A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport

Electric vehicles combine several systems together which strive to make a performant vehicle. Improving vehicle performance is aided by modelling each subsystem not separately, but together as a whole. This work develops software for modelling the entire electro-mechanical system, able to inform the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Blissett, Jonathan
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59477/
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author Blissett, Jonathan
author_facet Blissett, Jonathan
author_sort Blissett, Jonathan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Electric vehicles combine several systems together which strive to make a performant vehicle. Improving vehicle performance is aided by modelling each subsystem not separately, but together as a whole. This work develops software for modelling the entire electro-mechanical system, able to inform the design of individual components. An electric motorcycle is chosen as a the platform for the development of such a model. Verification of the model is demonstrated by calibration to recorded data and application to a race event, demonstrating the accuracy of the modelling technique. The model guided the subsequent design of an electric motor tailored to the system, through a better understanding of the entire vehicle interaction. Applying this method to a racing motorcycle demonstrates the utility of broad system modelling in detailed component design, by guiding the determination of optimal speed and torque rating for the motor. This process demonstrated that the trend of designing increasingly high speed motors to reduce their size is not always the best approach when considering the system as a whole. The work concludes with a demonstration of the motor performance in the application, including winning a race against a mixed grid of petrol and electric motorcycles.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:38:46Z
publishDate 2019
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spelling nottingham-594772025-02-28T14:43:13Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59477/ A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport Blissett, Jonathan Electric vehicles combine several systems together which strive to make a performant vehicle. Improving vehicle performance is aided by modelling each subsystem not separately, but together as a whole. This work develops software for modelling the entire electro-mechanical system, able to inform the design of individual components. An electric motorcycle is chosen as a the platform for the development of such a model. Verification of the model is demonstrated by calibration to recorded data and application to a race event, demonstrating the accuracy of the modelling technique. The model guided the subsequent design of an electric motor tailored to the system, through a better understanding of the entire vehicle interaction. Applying this method to a racing motorcycle demonstrates the utility of broad system modelling in detailed component design, by guiding the determination of optimal speed and torque rating for the motor. This process demonstrated that the trend of designing increasingly high speed motors to reduce their size is not always the best approach when considering the system as a whole. The work concludes with a demonstration of the motor performance in the application, including winning a race against a mixed grid of petrol and electric motorcycles. 2019-12-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59477/1/J_Blisset_PhD_thesis.pdf Blissett, Jonathan (2019) A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. electric motorcycle; vehicle optimisation; electrical machine motor design
spellingShingle electric motorcycle; vehicle optimisation; electrical machine motor design
Blissett, Jonathan
A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
title A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
title_full A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
title_fullStr A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
title_full_unstemmed A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
title_short A wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
title_sort wholistic motor design philosophy for electric motorcycles in motorsport
topic electric motorcycle; vehicle optimisation; electrical machine motor design
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59477/