Maintenance of Harvester gas engine range extender

soedesh

Member
First Name
Shawn
Joined
Oct 24, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
6
Reaction score
4
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicles
'82 VW Rabbit 1.8T, '10 Volvo XC60 T6, '13 Chevy Volt, '19 Volvo XC60 T6 R-desig
Country flag
Oh, you were replying to the oil change stuff. Gotcha. I thought you were replying to the operation of the Voltec drive.
 

ClayCollins

New Member
First Name
Clay
Joined
Oct 25, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
2
Reaction score
3
Location
Houston, TX
Vehicles
2022 GMC Yukon, 2012 Jaguar XF, 1963 MGB
Country flag
Mazda used a Wankel engine for their range-extended MX-30:
https://insideevs.com/reviews/712120/mazda-mx-30-range-extender/

I do wonder about the rotary engine used for this purpose - they're famously smooth, but also notoriously thirsty. If the whole point is efficiency, is a rotary engine going to use more or less gas than a traditional cylinder engine for the same energy output?
I do know the Wankel engines suffer from apex seal wear which limits their life. Mazda has improved, but not eliminated this problem. Perhaps the reduced weight and size would offset the efficiency. I don’t know if Liquid Piston’s design is better in efficiency. I do know they claim to have solved the apex wear problem.
 

timmyhil

Active Member
First Name
Timmy
Joined
Oct 29, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
42
Reaction score
44
Vehicles
mini countryman 2019 s all4, scout800
Country flag
My guess is that its maintenance will be around 4,000-8,000hrs of run. Only because it will most likely run at the most torque made rpm which would in theory create less heat and wear to oil and internals. The reason it would be the torquiest rpm is because it would be connected to some kind of alternator or to a special alternator crankshaft to charge the battery.
 

RMK!

Member
First Name
Robert
Joined
Oct 25, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
16
Reaction score
13
Location
No Cal
Vehicles
Tesla: 2024 Model 3 DM, 2018 Model X 100D
Country flag
My understanding is that my Gen 1 Volt mostly uses the engine to drive the generator and only direct couples the engine to the drivetrain above 50mph, presumably for efficiency. If you need to pass it decouples and uses pure electric.

My original point was that the engine/generator is capable of fully operating the vehicle and not just some kind of "booster". You can run the car indefinitely on gas and have full power. Also, the car keeps track of the engine hours and alerts the driver when an oil change is required, not based on miles.
Yep, it was a "smart car" in that my wifes commute was less than 40 miles per day she was always on electric drive. One year she received a warning on the screen that the cars gasoline was nearly a year old and it automatically ran on gas only until that the tank was emptied of the old gas. She would plugin and charge every night and replenish the 40 miles of potential range via a standard 120V outlet. The Volts were beautifully engineered nice little vehicles which never made a profit for Chevy hence their demise.
 
Top