- Jan 2, 2006
- 10,455
- 35
- 91
Am I missing something obvious here? The way that I see it:
1. We want a fuel that's better for the environment.
2. We want to keep our current driving range on our cars.
3. We want to be able to fill up quickly.
4. We don't want to completely overhaul our refilling stations.
5. We want a renewable fuel source.
6. We want fuel relatively cheaply.
Diesel already fits all of these requirements.
Gasoline fulfills 4 of them.
Electric fulfills 3 of them.
A Diesel / Electric hybrid would fulfill all of them and then some.
Diesel:
1. We want a fuel that's better for the environment - I'm sure with the right scrubbers the emissions can be decreased to acceptable levels
2. We want to keep our current driving range on our cars - driving range would be even more than gasoline
3. We want to be able to fill up quickly - we can fill up 400-mile's worth of range in less than two minutes at the pump
4. We don't want to completely overhaul our refilling stations - gas stations already pump diesel
5. We want a renewable fuel source - diesel can be made from cheap, hardy, fast-growing biological materials like switchgrass
6. We want fuel relatively cheaply - Diesel can be made cheaply as well.
Diesel / Electric Hybrid:
1. We want a fuel that's better for the environment - Electric has no emissions. I'm sure with the right scrubbers the diesel emissions can be decreased to acceptable levels.
2. We want to keep our current driving range on our cars - Use all-electric for 100% of your around-town driving. When out of charge, driving range would be the same as a regular diesel car.
3. We want to be able to fill up quickly - with current battery tech there is no possible way in hell to charge up 400-mile's worth of electrical energy in 2 minutes. You would have to do a complete battery swap if you wanted your range "refilled" in less than 5 minutes. With a hybrid, we can fill up 400-mile's worth of range in less than two minutes at the diesel pump.
4. We don't want to completely overhaul our refilling stations - with all-electric, you would have to completely overhaul gas stations with hookups and even increase inventory space if you're stocking and swapping out entire batteries. Plus you'd have to standardize battery sizes of all cars for any kind of efficient swapping. Liquid conforms to the form factor of its container. With a hybrid you can just fill up with diesel at gas stations with zero conversion of the gas station.
5. We want a renewable fuel source - Electricity can be renewable. Diesel can be made from cheap, hardy, fast-growing biological materials like switchgrass. So both sources are possibly renewable.
6. We want fuel relatively cheaply - Electricity is dirt cheap. Diesel can be made cheaply as well.
1. We want a fuel that's better for the environment.
2. We want to keep our current driving range on our cars.
3. We want to be able to fill up quickly.
4. We don't want to completely overhaul our refilling stations.
5. We want a renewable fuel source.
6. We want fuel relatively cheaply.
Diesel already fits all of these requirements.
Gasoline fulfills 4 of them.
Electric fulfills 3 of them.
A Diesel / Electric hybrid would fulfill all of them and then some.
Diesel:
1. We want a fuel that's better for the environment - I'm sure with the right scrubbers the emissions can be decreased to acceptable levels
2. We want to keep our current driving range on our cars - driving range would be even more than gasoline
3. We want to be able to fill up quickly - we can fill up 400-mile's worth of range in less than two minutes at the pump
4. We don't want to completely overhaul our refilling stations - gas stations already pump diesel
5. We want a renewable fuel source - diesel can be made from cheap, hardy, fast-growing biological materials like switchgrass
6. We want fuel relatively cheaply - Diesel can be made cheaply as well.
Diesel / Electric Hybrid:
1. We want a fuel that's better for the environment - Electric has no emissions. I'm sure with the right scrubbers the diesel emissions can be decreased to acceptable levels.
2. We want to keep our current driving range on our cars - Use all-electric for 100% of your around-town driving. When out of charge, driving range would be the same as a regular diesel car.
3. We want to be able to fill up quickly - with current battery tech there is no possible way in hell to charge up 400-mile's worth of electrical energy in 2 minutes. You would have to do a complete battery swap if you wanted your range "refilled" in less than 5 minutes. With a hybrid, we can fill up 400-mile's worth of range in less than two minutes at the diesel pump.
4. We don't want to completely overhaul our refilling stations - with all-electric, you would have to completely overhaul gas stations with hookups and even increase inventory space if you're stocking and swapping out entire batteries. Plus you'd have to standardize battery sizes of all cars for any kind of efficient swapping. Liquid conforms to the form factor of its container. With a hybrid you can just fill up with diesel at gas stations with zero conversion of the gas station.
5. We want a renewable fuel source - Electricity can be renewable. Diesel can be made from cheap, hardy, fast-growing biological materials like switchgrass. So both sources are possibly renewable.
6. We want fuel relatively cheaply - Electricity is dirt cheap. Diesel can be made cheaply as well.