Green GT Design Study Envisions Future Le Mans Electric Racer

Green GT LeMans prototype design study

Electric racer will come with a whopping 2,000 Nm of torque

By Alex Ricciuti
May 15, 2009 2:29 PM
Filed Under: Artist Renderings, Concept Car, Design, European, Motorsport

Not sure if an electric race car can technically meet all the requirements and specifications of Le Mans racing today, but GreenGT of Switzerland has designed an electric racer to do just that.

Meet GreenGT's first design study for a Le Mans prototype that could possibly compete in the 2011 24-hour race at Le Mans.

The Le-Mont-sur-Lausanne-based GreenGT team commissioned the young French designer Thomas Clavet of the ISD Valencienne Design School to create this Le Mans prototype.

The prototype is made up of an FIA-spec carbon chassis with a fiberglass body. It comes with 2 water-cooled electric motors each with 100 kW (2 x 100 kW) coupled to a differential gearbox patented by GreenGT. Power supply comes from flexcell photovoltaic solar panels (What? You don't know what those are?) and two lithium-ion batteries, each with 30kWh of juice. The whole thing weighs in at a ship-shape 860 kg.

The numbers?

Maximum speed: 275 km/h (171 mph)
0-100km/h (62mph): Under 4 seconds
Horsepower: 350 to 400
Torque:...

No, torque should be posed as a mindblowingly-mental rhetorical question.

Torque? 2000 "Nee-hah!" Newton Meters (1475 ft-lb).

GreenGT is also hoping this car will be more than a pioneer on the track, and become a retail-ready road car for the masses. Or at least, the masses who can afford a high-tech, electric supercar.

You know, with Swiss-watch precision being what it is, a Swiss car doesn't sound like such a bad idea, does it? And the car looks good too.

 

Source: Green GT via carplatform

Comments

SkinnerY2K
May 15, 2009 3:01 PM
That is MUSTARD. I wnat one

rogers
May 15, 2009 3:06 PM
This is awesome. This is sick.

Prince_Ash
May 15, 2009 3:08 PM
very very nice, if i could afford one i would get one. but i doubt this would be street legal lol.

tootall
May 16, 2009 3:54 AM
If the caparo T1 can be street legal, then this should be not too far off.

scratchy996
May 15, 2009 4:12 PM
how do they plan to win Le Mans when they need 15 hours just to recharge the batteries ?

tootall
May 16, 2009 3:52 AM
Great question.

N20_Purge
May 15, 2009 6:30 PM
If future Le mans cars look like that....

.... I hope it is televised on a big TV Co.! Seriously, that car looks pretty hot!

kryst_PL
May 15, 2009 7:03 PM
Do the maths: two 30KWH batteries and two 100KW motors. It will go only for 20 minutes! Assuming that solar panels dont work very well at night it needs to go for battery swap about 60 times a race (only 60, if it wouldnt need it at all in full sunlight). And what if one cannot swap batteries and needs to charge them? A 20 minute pit stop every 20 minutes?:) How competitive is that?

Anthropos
May 16, 2009 6:09 AM
Do you really think they would even announce it as a 24-hour Le Mans racer if it was that incompetent as u say? I don't think ur math is correct... they're probbably more efficient than u think ;-)

Wickedated
May 16, 2009 7:16 AM
I kinda of agree with kryst_PL if youre talking competing against cars like the R10 that run on diesel, this thing is cool but stands no chance at competing against anything. Its just for show, great design and all, but don't count on it

Bremen_Koenigsegg
May 17, 2009 1:10 AM
The technology may not be there yet, but it's still a good start; diesel and gasoline have the advantage of having been the industry standard for a century. Motorsport is, in most car enthusiasts' minds, the cornerstone of automotive development. And what better series than LeMans to develop an emerging technology?

astroturf777
May 17, 2009 5:17 AM
rather see a hydrogen cell racer - imagine pit stop speed with no refuelling...

blay
May 18, 2009 2:47 AM
reminds me of the danish supercar... the Zenvo? mmmmm beastly looking thing lolz

Clavet_Thomas
May 18, 2009 10:43 AM
I just want to rectify a very important thing, this project was made by a team work composed by Baptiste Viry, Julien Sarreméjean and me for the design and Mathieu Bouis and Romuald Lemoine for the 3D modelling.

Thanks to all for your comments.

rallycarsforsale
October 14, 2009 8:39 PM
this is really amazing, it is another leap into the pollution free world if this becomes reality and is successful then the engines will be much quiet and less noise pollution and fuel emissions will also decrease. i wish all the best to the designers.

a href="http://www.rally24.com"rally cars for sale/a www.rally24.com

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