greendwarf
Well-known member
anko said:I guess they must be selling two types of PHEV :shock: . In parallel mode, only changes in speed, which are mostly gradually, result in (linear) ch anges in RPM. Yes, like a normal car as long as you do not change gears. Altogether, in parallel mode RPM is quite steady. In serial mode however, any change in throttle position and / or any change in driving conditions (wind, incline, ...) result in a changes in RPMs. This results in what people call the CVT effect or the race conditions that so many people hate. I believe this is the main reason why many people use Charge or Save on te motorway: it allows them to stay away from serial mode. You said something similar yourself:
No not two different types of PHEV - 2 different types of driving conditions. :lol: There are not many higher speed roads in England where you can drive in parallel with a steady RPM (i.e. constant speed) for very long - varying speed limits, traffic jams, road works, inconsiderate drivers etc. etc. - and rarely "gradual"
However, in serial mode why would RPM change be linked to throttle position during normal driving? I thought the "screaming" complaints arose when needing power under heavy demand e.g. towing or up steep inclines. Are you suggesting the car tries to maintain SoC by increasing the revs to match drain on the battery?