Curious by Design
Think about an electric vehicle. No engine noise. Instant acceleration. A dashboard that feels more like a screen than a control panel. It looks familiar… but it behaves completely differently. In this episode of Curious by Design, we explore why electric vehicles are designed the way they are—and how removing the internal combustion engine reshaped the entire architecture of the car. Traditional cars were built around one dominant component: the engine. It dictated layout, weight distribution, and how power moved through the vehicle. Electric vehicles flipped that model. Batteries are spread across the floor. Motors are compact and often placed near the wheels. The result is a lower center of gravity, more interior space, and a completely different driving feel. We’ll break down why EVs accelerate instantly, how regenerative braking turns motion back into energy, and why range—and charging—drive so many design decisions. You’ll also see how software plays a central role. From battery management systems to over-the-air updates, modern EVs behave more like connected devices than traditional machines. Because designing an electric vehicle isn’t just about replacing fuel with batteries. It’s about rethinking the entire system— from performance… to efficiency… to how drivers interact with the car itself. The next time you see an electric vehicle glide silently past you, notice what’s really different. Not just the power source— but the design decisions underneath it… reshaping what a car can be. That’s Curious by Design. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2591493/support]
29 episodios
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