July 1 | @Adrian Au @SJ (Unlicensed) @Micah Black @Kristen Emiko Shiozaki (Deactivated) @Michael Shiozaki @Micah Bai | Array Panel Hinging | Hinge design project was assigned today Initial thought was charging configuration would be sideways (side hinges) Assuming the panels have to stay on the car at some capacity, can we facilitate rotation for the trunk panel given what we’re hoping for our current trunk functionality (which is to act like a normal trunk) How important is angled incidence in the overall big picture (does it give us a 0.5% boost in overall day charging?) Should do the math to determine the significance In terms of high-level strategy, what are the aero / dynamic tradeoffs due to side hinges (if any)?
2 options being considered From a feasibility standpoint - the fewer hinges you have to make (especially consistency), the better From a pure geometry standpoint, rear/trunk panel will want to hinge inwards vs. on the sides due to the hinge location being on a flat part vs. a curved part if it were hinged on the sides What is easier to design? Adrian recommends not following Minessota’s route - aka no hinges Space for trunk hinges - would it be wide enough for the trunk panel to open trunk style? Charging configurations are only practical if you have allocated charging times Ideal choice: remove trunk + roof panels for charging Rope Clarke + strategy in to learn about their charging models Are there any
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July 22 | @Adrian Au @Leif Blake @Geoffrey Liu @Micah Bai @Kristen Emiko Shiozaki (Deactivated) | Brake routing between front and rear wheels | Concerns Where are we putting the cables How are we pulling the parking brake What mechanism fits best with our limited space (Adrian’s recommendation was a pedal style) Cable routing - will it interfere with other systems?
Old Routing Why a Pedal Mount? Positioning? What to sort out Can we have a 3d printed part that the brake lines go through? Adhesives would be weak and cannot resist the pulling of the cable If we’re thinking of coming through a hole in the upright, the wheel wll turn a bit, but the push-rod does not turn and it’s hard to say how the cable will go through there The bend radius of the cable kind follows the shape and goes around, but it’s hard to control the ‘motion’ of the cable (might be unable to prevent potential rubbing of the wheel) For the actual brakes, might be better to come around the aerobody - current routing is going through a mess of components
Next Steps Routing through the chassis then work through components (mount to firewall, etc.) For brake route cabling going to the rear wheels - main ideal was to keep it in the bottom corner of the catamaran (by the driver’s right leg) Might not need to go through the front firewall but will need to go through the rear firewall For the front, cable routing should be similar Understand what you can and can’t do from the Dynamics end (@Geoffrey Liu to schedule another meeting w/ Leif) Focus on routing first
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