A growing market
for E-bikes, especially in Europe, is helping generate cash for Fallbrook
Technologies Inc. as it develops its NuVinci continuously variable
transmissions (CVTs) for automotive, off-highway and industrial applications
Recognising that building up the 2,000,000km durability
requirement expected – and demanded – by commercial vehicle manufacturers can
take a long time, Fallbrook Technologies is adopting a four-pronged attack to
the problem.
The four-pronged attack comprises two-wheel
vehicles like bikes and E-bikes, passenger cars and light truck, heavy
commercial and off-highway vehicles and finally industrial applications. And
for these areas it has three licensees all of which are working actively in a
range of transmission applications.
The first and the last of these
four areas are likely to provide the launch pad for further growth in the other
two areas. Relatively cheap to manufacture, CVTs for E-bikes offers the
necessary manufacturing experience for high-volume production. Typically, the
numbers are in the region of 100,000 a year – a figure recognised by the
automotive world which understands the unique environment of process control
and supply chain management.
The industrial units, for conveyors
and other industrial units could be manufactured in lower volumes but pave the
way for higher horsepower applications. This area of Fallbrook Technologies' expertise is being developed by Team Industries Inc. of Bagley, Minnesota, itself a licensee of Fallbrook Technologies' NuVinci CVT.
Next in line, and with a shorter
time to market, is likely to be the recreational/small vehicle/utility vehicle
sector. Here the volumes are not as large as passenger cars but they further
help pave the way to wider application. This product sector is being addressed
by one of Fallbrook's licensees.
Addressing another sector, Dana
Holding Corporation of Maumee, Ohio is a licensee of the NuVinci technology
with direct application to light-duty trucks and passenger cars.
Such is Dana’s commitment to the
technology that late last year it announced a Technology Centre in Cedar Park –
exactly where Fallbrook Technologies is based. Dana is receiving $1.25 million
in funding from the Economic Development Department for Cedar Park, Texas, to
help set up the centre.
In setting up the centre, Dana
noted that it will “fully leverage” the company’s investment in its strategic
relationship with Fallbrook Technologies Inc.
In September 2012 Dana secured an
exclusive license from Fallbrook Technologies to engineer and produce
“continuously variable planetary” (CVP) technology for use in light vehicles
and certain off-highway transmissions.
Dana clearly is hoping a place
will be found for the CVP in the passenger car and light trucks arenas.
The final leg of the stool –
involving Allison Transmission Inc. – another licensee – is the one which is
most difficult to satisfy. Its demands are high – the request for 2,000,000km
durability requirement from some truck OEMs being just one of them. Another
requirement is the need to cope with high torque inputs – 1,000Nm being just
one number of many associated with this type of transmission.
And it is in aiming to satisfy
this market, eventually, that Fallbrook Technologies is pursuing the other
market areas to build up all the necessary areas of expertise.
As well as providing manufacturing
and durability experience, the E-bike market – which in Europe is worth 1.6
million units annually – is providing the baseline numbers that automakers and
OEMs recognise.
Fallbrook Technologies already
claims to have sold over 100,000 bike and E-bike NuVinci CVP transmissions and
the market is growing.
The E-bike market is also offering
a launch point to move into the moped and small motorcycle market. These too
will provide the additional annual numbers that help to give automakers and
OEMs the confidence the transmission – based on “moving from gears to spheres”
are looking for.
Fallbrook Technologies has more
than 45 people developing a range of CVT prospects as well as developing the
technological baseline suitable for further growth. In its partnering,
Fallbrook has developed a “community” for the technology through its licensing.
Improvements to the technology are shared among the members of the community to
improve quality of designs and speed the development cycle for the members of
the community.
Already developing transmissions
of “several hundred kilowatts” capability, the engineers are gradually, through
extensive durability trials, building up the necessary simulation tools that
will lead eventually to the 2,000,000km goal.
“We have been investing heavy in
testing based on the coefficients we have already obtained,” noted Alain
Charlois, executive vice president, corporate and business Ddevelopment of
Fallbrook Technologies Inc. in an interview. “And that is why we are getting a
lot of attention from automakers, OEMs and Tier 1 automotive suppliers. They
are not questioning that the technology works or that it brings improved fuel
consumption, or reduced energy use for other applications.”
As Charlois sees it, the “direct
sell” element derived from bike/E-bike CVP transmissions provides the steady
cash-flow incomes needed to keep the company going. Licensing provides further
valuable income while the next level of cash inflow will be derived from the commercialisation
of CVPs in the recreational/small vehicle market and the sale of low volumes
CVPs for industrial applications in the non-transportation arena.
Applications in the auxiliary
drive field could provide further encouragement for growth and in this respect
Fallbrook Technologies hopes to make an announcement shortly. These are likely
to have multiple applications in both automotive and off-highway spaces and
could involve several Tier 1 automotive suppliers
Charlois is wary of revealing any
numbers that might lead anyone to unravel the size of the business, or the
extent of the level of investment so far. Nor is he willing to disclose
customers, the size (in terms of horsepower or torque) of the various CVP
traction drives under development that might incriminate him in any
non-disclosure agreement – of which Fallbrook Technologies has many.
“All of our partners are very
sensitive the release of information,” is all he will say.
But it is known that serious
automotive numbers have to begin at 50,000 units a year.
It is clear that the E-bike market
with its 250kW electric motor drives and associated CVP transmission could lead
before long to 350kW and thence to 500kW applications if regulations change.
The market for E-bikes in Germany is worth 900,000 units a year alone and could
swell.
This technology leads on
immediately to mopeds and small recreational vehicles and thence into passenger
cars.
Experience thus far with CVTs
suggests the road ahead is not easy.
“Nothing will kill you quicker
than turning up with a transmission that does not meet customer requirements,”
said Charlois.
He is hoping the road Fallbrook
Technologies is taking will lead to that elusive pot of gold at the end of the
rainbow.
How
NuVinci works
NuVinci technology is a continuously variable
planetary (CVP) system based on a set of rotating, tilting balls located
between two rings. The basic components
comprise an input disc, or ring, driven by the power source; an output
disc, or ring, connected to the CVP output; and a set of balls each rotating on
its own axle and situated between the input disc, the output disc and the
central ‘sun’ that maintains the balls in their position.
Torque from an engine, motor or
other input source is transferred through the input disc to the balls using a
thin layer of traction fluid.
The torque is then transmitted
through the balls to the output disc through another thin layer of traction
fluid. The input disc and output disc are compressed onto the balls by an
external force. The value of this force is proportional to the torque being
transmitted.
The torque is transmitted through
the traction fluid which prevents destructive metal-to-metal contact between
balls and discs whilst at the same time providing traction for the balls and
rings and lubrication for bearings and other components.
The speed of the output disc
compared to the speed of the input disc, or speed ratio, is controlled by the
angle of the ball axles relative to the axis of the transmission. Tilting
the axes of ball shifts the transmission steplessly from low to high, or from
high to low, or to any ratio in between.
The number of balls used depends
on several factors including torque and speed requirements, operational
requirements and space considerations, among others.
The overall speed (torque) ratio
that can be achieved from the CVP variator components alone is 4:1 or 400 per
cent, but this can be expanded or reduced through configuration of the entire
transmission to meet the needs of the overall system. Extending the technology from bikes through to heavy commercial vehicles is certainly a challenge not to be undertaken lightly.
Finally, in an interesting twist of irony, Torotrak plc on
its web page under the heading "Driving change" recently highlighted
its new and “unique” traction drive elastohydrodynamic fluids laboratory. Following
its own short video clip of the laboratory, Torotrak highlights the work of various
other CVT, IVT and transmission innovators using YouTube video clips.
One video clip is from Fallbrook Technologies Inc.
entitled an "Introduction to NuVinci CVP"; another is: "How a
CVT works" by Team Industries Inc. ∎
.
2 comments:
How does Torotrak fit in with all this?
good blogging!
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