Also, I was curious how the single gear transmission was engineered.
Conventionnal transmissions have several gears with several reduction ratios to gradually and smoothly bring the car from stopped to full speed. CVT' s will do same but with infinite reduction ratios by design.
The single gear ratio of the Outlander's E-transmission is a "high gear" . Because of that, I suppose when starting the vehicule from stop, the electric motors are first used, and if required, the clutch that engages the ICE in parallel mode will do so when a minimum speed has been reached. It's difficult or impossible to start a conventionnal vehicule from stop with a high gear.
I believe these things to be true.
With the Outlander PHEV, the electric motors are the primary drive, and always are 'running', providing the motive power to the wheels.
Once a speed is reached (I'm not certain, but I think it is 80 kph) the engine may also provide motive force to the front wheels via the e-Drive.
The car's driving modes are:
1. Electric - Power from the battery drives the electric motors.
2. Serial Hybrid - Power from the engine drives the generator which powers the electric motors (the battery is still in circuit, and will often be taking some charge in this mode).
3. Parallel Hybrid - Power from the engine drives the generator, and is provided to the front wheels.
There is also a 4WD mode, where the power to the electric motors is provided as a 50:50 split between the front and rear motors. That mode can be selected at any time.
At lower speeds, I believe that the car is usually only driving one motor (the front) and the rear motor only receives enough power to prevent it from acting like a brake.
Please note that this is all based on my model, which is ten years old now.