So you take the Tesla system as a start, use a motor of 75 hp, put it in a lightweight econobox and you have a VW rabbit size car that does 0-60 fast enough to enter the freeway, can cruise at 70, and can go 250 mi range. Good enough for 90% of us. I mean if we were realistic.
I'm not sure 75 hp would be enough, after all the Tesla weighs 2700 lbs empty (about 1000 lbs of that is the battery). If you want a 4 seater car with the same battery, it's going to be heavier.
And what you end up with is a small, heavy car with not enough power, that costs far more than a comparable petrol car.
No one is saying electric cars won't work, it's just that they cannot compete with petrol or diesel vehicles, even when the price of petrol or diesel is $8 a gallon.
What I'm describing is not a perpetual motion machine. I know power is going to be lost due to heat. That's not my concern. I'm just thinking there should be a way to harness the energy of the cars physical movement, i.e. the wheels rotation, and use that to generate additional power.
But that slows down the car.
If the drive motor is using 250amps of power to drive the car at 55mph down the highway,
Right, it's using 250 amps,
without powering the alternator. The car is going a steady 55 mph.
and you have a 150amp alternator connected to both rear wheels of the car, then they would be generating 300amps of power.
Which comes from where? The car going 55 mph has considerable kinetic energy, but if you start taking that to power the alternator, then the car has less kinetic energy, ie it slows down.
The only way to keep the car travelling 55 mph and power the alternator is to increase the power to the drive motor, by at least as much as the alternator is drawing (if you have perfect efficiency) or by more than the alternator is generating (in the real world where efficiency is less than 100%).
Even if that's not possible, if you could generate 50% of the power your using to drive the car and channel that back into the batteries, you'd almost double your range before needing to plug in and recharge.
Generating 50% of the power you use will require more than 50% extra power from the battery. You will have a net loss.
There is no way to do this and end up with more energy. A similar idea would be to mount a wind generator on the roof of the car, the faster you go the more electricity it would generate. Of course, it would greatly increase drag, meaning you would have to use more power to go the same speed, and the windmill would generate less energy than the amount required to overcome the extra drag.