cycleops612
10 kW
I did try & ensure this isnt a repeat.
"Battery: 518 Wh Lithium-ion battery that is continuously recharged by the fuel cell and hydrogen canister. The battery itself can be recharged in six hours on mains power.
Fuel cell power: 100W (FOR 7+ HOURS NB)
Canister: 738 Wh capacity. It can be exchanged for a new canister in 30 seconds.
"
http://newsroom.unsw.edu.au/news/science-technology/australia%E2%80%99s-first-fuel-cell-bicycle
at the risk of stating the obvious, 100w for 7+ hours is a damn good extender - its in theory = to a 20ah 36v battery in capacity, instant recharge but lousy discharge rate.
they dont state the weight of the fuel cell. i imagine its a sore point, but hey, it fits on a bike, right?
and the battery is spared from draining anytime use is below 100w, and it gains 100 wh~ each, bike idle/parked hour.
so a common 10ah 36v 360wh battery could be flattened getting to work (and have 100w more squirt for the trip), and after 3.5 hours, be independently recharged for the home trip, and be refueled with a cheap, convenient, non pressurised canister.
the latter is the real possible game changer-no infrastructure required for wide adoption.
"Battery: 518 Wh Lithium-ion battery that is continuously recharged by the fuel cell and hydrogen canister. The battery itself can be recharged in six hours on mains power.
Fuel cell power: 100W (FOR 7+ HOURS NB)
Canister: 738 Wh capacity. It can be exchanged for a new canister in 30 seconds.
"
http://newsroom.unsw.edu.au/news/science-technology/australia%E2%80%99s-first-fuel-cell-bicycle
at the risk of stating the obvious, 100w for 7+ hours is a damn good extender - its in theory = to a 20ah 36v battery in capacity, instant recharge but lousy discharge rate.
they dont state the weight of the fuel cell. i imagine its a sore point, but hey, it fits on a bike, right?
and the battery is spared from draining anytime use is below 100w, and it gains 100 wh~ each, bike idle/parked hour.
so a common 10ah 36v 360wh battery could be flattened getting to work (and have 100w more squirt for the trip), and after 3.5 hours, be independently recharged for the home trip, and be refueled with a cheap, convenient, non pressurised canister.
the latter is the real possible game changer-no infrastructure required for wide adoption.