How this Tiny Motor is More POWERFUL than Your Car

Koenigsegg are used to making ridiculous hypercars with bonkers top speeds and minimum four-figure horsepower numbers. However, they’ve now created an electric motor that makes 330bhp but is somehow smaller than my head. That is madness. Two of these motors with a single inverter will make 660bhp and weigh less than 85kg. 🔴 Follow us! 📱TikTok - @drivenmediatt 📸 Instagram - ⭕ Porsche’s Genius Turbo Design ⭕ Zenvo’s MAD Rear Wing This tiny bundle of power is the work of Swedish Hypercarmakers Koenigsegg. So how does it actually work? The motor has been dubbed the ‘Quark’ which is actually a type of soft spreadable cheese and probably the noise a posh duck makes. Unfortunately, that isn’t how it got its name. It’s much more complicated and scientific than that. There’s no easy way to tell you the real definition of the term ‘Quark’, so I’ll just read it to you. A Quark is ‘any of several elementary particles that are postulated to come in pairs (as in the up and down varieties) of similar mass with one member having a charge of ²/₃ and the other a charge of −¹/₃ and are held to make up hadrons’ Does that make sense to you? It doesn’t matter, let’s look at how it actually works. The mystery that is magnetism is an important part of how electric motors work, and Koenigsegg have cleverly combined two methods to create the Quark E-Motor. It uses something Raxial Flux, which sounds made up because it is. Koenigsegg got the name from a combination of ‘radial’ and ‘axial’ flux, which are two different ways that electric motors usually function. The two terms refer to the direction in which the motor’s permanent magnets create the magnetic field. The radial does it in a radial direction, so basically more circular. The axial does it along an axis and is more perpendicular. Would you like to be featured in a video with your car? Submit it here: Press enquiries: press@ #Koenigsegg #Electric #Automotive
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