It is in no way terrible - until I looked at the Genesis DPVs it was what I was planning to buy. It's a great scooter based on established technology that's just been surpassed in some respects as better designs come to market.
But the TBM numbers are quite clear that a Cuda Fury is doing less work per watt-hour than a Genesis. Put a big enough battery in it, and you'll still go further with the Cuda than with the Genesis...but then you're spending extra money and weight on making an inferior design perform the same/better. Assuming they each have the same battery, the Genesis will tow the same diver further/longer than the Cuda.
Humm, I disagree.
Keep in mind that at the last TBM is was not possible to slow a Cuda Fury down to (IIRC) 150 fpm cruise. That means the efficiency numbers were skewed. With the new user programable motor controller Dive X sells it is now possible to select as slow a sped as you want.
Having said that why should the user care if one scooter designer selects a motor of XX efficiency and a battery of YY watthours and another designer selects a motor of with an efficiency of .95XX and a battery with 1.10YY capacity? The net result is about the same.
WRT to batteries; 18650 cells are pervasive. They are used in everything from laptops to cordless tools to Telsa Autos. Billions of cells are produced every year. That means the R&D $$ spent on 18650's is also huge. It's not chance that the capacities of 18650's has grown rapidly from ~2.0 amphour per cell to ~3.9+ in just a few years. As a designer I absolutely want to leverage the R&D $$ that Apple and Dewalt and Tesla are spending.
This is dramatic compared to large prismatic Li-Poly cells, for which there is a much smaller market.
It's also not chance that packs using many 18650's are what powers the Tesla Autos.
The specific energy (watt hours / unit mass) of packs built using 18650's is very difficult to match (impossible?) using packs built from small numbers of large prismatics.
The problem is building packs using 100's of 18650's is extremely difficult, and expensive and requires substantial investments in fixtures, and fine resistance spot welding equipment.
(Replacement costs on the welder we use is over $50K) Perhaps I should post some photos of the pile of fixtures required simply to assemble the cells in preparation for welding.
That makes soldering together a few high capacity Li-Poly cells an attractive choice for low volume applications, but by doing so the advantages of high specific energy, and massively paralleled, passive self balancing packs is lost.
The massively paralleled design we use is patented, and DSS holds the exclusive license for this technology in DPV's.
I should also mention that "active" balancing is largely ineffective for high capacity series packs produced using series strings of large capacity cells as the "balancing circuits" used for smaller batteries don't scale very well.
Oh, one last note concerning the last TBM; of all the scooters tested only the DSS Li-Ion powered scooter actually delivered *more* total watthours than we claimed to provide. Under promise and over deliver
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Tobin
---------- Post added May 14th, 2015 at 08:09 PM ----------
Following this logic, then, SPGs are unnecessary....
SPG's are largely unnecessary. I use mine to confirm what I already know.
Let's say 1/2 way into a dive I look at my SPG and discover that I have less gas than I expected. Based on that what action do I take?
Pretty simple, some sort of gas sharing with Teammates is likely to be implemented. This of course only works because adequate predive planning insured there would be sufficient resources to complete the dive in the event of a failure.
One can easily argue that SPG's (and battery gas gauges) actually encourage additional risk taking.
Tobin