Stasis fallacy?
We are talking about replacing a train that hasn't yet gone into service, I have updated my nominal battery 800to show what we could do with a BEMU using today's cutting edge automotive battery tech. So I am assuming that we keep the same axles load as today, delete the engines and their fuel, also delete the transformer and replace it with a DC-DC converter of around 1/10th the mass. I have then also assumed a structural battery which has allowed me to delete about 10% of its mass from the remaining structure of the carriage and put this back into the battery pack.
Up shot is that we have enough storage to run 80% of the distance from London to Newcastle at Express speed, this assumes we don't improve aerodynamics, which we will.
Masses | 5 Car | 9 Car |
Tare Electric 801 (has one diesel engine) | 233.00 | 420.00 |
Tare Bi-Mode 802 | 243.00 | 438.00 |
Mass Difference | 10.00 | 18.00 |
Mass per engine | 5.00 | 4.50 |
Mass of Fuel per engine | 1.27 | 1.27 |
Mass of Transformer | 4.00 | 6.50 |
Mass of Electric Train Minus Aux Diesel and Transformer | 224.40 | 409.65 |
Mass of battery pack inc. 10% improvement due to making it structural | 24.90 | 38.56 |
Capacity of Pack End of Life (MWh) | 3.74 | 5.78 |
Max Discharge 6C (MW) | 22.41 | 34.71 |
Max Power (1000 bhp) | 30.04 | 46.52 |
Power to Weight (bhp/t) | 121.73 | 104.69 |
Second up-shot is that we can discharge and charge those batteries at much greater charge rates than we can draw from OHLE and with automotive motor tech we can put a 700bhp motor/inverter that weighs 100kg and costs £3k on each axle and get a train with incredible performance, 0-300kph in 70 seconds, or 0-125mph in 910 metres. This potentially gives us two things:
1: Stopping services can have very high end to end speeds particularly if we design intercity trains to have doors more like commuter trains to reduce dwell times.
2: If we pull tech from self driving cars potentially we could have these trains braking and accelerating out of corners like a rally car allowing us to have much higher line speeds on even relatively short sections of straight track.
In short every train will end up being a battery train eventually.