RE: Electrified son-of-Elise now testing on road

RE: Electrified son-of-Elise now testing on road

Friday 28th June

Electrified son-of-Elise now testing on road

Nyobolt's working prototype weighs 1,250kg and charges to 80 per cent in under five minutes. What's not to like? 


If Nyobolt’s EV prototype seems familiar that’s because we talked about it at length this time last year. (And because it’s a latter-day take on the Lotus Elise, designed by Julian Thomson himself.) The design allusion is obviously not accidental: what better way to make your novel battery technology seem revolutionary than putting it in a car that helped to rewire the way we think about lightweight sports cars? After all, it worked for Tesla. 

Of course, in that case, the resulting Roadster was famously and prodigiously heavy. The point of the Nyobolt prototype is that it very much isn’t. The car is said to weigh just 1,250kg, which is a veritable feather duster in EV terms. That’s partly because the firm’s fast-charging tech means it can make do with a relatively modest 35kWh battery pack. How fast? Well, using a 350kW charger, Nyobolt tests suggest that it can charge from 10 to 80 per cent in four minutes and 37 seconds. Which is seriously rapid. 

Naturally, the compromise in overall size means a smaller range - the development team says you’ll get 155 miles from a full charge - but the point is that highly accelerated (i.e. fuel pump-rivalling) charge times go a long way to alleviating the real-world usability issue that blights most EVs. Also, it makes the prototype much better suited to track work than most battery-powered cars. Handily, Nyobolt reckons its solution is much more resistant to degradation, too: having completed over 4,000 charge cycles, which equates to over 600,000 miles of normal use, the pack apparently retained over 80 per cent of its original capacity. 

“Our Nyobolt EV demonstrates the efficiency gains facilitated by our fast-charging, longer-life battery technology, enabling capacity to be right-sized while still delivering the required performance,” reckons Shane Davies, Nyobolt’s director of vehicle battery systems “Nyobolt is removing the obstacle of slow and inconvenient charging, making electrification appealing and accessible to those who don’t have the time for lengthy charging times or space for a home charger.”

Sounds pretty good, no? Well, if you think so too you’ll be delighted to hear that while the car is very much a working prototype and a technology showcase, it was engineered with the help of Callum so that future low-volume production would be a possibility. It has taken a year to get the test mule to this stage; Nyobolt reckons that within another year its battery assembly plans could be ramped up to produce 1,000 packs in 2025. Ultimately, its manufacturing model would enable the creation of two million cells per year. 

Needless to say, the company has ambitions that far exceed the introduction of a niche sports car. It is already said to be engaged in a number of serious conversations with existing OEMs about adopting its technology, which can be retrofitted to existing EV systems. In fact, it is so scaleable that everything from robotics to heavy-duty commercial vehicles is within its sights. But the narrower and more immediate takeaway for us is this: “We can enable OEMs to build excitement back into the segment, which is literally weighed down by legacy battery technology currently,” says Davies. And not a moment too soon. 


Author
Discussion

endorium

Original Poster:

34 posts

197 months

A very clever approach to EV. It makes a lot of sense for certain types of vehicle. Obviously at home the charging would be very slow (7kwh?), but if you have access to fast chargers, more cars should go this direction.
I realise, most dont have access to fast charging yet frown

chrisironside

694 posts

165 months

Love that. Well done to everyone involved - hope it's a raging success.

trails

3,942 posts

152 months

Cool thing, looks like the roof may come off too.

C5_Steve

3,662 posts

106 months

A very impressive-looking package and exactly the type of thing to get enthusiasts interested. I hope it does well!

ucb

981 posts

215 months

I'd happily drive that as my daily commuter

damienm

14 posts

195 months

I oddly find myself more drawn to this than some of the longer range EV solutions I've seen.

I dont normally stop every 2 hours on a long drive but stopping for 5 or 10 minutes every 2 hours doesn't seem unreasonable. Of course the next issue would be access ro rapid charging.

But overall it looks good.

Orange Rocket

47 posts

132 months

Nice touch replicating the door hinges in the charging port cover.

It's a nice looking design, but "needs" to be in a bright colour - just like all the best Elise's

Pughmacher

381 posts

46 months

All power to them. I think this is the type of development that BEV manufacturers and customers have been waiting for. Lowish overall weight and combined with low COG should be brilliant.

Compare that to the new M5 at 2.5 tonnes complete with hybrid V8 and transpose the approach to that type of vehicle and it’s starting to make real sense. I know comparing an M5 to a sports car is a bit iffy but the benefits if they can be reproduced at scale could potentially produce a regular car (hot hatch) at not much more than what they weigh now with all the benefit of low down weight.

The homogeneous engines that are produced now make the drive train less of an issue as well. There’s little to differentiate between one 4 cyl turbo to another anyway! No huge loss of character and noise.

Gastons_Revenge

115 posts

7 months

Clever philosophy and makes a lot of sense. More of this sort of thing please OEMs!

SDK

971 posts

256 months

As much as this appeals to the Pistonheads audience, a car like this just won't sell in any volume to make a profit.

-> Cost price, likely over £60k
-> No storage
-> 2 seats
-> Limited range
-> Limited comfort and spec
-> Hard to get in and out of

TonyG2003

258 posts

95 months

I had to do a double take. Have they just reused an Elise/Exige S3 interior. It looks just like my Elise S3.

Still interesting car.

crofty1984

15,993 posts

207 months

endorium said:
A very clever approach to EV. It makes a lot of sense for certain types of vehicle. Obviously at home the charging would be very slow (7kwh?), but if you have access to fast chargers, more cars should go this direction.
I realise, most dont have access to fast charging yet frown
My eGolf has a similar size battery. Even on a 3 pin plug you'd get it charged overnight so what you have "at home" isn't really an issue in practical terms whether it charges in 7 minutes or 7 hours.

Out in the real world though, you're probably looking at 150kW max available from most chargers. I charge at 50kW but my car's old tech. Still, everything is a step in the right direction as far as making EV more practical. Just need to wait 5 - 10 years for cars with a 200 mile range degraded to 150 miles to start popping up on Autotrader for £2-3k and I'll be in my element. EV bangernomics! With something fun and dinosaur-burning for the weekend of course.

Ribbit2112

3 posts

2 months

For real some one has the guts to destroy an Elise ?
The stupidity of an electric sports car!

Mikebentley

6,270 posts

143 months

I think Lotus should make something just like this….maybe call it the E Lise.

georgeyboy12345

3,594 posts

38 months

But can it tow my speedboat my 1000 mile commute I do every day? I think not! I’ll stick with my diesel Mondeo thanks!

georgeyboy12345

3,594 posts

38 months

Ribbit2112 said:
For real some one has the guts to destroy an Elise ?
The stupidity of an electric sports car!
Damn, someone actually beat me at the stupid comment competition! Bravo!

740EVTORQUES

776 posts

4 months

Mikebentley said:
I think Lotus should make something just like this….maybe call it the E Lise.
clap

rofl

otolith

56,982 posts

207 months

article said:
Of course, in that case, the resulting Roadster was famously and prodigiously heavy. The point of the Nyobolt prototype is that it very much isn’t. The car is said to weigh just 1,250kg, which is a veritable feather duster in EV terms.
Tesla Roadster Owner said:
I weighed my car today and unfortunately but not surprisingly it is heavier than I hoped. I used my buddy's race car scales and came up with 2790 (1265kg) including tool bag, floor mats, fix a flat, fan shroud and hardtop. Tesla says the car weighs 2723 (1235kg). Subtracting the 22 pounds for the hardtop makes for 2768 (1256kg), still off by 45 pounds. The heavy floor mats weigh 3 pounds total and the fan shroud might weigh 5 pounds? Giving them the benefit of the doubt, let's call those two items 10 pounds, that means we are still off by 35 pounds and the car really should be weighed with the soft top on, which would add back another 10 pounds. Have I missed anything? The scales we used were of course not certified, but I doubt they are off that much. Has anyone else out there weighed their car?
https://teslamotorsclub.com/tmc/threads/roadster-w...



Turbojuice

605 posts

92 months

endorium said:
A very clever approach to EV. It makes a lot of sense for certain types of vehicle. Obviously at home the charging would be very slow (7kwh?), but if you have access to fast chargers, more cars should go this direction.
I realise, most dont have access to fast charging yet frown
Same approach as the Honda e (35kWh & 1500kg) and the upcoming Renault 5 (40/52kWh & 1350-1450kg). It's the most logical approach for a commuter car and indeed a weekend car like this thing. thumbup

Edited by Turbojuice on Friday 28th June 12:47

Fezza27

2 posts

13 months

This is what Alpine should be doing!