Originally posted by: Minjin
A personal EV1 page
EV1 Range
Sure, the EV1 didn't get 100 miles per charge. But how often do you actually need that? And remember that this was with lead acid battery technology. If you may recall, we've made 'some' improvement in that area. Nicad => Nimh => Lithium Ion => Lithium Polymer... The future is definitely in electric.
Originally posted by: Dunbar
Originally posted by: Minjin
A personal EV1 page
EV1 Range
Sure, the EV1 didn't get 100 miles per charge. But how often do you actually need that? And remember that this was with lead acid battery technology. If you may recall, we've made 'some' improvement in that area. Nicad => Nimh => Lithium Ion => Lithium Polymer... The future is definitely in electric.
Even if you only need the range a handful of times a year, and it's your only vehicle, how useful is that? Plus you have to plug the thing in every night. The future is not electric, I don't even think people will buy hybrids in large numbers unless gas stays over $4 a gallon for an extended period.
Originally posted by: Lyfer
We have wireless intenet (YES INTERNET WITH NO WIRES, and its gonna hit 200mbps soon), and yet our method of transportation makes us rely on a prehistoic expensive fuel.
conspiracy theorie?
Originally posted by: Minjin
Originally posted by: Dunbar
Originally posted by: Minjin
A personal EV1 page
As I said, the technology is already available for quick charging. You'd stop at a gas station and they would have charging stations that could give you 80-90% of your charge in a short period of time...You'd rent (or borrow) a long range car and to carry the analogy further, there are already generator trailers that you could tow behind your electric car to give it equivalent range. And if its once or twice a year, is it really that big of a hassle? edit: oh yeah, is it really that difficult to plug your car in every night?
How quick would the charge take, 30 minutes or more? That's a lot longer than the five minutes, or less, it takes to fill your gas tank. I think most people want to be able to drive more than 100 miles round-trip without having to "fill up" their car. And yes, plugging in your car, and unplugging it every morning, would actually be a big hassle. Especially for those who don't park their car in a garage.
If electric vehicles are "all that" you'd think they'd be a hit in Europe. They pay $7-8 a gallon, already drive small cars, and travel shorter distances. Also, the electricity has to come from somewhere which means coal, natural gas and petroleum are being burned to generate it (70% in the US.)
Originally posted by: OREOSpeedwagon
video killed the electric car
Originally posted by: Minjin
A personal EV1 page
EV1 Range
Sure, the EV1 didn't get 100 miles per charge. But how often do you actually need that?
Originally posted by: datalink7
Originally posted by: Minjin
A personal EV1 page
EV1 Range
Sure, the EV1 didn't get 100 miles per charge. But how often do you actually need that?
Every day I work.
Originally posted by: Minjin
As for the comment above about electric being mainly produced by oil burning, this is far off base. The majority is coal with nuclear being 2nd. Oil is down around 5%. Let me find some real figures. Even if 100% of power plants were gasoline and we were just switching from producing energy at the car to producing energy in a plant, you get huge efficiency gains. Its also much easier to distribute electric than gas. Its much easier to regulate and control the emissions from one plant than 100,000 cars.
Mark
Originally posted by: sniperruff
electric cars are so 90's... takes a long time to charge, and by the end of the day, you're still using electricity, which is produced mainly by oil anyway.
this is the future
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: Minjin
As for the comment above about electric being mainly produced by oil burning, this is far off base. The majority is coal with nuclear being 2nd. Oil is down around 5%. Let me find some real figures. Even if 100% of power plants were gasoline and we were just switching from producing energy at the car to producing energy in a plant, you get huge efficiency gains. Its also much easier to distribute electric than gas. Its much easier to regulate and control the emissions from one plant than 100,000 cars.
Mark
Coal is about a thousand times worse than oil IMHO.
Originally posted by: sniperruff
electric cars are so 90's... takes a long time to charge, and by the end of the day, you're still using electricity, which is produced mainly by oil anyway.
this is the future
And by the end of the day, hydrogen comes from electricity, which is produced...?
Originally posted by: Minjin
You can see that emissions are very similar.
Mark