Toyota Motorsport to race to the clouds at Pikes Peak with new electric race car

Toyota Motorsport Group last year took an electric race car, the EV P001, to the Nürburgring to set a lap record for electric cars.  This year TMG is taking the next iteration, the EV P002, to the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, to see about racing to the clouds.  The specs on the new machine are a step forward from the EV P001.  Along the way Toyota seems to have changed their intent from being the sole provider of electric drive train components to a race series, to being one participant in a range of components suppliers in the burgeoning field of electric racing.
The TMG EV P002 being tested at Paul Ricard Circuit in France.

Let’s start with the EV P002.  It, like the EV P001, is built on a Radical chassis but with electric drive train components.  The twin axial flux motors produce a 350 kilowatt output (approx 470 horsepower), and a maximum torque of 900 Nm.  Each motor has its own TMG-designed inverter.  It is powered by a massive 42 kilowatt-hour battery pack, and has an off-board DC charger.  TMG predicts a top speed of 150 miles/hr, in the Pikes Peak configuration.  The EV P001 had twin motors, supplied by EVO Electric, but with a maximum output of “only” 280 kilowatts.  TMG does not disclose the supplier of the EV P002 motors, but a close look at one of the pictures published by TMG and we see a motor that suspiciously looks like EVO’s.

TMG’s high-performance electric powertrain, with axial flux motors and TMG inverters visible

Japanese rally champion Fumio Nutahara will drive the car. In May, TMG conducted extensive testing at the Paul Ricard circuit in southern France to verify car and drive train performance.

Last year TMG described the project as a collaboration among several organizations, but this year the only listed collaborator is RK1 Inc.

What may be the most important tidbit is the quote down at the end of the press release:

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Ludwig Zeller, General Manager Electric & Electronics: “Pikes Peak is a great showcase for TMG’s electric powertrain technology. We already proved at the Nürburgring that TMG is leading the way in developing such powertrains for motorsport and this is another sign of our commitment to this technology. TMG wants to be increasingly involved in electric motorsport and we believe our powertrain technology is an industry-leading combination of performance, durability and packaging. Electric powertrain technology in motorsport is still in its development phase but through projects like this one, TMG is laying the foundations for the future of high-performance and motorsport cars.”

The context is that there are several organizations developing electric car racing series.  TMG clearly wants to be a supplier of components to the teams which will race in these series.   TMG’s purpose is to supply parts and expertise to racing teams, and if the future of racing really is electric, then TMG would be foolish to ignore the wave of change.

Last year, after attaining the Nürburgring lap record for electric cars, TMG said that event proved their drive train technology was “ideal to power any future single-make electric motorsport series.”  This was clearly meant to appeal to the racing series organizers, and position TMG as the supplier to some kind of spec racing series.  This press release does not contain such a statement, but still works to position TMG as a supplier to electric racing teams.



TMG EV P002 Technical Specifications
Performance
Top Speed
240km/h (Pikes Peak configuration)
Maximum Torque
900Nm
Maximum Power
350kW
Maximum Revs
5000rpm
Powertrain
Electric Motor
2 axial flux
Inverter
2 x TMG inverters
Gear Ratio
2.5
Transmission
Single-reduction gearing
Battery
Lithium ceramic
Battery Capacity
42 kWh
Charging Technology
Off-board DC charging
Dimensions
Length
4.10m
Height
1.04m
Width
1.79m

Sources:

Toyota’s electric race to the clouds at 2012 Pikes Peak Hill Climb

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About David Herron

David Herron is a writer and software engineer living in Silicon Valley. He primarily writes about electric vehicles, clean energy systems, climate change, peak oil and related issues. When not writing he indulges in software projects and is sometimes employed as a software engineer. David has written for sites like PlugInCars and TorqueNews, and worked for companies like Sun Microsystems and Yahoo.

About David Herron

David Herron is a writer and software engineer living in Silicon Valley. He primarily writes about electric vehicles, clean energy systems, climate change, peak oil and related issues. When not writing he indulges in software projects and is sometimes employed as a software engineer. David has written for sites like PlugInCars and TorqueNews, and worked for companies like Sun Microsystems and Yahoo.

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