icelander
Automotive
- Mar 10, 2007
- 9
The general direction of combustion engine development is towards increased complexity to retain efficiency over a wider range of speed and load, with Daimlers DiesOtto as possibly the pinnacle. Going the other way, designing a combustion engine for one speed and one load would shed loads of compromise and complexity. Flow simulation now makes "easy" optimizing such an engine (presumably 2 stroke, valveless, minimum peripherals, cheap to produce) to the maximum efficiency/emissions point. A similarly simple and optimized single load/single speed (on-off) electrical generator would absorb the mechanical force, batteries serving as load buffers in vehicular applications. Since no major players seem to follow such a strategy the question is simple.
Why not?
Why not?