Montyjohn
Well-Known Member
I love my P38 and I think I will always want to own one.
But it does make me wonder how likely am I to run one in 20+ years time?
By then, fuel will probably all be synthetic, cost four times as much, plus a little extra as politicians will argue that you have no right to pollute the air when you could cheaply by an EV. Times are changing fast.
So is an EV conversion the way forward.
Not for me. Right now anyway.
I love the V8. That would be a loss. But also, conversions cost a fortune, and the batteries are very very heavy. I also worry about battery degradation. EV manufacturers put a lot of effort into managing batteries and cooling. Replicating this in a diy project wouldn't be easy.
Which got me wondering, would a hybrid conversion be the way forward?
Most of my journeys are sub 10 miles (return). I'd get to keep the V8. Battery weight would be minimal. This might not be the worst idea.
So the way I would do it is to swap the auto gearbox for a Lexus GS450H gearbox. The motor within that gearbox is about 200hp which is plenty.
You can get 12kwh batteries by BMW from eBay for about £1k. With a bit of re-fiddling it would mostly fit in the spare tyre well if re-engineered.
Use the Lexus inverter controlled by Damiens thingy https://www.evbmw.com/index.php/evbmw-webshop/vcu-boards/gs450h-vcu. Or maybe the Zombie version.
Bits that would be a problem.
GS450H gearbox is longer than the P38 auto box. So engine might need to move forward. Maybe remove handbrake drum to move the transfer box back. probably would need both. But then how would you provide a handbrake directly to callipers?
The GS450H box would need to be a divorced connection to the transfer box. Sounds complicated. May make the system even longer.
Damien's inverter controller isn't programmed to work in hybrid mode so the code would need to be adapted to use engine power. Engine speed, vehicle speed and throttle position are all known so the logic should be solvable. (I write a lot of code anyway, so provided I can figure out the logic, I'm not worried about this bit).
I've never understood regen braking. How does the inverter know what voltage to charge the battery at when braking. The battery won't be stock so this info would need to be provided somehow. Does Damien's board do this?
These are just the obvious problems, many more to uncover I'm sure.
Just mulling it over at the moment so any thoughts welcome.
But it does make me wonder how likely am I to run one in 20+ years time?
By then, fuel will probably all be synthetic, cost four times as much, plus a little extra as politicians will argue that you have no right to pollute the air when you could cheaply by an EV. Times are changing fast.
So is an EV conversion the way forward.
Not for me. Right now anyway.
I love the V8. That would be a loss. But also, conversions cost a fortune, and the batteries are very very heavy. I also worry about battery degradation. EV manufacturers put a lot of effort into managing batteries and cooling. Replicating this in a diy project wouldn't be easy.
Which got me wondering, would a hybrid conversion be the way forward?
Most of my journeys are sub 10 miles (return). I'd get to keep the V8. Battery weight would be minimal. This might not be the worst idea.
So the way I would do it is to swap the auto gearbox for a Lexus GS450H gearbox. The motor within that gearbox is about 200hp which is plenty.
You can get 12kwh batteries by BMW from eBay for about £1k. With a bit of re-fiddling it would mostly fit in the spare tyre well if re-engineered.
Use the Lexus inverter controlled by Damiens thingy https://www.evbmw.com/index.php/evbmw-webshop/vcu-boards/gs450h-vcu. Or maybe the Zombie version.
Bits that would be a problem.
GS450H gearbox is longer than the P38 auto box. So engine might need to move forward. Maybe remove handbrake drum to move the transfer box back. probably would need both. But then how would you provide a handbrake directly to callipers?
The GS450H box would need to be a divorced connection to the transfer box. Sounds complicated. May make the system even longer.
Damien's inverter controller isn't programmed to work in hybrid mode so the code would need to be adapted to use engine power. Engine speed, vehicle speed and throttle position are all known so the logic should be solvable. (I write a lot of code anyway, so provided I can figure out the logic, I'm not worried about this bit).
I've never understood regen braking. How does the inverter know what voltage to charge the battery at when braking. The battery won't be stock so this info would need to be provided somehow. Does Damien's board do this?
These are just the obvious problems, many more to uncover I'm sure.
Just mulling it over at the moment so any thoughts welcome.