows E-Ray to run purely on electrons for somewhere between 3 to 4 miles, said Franz. It can run up to 45 mph, at which point the V8 automatically fires up."
--
That said, the Prius HEV 1.3 kWh battery uses a 40% SoC window, so only has ~0.52 usable kWh. So if we assume an EV range of about 1 mile (at <45 MPH) that 1.9 miles/kWh.
For comparison, the Prius Prime has an 8.8 kWh battery and uses a 75% SoC window (I think). So it'd be 6.6 kWh usable. The Prime is listed with a 25 mile range which would be almost double that of the HEV.
Does that pass the smell test? I guess I thought the Prius HEV and PHEV were very similar aside from the size of the battery and being able to plug them in...? Or does it suggest the HEV has closer to a 2 mile range following whatever the EPA did to get their 25 mile estimate for the PHEV?
For the sake of arguments, let's split the difference and figure 1.5 miles for the HEV on it's 520 Wh. And let's just go with the E-Ray being a similar rate.
So then 3-4 miles would be 1.04-1.56 usable kWh, which would be a SoC window of 55-82% on the 1.9 kWh pack. That might be a bit high for a small hybrid pack, but then there is a pretty big difference between a Prius where typical might be 150-300k miles for it's lifetime and a Corvette where 100k miles isn't super common (my 1993 is still under 75k).
going from a hybrid to a PHEV might not quite be linear (with over-provisioning and what not involved)...?
The Prius Prime has an EPA range on EV of 25 miles from it's 8.8 kWh pack. That is 2.8 mi/kWh. If the 'regular' Prius gets 1-2 miles, and it was linear, then it would suggest
Nice theoreticals, that aren't TOO far off of real life. Note that Prius (plain HEV) has traditionally used NiMH batteries (not sure if it still does) with capacities around 1 kwh (my 2014 is actually rated at 0.9). They can't maintain EV-mode operation at speeds above 25 mph for long enough to be useful. EV mode is mostly useful for trundling around parking lots and neighborhoods, and the occasional terminally stop & go "LOS G" (for GOD-awful, as one consultant once put it) traffic jam. And in summertime the a/c after a hot-soaked start can easily burn down a "full" battery in the NiMH HEV in less than 5 minutes, leaving the ICE as the only power source. The Prime PHEV has more electric HP (see Weber Auto's Prius transaxle discussions for details), and can run electric-only with careful acceleration (push too hard and that ICE starts up) up to decent speeds (45-60 mph), with a range (in modest-speed use) of around 25 miles, using a Li-Ion battery instead of NiMH. The new Prius (see recent articles in Ars and elsewhere) appears to use a drivetrain more like the RAV4 and Camry HEVs and PHEVs, with Li-Ion batteries for all and much more capable EV modes and EV ranges.The link below is where I got 3-4 miles from:
https://www.forbes.com/wheels/news/...de, meanwhile, allows,to 4 miles, said Franz.
"The Stealth Mode, meanwhile, allows E-Ray to run purely on electrons for somewhere between 3 to 4 miles, said Franz. It can run up to 45 mph, at which point the V8 automatically fires up."
--
That said, the Prius HEV 1.3 kWh battery uses a 40% SoC window, so only has ~0.52 usable kWh. So if we assume an EV range of about 1 mile (at <45 MPH) that 1.9 miles/kWh.
For comparison, the Prius Prime has an 8.8 kWh battery and uses a 75% SoC window (I think). So it'd be 6.6 kWh usable. The Prime is listed with a 25 mile range which would be almost double that of the HEV.
Does that pass the smell test? I guess I thought the Prius HEV and PHEV were very similar aside from the size of the battery and being able to plug them in...? Or does it suggest the HEV has closer to a 2 mile range following whatever the EPA did to get their 25 mile estimate for the PHEV?
For the sake of arguments, let's split the difference and figure 1.5 miles for the HEV on it's 520 Wh. And let's just go with the E-Ray being a similar rate.
So then 3-4 miles would be 1.04-1.56 usable kWh, which would be a SoC window of 55-82% on the 1.9 kWh pack. That might be a bit high for a small hybrid pack, but then there is a pretty big difference between a Prius where typical might be 150-300k miles for it's lifetime and a Corvette where 100k miles isn't super common (my 1993 is still under 75k).
going from a hybrid to a PHEV might not quite be linear (with over-provisioning and what not involved)...?
The Prius Prime has an EPA range on EV of 25 miles from it's 8.8 kWh pack. That is 2.8 mi/kWh. If the 'regular' Prius gets 1-2 miles, and it was linear, then it would suggest