I love the cacophony that is the morning of race day. One of the things I will never forget is roaming around the Sebring paddock on race day as all manner of displacements, cylinder count, and crankshaft designs fire to life. It's loud, it's sometimes abrasive, but it's alive and there is a magic there with the sounds and smells that can never be replicated.
But, the world is changing, and the attraction of electricity is something that I never imagined that I would say I'd be interested in, but I'm finding myself more and more intrigued with the electrification of classic compact sports cars. I was far less attracted to it until I realized that you could actually attach that motor to a real transmission: https://youtu.be/VdPQueOPT4A
The dumbing down of such a conversion (e.g. Turn car on, push pedal, go) was enough to keep me away for a long time. But the idea that you can now essentially replace the ICE with a pony keg of wound copper and your fuel tank with a load of cells while still keeping quite a bit of the tactile sensations that make driving a car actually driving a car, well that changes things. Range still seems bad, but things will improve, I'm sure.
Has anyone ever crunched the numbers on this for weight? I have an AW11, which has a nice, heavy iron block, but a small fuel tank, plus all the normal things you wouldn't need (radiator, piping, etc.). Without knowing really what one of those DC motors would weigh, I'm not going to make any conjecture on how the numbers would balance out, but I'm wondering if you get close to the factory weight while loading up the fuel tank cavity with cells. Maybe you'd need to spill over into the frunk, but there'd be plenty of room up there too.
Fundamentally, It also seems like you could do this without having to hack apart your car, which is also attractive.
Anyways, morning coffee thoughts. Interested to hear what the hive thinks.