Under the skin: Koenigsegg’s ingenious transmission solutions

Koenigsegg won’t say what, but it will hopefully reveal something special on the morning of 3 March at this year’s Geneva motor show. Rumour has it the Swedish supercar maker, known for its highly innovative drivetrains, will reveal a production car concept capable of breaking the 500km/h barrier (a smidge over 310mph).

Koenigsegg currently employs two bespoke transmission technologies in its existing models, neither of which exists in mainstream production cars. The question is which, if either, will be used to help raise the speed record bar yet higher.

The first is the Koenigsegg Direct Drive (KDD) fitted to the Regera, which does away with selectable gear ratios altogether. However, it’s not a continually variable transmission (CVT); instead, it blends three electric drives with power and torque from the engine via a Hydracoup, a special type of torque converter developed in-house.

The axial flux electric motor-generators are supplied by British specialist firm Yasa and integrated into the drivetrain at Koenigsegg. These units are larger in diameter but much shorter than conventional radial flux motors, so they resemble biscuit tins. Two Yasa 750 units fit either side of the rear axle final drive, producing 1180lb ft of torque each. The third, a Yasa 400, is mounted on the engine’s crankshaft. This produces 258lb ft and fills any torque gaps in the operating range.

The fixed final drive ratio is equivalent to the Agera’s seventh gear, at 2.73:1, but the engine produces 1085bhp and 922lb ft in its peak operating range and nothing at 0rpm. Without something to replace conventional gears, then, it would be impossible to even pull away, so the powerful electric motors add another 661bhp and 2618lb ft from standstill.

At around 3500rpm, the engine starts to come into play, feeding in torque via the Hydracoup until it locks up to provide a direct mechanical drive to the wheels.

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