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Chevrolet electric Camaro concept drag racer: eCOPO with 800V battery pack; electric crate motors

Fifty years after the original COPO Camaro special order performance models were introduced, Chevrolet’s eCOPO Camaro Concept is demonstrating an electrified vision for drag racing.

2018-SEMA-Chevrolet-eCOPO-Concept-028

Developed by General Motors and built in partnership with the pioneering electric drag racing team Hancock and Lane Racing, the concept race car—based on the 2019 COPO Camaro—is driven by an electric motor providing the equivalent of more than 700 horsepower and 600 lb-ft (813 N·m) of torque.

Chevrolet estimates quarter-mile times in the 9-second range. Testing is ongoing.

in 1969, the first purpose-built Camaro drag-racing specialty car was designed to compete in the NHRA Stock Eliminator. The COPO nameplate is a nod to the Central Office Production Order system, which Chevrolet dealers used to build one-of-a-kind high-performance models.

The eCOPO Concept is all about where we go in the future with electrification in the high performance space. The original COPO Camaro program was all about pushing the envelope, and this concept is an exploration with the very same spirit.

—Russ O’Blenes, director, Performance Variants, Parts and Motorsports at GM

Chevrolet partnered with Hancock and Lane Racing not only because of the team’s success in NHRA drag racing, but also its involvement with Patrick McCue, the driving force behind the record-holding “Shock and Awe” electric drag racing car, and his Seattle-area Bothell High School automotive technology program. With the racing team’s assistance, more than a dozen students participated in the development and assembly of the electrified drag car.

This project exemplifies Chevrolet and General Motors’ commitment to engaging young minds in STEM education. It also represents our goal of a world with zero emissions, with the next generation of engineers and scientists who will help us get there.

—Russ O’Blenes

800 volts. Just as the original 1969 COPO Camaro models relied on creative engineering to make them successful in Stock Eliminator drag racing, the eCOPO breaks new ground with its unique motor and GM’s first 800-volt battery pack.

The electric motor is based on a pair of BorgWarner HVH 250-150 motor assemblies, each generating 300 lb-ft (407 N·m) of torque, and replaces the gasoline engine. It is connected to a conventional racing-prepared “Turbo 400” automatic transmission that channels the motor’s torque to the same solid rear axle used in the production COPO Camaro race cars.

The all-new 800-volt battery pack enables a more efficient power transfer to the electric motor and supports faster recharging, which is important for the limited time between elimination rounds in drag racing.

Eight hundred volts is more than twice the voltage of the battery packs in the production Chevrolet Volt and Bolt EV, so the eCOPO pushes into new technological territory. As GM advances its electrification leadership, a big step might just come from the drag strip.

—Russ O’Blenes

The battery pack is composed of four 200-volt modules, each weighing approximately 175 pounds, mounted strategically in the car for optimal weight distribution. Two are located in the rear seat area and the other two are in the trunk: one in the spare tire well and the other in the area over the rear axle.

A full Battery Management System monitors all critical voltages and temperatures within the pack. It ties into a comprehensive safety system that continuously evaluates all vehicle electrical components for proper function and safe operation. The batteries in the rear compartment are sealed off from the interior and an integrated driveshaft tunnel has been added between the modules for increased protection. Additionally, the roll cage in the trunk area has been expanded to provide additional protection for the rear-mounted modules.

With the modules’ strategic positions, the eCOPO Camaro has greater than a 56% rear-weight bias, which helps launch the car more efficiently.

Electric crate motors. The eCOPO Camaro Concept expands Chevrolet and General Motors’ electrification development and supports future product development. It also suggests a potential new avenue for Chevrolet’s crate engine and performance parts portfolio.

The eCOPO Camaro’s electric motor has the same bell house mounting pattern and crankshaft flange as the popular LS-family engines in Chevrolet’s crate engine portfolio. That allows it to bolt up to just about any General Motors transmission. The transmission, driveshaft and other drivetrain components remain in the same locations as in a gasoline-powered COPO Camaro race car—meaning the electric motor simply bolts into the engine compartment in place of the gas engine.

The possibilities are intriguing and suggest a whole new world for racers. Chevrolet pioneered the concept of the high-performance crate engine right around the time the original COPO Camaro models were created, and the eCOPO project points to a future that could include electric crate motors for racing, or even your street rod. We’re not there yet, but it’s something we’re exploring.

—Russ O’Blenes

In the meantime, Chevrolet and Hancock and Lane Racing will continue to develop the eCOPO Camaro and test it on the drag strip, seeking quicker elapsed times with all-new technology.

Comments

Engineer-Poet

If you only need a few seconds of power, ultracapacitors may be better than batteries for drag racing.  Extra energy isn't much use if you can't get it out to the motor between the gate and the finish line.

Maybe the first one can be called the InCAPacitator.

Lad

Drag racing is very dependent on what you use for power; how about a 3.5 second 1/4 mile?:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lnEjOuQGBc

Engineer-Poet

Technically easier to do if you don't need traction, which that car doesn't (much).

Let's see, d = ½at²

1320 ft = ½a(3.58)²

a = 2640 ft / (3.58 sec)² = 206 ft/s²

Minimum acceleration about 6.4 g.

Lad

Interesting; almost enough to disconnect one's eyeballs.

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