A new in-wheel electric motor designed to make it easier and quicker for manufacturers to develop EVs is due to enter production later this year.

The weight-saving technology, called the Protean Drive, has been under development by Farnham-based Protean Electric for the past eight years.

“There are a number of different applications for it,” explained Protean’s Gabriel Donaldson. “It can be used for two-wheel-drive EVs, to hybridise an existing vehicle or to convert a two-wheel-drive vehicle to four-wheel drive.”

The Protean Drive is a completely self-contained ‘smart actuator’ that includes a permanent magnet and synchronous electric motor, as well as the electronics needed to make it work. Each motor produces 81kW (109bhp) and 922lb ft, so a two-wheel-drive electric vehicle could conceivably produce peak power and torque of 160kW (214bhp) and 1844lb ft.

Using self-contained wheel motors such as the Protean Drive eliminate transmissions and driveshafts and free up space in the centre of the car between the driven wheels. Cabling is minimised – two cables supplying power and another smaller one used by the main vehicle computer to control the motor.

Donaldson says that, at 72kg, a pair of the motors weighs 30kg less than the electric drivetrain of a BMW i3 (102kg). However, the wheel motors still weigh more than a conventional wheel.

With that in mind, the Protean Drives were fitted to a Volkswagen Golf, the suspension of which was tuned by an independent vehicle dynamics expert. According to Donaldson, the additional unsprung weight was managed successfully and the test car was made to handle as well as a standard VW Golf GTE.

Eliminating transmission reduces friction losses by 6-8% compared with a conventional two-wheel electric drive system. The extra efficiency is a benefit during both acceleration and deceleration, so more energy is recovered during regenerative braking.