Difference between revisions of "Chrysler Patriot"

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[[Category:Chrysler concept vehicles|Patriot]]
[[Category:Chrysler concept vehicles|Patriot]]
[[Category:Le Mans Prototypes]]
[[Category:Le Mans Prototypes]]
[[Category:Hybrid cars]]
[[Category:Hybrid cars]]

Latest revision as of 02:27, 4 February 2009

The Chrysler Patriot was a turbine-electric hybrid sports-prototype racing car utilizing flywheel energy storage, built by Chrysler in 1993 as a concept car but with the express intent of winning the Le Mans 24 Hour Race. [1]

The traction engine was a four-pole, three-phase, 525-volt AC induction motor, weighing 143 pounds (65 kg), with a maximum speed of 24,000 RPM; it had an aluminum housing, was lubricated by oil, and had an 8:1 motor to final drive ratio. Electrical power was supplied by a water-cooled, three-phase alternator which was built into a two stage gas turbine, fueled with liquified natural gas, running at 50,000 RPM at low speed and 100,000 RPM at high speed, weighing 186 pounds. Additional energy for acceleration was provided by a 147 pound SatCon composite flywheel housed in a vacuum chamber running at 58,000 RPM, coupled to the drive train via three-phase permanent magnets in a Halbach array.[2]

Although introduced with much fanfare as a great leap forward in alternative energy storage and efficiency, press releases regarding the Patriot faded away. It was later revealed that serious problems with the mechanical integrity of the flywheel could not be overcome, and protection from a shattering flywheel would exact too much of a weight penalty. [2]

It is not to be confused with the Jeep Patriot, a 2007 SUV built by the same company.

References

  1. Chrysler Patriot hybrid-electric racing car
  2. 2.0 2.1 Modern Chrysler Concept Cars: The Designs That Saved the Company, by Matt DeLorenzo, Motorbooks, 2000, ISBN-10: 0760308489, ISBN-13: 978-0760308486