InMotion IM01

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I've mentioned the IM01 in the LeMans thread before. InMotion is an automotive team of students from the Eindhoven University of Technology which collaborates with students of the Fontys University of Applied Sciences. They have "Garage 56" for 2017 running of Le Mans (They plan to win it all). and are also aiming to take down Stefan Bellof and his Porsche 956s lap record of 6:11.13 at the Ring. (This is planned to happen in August 2016)

It will be powered by 4 individual electric motor's, it also will be the return of the rotary.

Even better it looks like the Red Bull X1 👍.

inmotion-im01-galeriebild-6110252907763967428.jpg


On my twitter feed I saw this today.

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A quote by the team -
Automotive Technology InMotion

During the 85th edition of the 24h of Le Mans in 2017 the rotary engine will return to this legendary track, more than 25 years after it has been banned from endurance racing. The Hybrid IM01 racecar will use a rotary engine as range-extender in order to complete the 24 hours. Because the rotary engine will be used as a generator, it can be tuned in such a way that it always runs in its optimal operation point. This results in a tremendous reduction in fuel consumption, as has been shown on the InMotion engine test bed located at the University of Technology Eindhoven.


In 1991, its final year of admission on the Le Mans racetrack, the rotary engine yielded Mazda a remarkable result. They won the 24h race with the Mazda 787B. This enormous success unfortunately also meant the end for this type of engine. Motorsports Federation FIA reacted by banning the rotary engine from its races. The piston engines couldn’t keep up with the reliability and the power vs. weight ratio that a rotary engine offers. Exactly those kind of regulations, which limit technological innovation, are the primary reason that
InMotion began developing the IM01.

The IM01 can use the rotary engine, because InMotion will compete with it in Garage 56. This class within the 24h of Le Mans embraces technological innovation. Besides the regulations on safety, no other technical limitations exist in this class.

Characteristic advantages of a rotary engine are compact sizing, because of which it requires little space in the car and weighs less than a comparable piston engine, high output power (this will be around 545 HP for the IM01) and few moving parts. These advantages are particularly useful for a racecar.

The best known disadvantage, wear due to the angles of the rotor, has already been solved a couple of decades back. Another disadvantage of the rotary engine, which still exists today, is the relatively bad efficiency at different engine speeds. This is where the series-hybrid drive-train of the IM01 comes in. Because the rotary engine acts as a generator for electricity, the engine can be tuned in such a way that it always operates at the optimal engine speed. This results in an enormous improvement in efficiency.

The innovation of the IM01 doesn’t stop here however. InMotion is currently running tests on an engine test bed with an adjusted combustion principle, called partially premixed combustion (ppc), which will also be applied on the IM01. The result of applying ppc on a rotary engine improves the efficiency even further. This yields an engine which will be around 45% efficient. Compared to regular piston engines, which have typical efficiencies of around 25%, our engine is almost twice as efficient. In shorthand this means that we will be able to finish the 24h of Le Mans using just over half the fuel that a normal racecar would.

After just over a year of scientific research on the range-extender for the IM01, the engine is currently running on our test bench. With our current set-up we have the possibility to simulate a 24h race, tune the engine to its optimum and test various developments. And that is the reason why the return of the rotary engine to Le Mans is closer than you’d think.
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I'll believe it when I see it. Do they have anything to show that this is more than a pipe-dream?
 
Reading the quote got me really excited, but @Zenith brought me back to reality. I need to stop getting excited before it actually exists and works.
 
I'd say it's fine to get excited about this actually being built. Performing though...now that's a different story and as G56 delta wing showed us, I don't expect too much from this. But I do think that they will have one built.

Don't know why they stole a Sauber BMW livery :sly:
 
Motorsports Federation FIA reacted by banning the rotary engine from its races. The piston engines couldn’t keep up with the reliability and the power vs. weight ratio that a rotary engine offers. Exactly those kind of regulations, which limit technological innovation, are the primary reason that
InMotion began developing the IM01.

The fact they can't even get their history right doesn't exactly fill me with confidence (They didn't ban the rotary, they moved to the same engines used in F1 at the time).

I also question their goal of winning outright considering there is no way the ACO would let them be that fast and based on how far the first 3 G56 entries made it just finishing would be a monumental feat.

Anyways, those things aside I'm going to put this in the same category as all those 5,000HP cars that never make it past a (rather nice looking) clay model.
 
They officially start running a test car in September. If anything else pops up I'll post it. If anything at least this team shows their work as they are going along. Do I know if it will do well, of course not but I do believe it will race and will be fast. The test car will be GP2 and they plan on running race tracks and Hillclimb events throughout Germany and Great Britain.

I've had them on twitter awhile and so far to me they seem legit, just have to wait and see.
 
A bunch of students actually expect to break Porsche's 'Ring lap record, which has stood for thirty years, and then go on beat Audi, Porsche, Toyota, Nissan and possibly Ferrari at Le Mans? Yeah, right. This is less believable than the Devel Sixteen's specs. I'd be surprised to see this car even get built, let alone compete, let alone win Le Mans. And why doesn't it have a spoiler or wing?
 
And why doesn't it have a spoiler or wing?

It most likely follows the DeltaWing's design philosophy as "Half the weight, half the downforce, and half the power.".

Maybe, I don't know too much about the IM01.
 
In any case, let's hope that an awe-inspiring race car like this will become reality and pave the way for race cars to come. That is, if it ends up working :lol:
 
I hate to act as the defender as I do not work with the team but you have to remember JMoney that no cars of that level have raced on the Nord since that year and that's the only reason the record still stands in my mind. The Le Mans goal is a bit far fetched to me as it is easy not to finish a 24hr race but the Ring record to me seems reachable as I'd bet there are many race cars today that can top it considering there are street legal cars that are within 46 seconds of the time on street tires. Street cars faster than Lauda in his 312T, I believe the tech has gotten to the point of easily beating a 31 year old car.

Question is IF they get that far who will drive it? Is there a sanctioning body that could step in and stop them from attempting it?

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@Nish I'm not so sure that's why the record still stands. Why is somebody just now challenging the record when no other race team has bothered in the past 30 years?

I wonder where these guys are getting funding from. The universities would be my only guess; there aren't any sponsors on the car. It takes a lot of money to design a car, build a car, and then build a race team. Even if Garage 56 wins Le Mans overall, I doubt the winnings would be enough cover the cost of the team and car(s). Why would the universities want to fund that?

A bunch of students building a car and winning Le Mans would be a good plot for a movie. But that doesn't happen in real life, and it won't. I fully expect Porsche to win a third straight Le Mans in 2017, and hopefully I will be there to see it.
 
@Nish I'm not so sure that's why the record still stands. Why is somebody just now challenging the record when no other race team has bothered in the past 30 years?

Unlike road going sports/super cars there really isn't any reason to go for the 'Ring record as it wouldn't serve as a marketing tool like it does with the road going cars (even then the appeal is limited).

I wonder where these guys are getting funding from. The universities would be my only guess; there aren't any sponsors on the car.

Considering the image in the OP is just likely a first rendering, I'm not surprised at the lack of sponsors. That being said, Eindhoven does have a Formula Student/SAE team that has plenty of sponsors so I'd imagine they would be able to get some support.

As for the cost of designing, building and racing the car, students work cheap, in this case a credit is likely the only form of compensation they would be asking for.
 
Unlike road going sports/super cars there really isn't any reason to go for the 'Ring record as it wouldn't serve as a marketing tool like it does with the road going cars (even then the appeal is limited).



Considering the image in the OP is just likely a first rendering, I'm not surprised at the lack of sponsors. That being said, Eindhoven does have a Formula Student/SAE team that has plenty of sponsors so I'd imagine they would be able to get some support.

As for the cost of designing, building and racing the car, students work cheap, in this case a credit is likely the only form of compensation they would be asking for.

Until it does something of great measure, then they'll be using it to get hired with an actual race team or start their own and so forth. I know when it's time to do my capstone (whatever it may be) I'm going to be doing it for more than just credits that's just part of it, and many others have done it and been given jobs due to it after.

@Nish I'm not so sure that's why the record still stands. Why is somebody just now challenging the record when no other race team has bothered in the past 30 years?

Same reason Peugot just recently challenged the Pikes record even though they had no real competition fighting them for it. Because people do things that will one give their engineers something to do that is successful but also R&D helpful, and two basically to get attention in their world. There is no reason to go for the record as @Justin said, but the attention they'd get for breaking it and then saying next is Le Mans could mean some extra sponsor money they didn't have prior. I mean just look at the time table and it seems pretty obvious (to me at least).

I wonder where these guys are getting funding from. The universities would be my only guess; there aren't any sponsors on the car. It takes a lot of money to design a car, build a car, and then build a race team. Even if Garage 56 wins Le Mans overall, I doubt the winnings would be enough cover the cost of the team and car(s). Why would the universities want to fund that?

Well here is this http://www.rubbernews.com/article/2...-to-speed-innovation-by-offering-prize-money#

Other than that the money is about as much as one of those Students college tuition for the 4-5 years at the Uni, at least that's the figures I've seen in the past couple years but can't find anything official. Also universities fund lots of crazy things (I should know), they do it because it brings notoriety back to the school which later on equates to people going there.

A bunch of students building a car and winning Le Mans would be a good plot for a movie. But that doesn't happen in real life, and it won't. I fully expect Porsche to win a third straight Le Mans in 2017, and hopefully I will be there to see it.

I agree I don't see it happening either but not due to lack of experience, due to lack of funding for the entire project in general e.g. testing for one. I don't see a university spending Audi amounts of money, hell I don't even see Toyota amounts either but stranger things have happened.
 
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