Fuddy1952
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2018
- Messages
- 3,191
- Location
- South Central Virginia
- Tractor
- 1973 Economy and 2018 John Deere 3038E
Omit my first sentence.Who's "we"? km and celsius is what I use, and I'm no spring chicken.
You keep predicting failure of the grid despite repeated responses that this is not going to happen overnight and it will not be every ICE in the world. To answer your question anyway though, I think you could look at the impact of the microprocessor on the power grid from 1980 to today. The introduction of personal computers, corporate datacenters, electronic appliances, personal phones and tablets, printers, games, 3-4 large tv's in every house, monitoring and surveillance systems, and uncountable other electronic items has had more impact on the power grid than the change from ICE to EV will have. The grid is still standing.
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Source: Electricity Consumption - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
My point was easy to understand (me and most people in the USA) miles, Fahrenheit, inches, etc.
Second point... the grid I'm not concerned with 100-200 watt computers, games, tv's but 1kw to 7kw chargers. Chargers running 10-20 hours continuously!
If HALF of all vehicles were switched to electric, the current grid couldn't supply it, I guarantee.
Also, why not address my other concerns?
I know it's not happening overnight, but as it happens the demand/price of power WILL increase...it has to.
A few years ago at my home place they (AEP) wanted to install 1,000,000 volt towers across the property, close to both houses. We stopped it (for now).
All I'm saying is it's not this simple, non-polluting wonderful solution. You have to consider all aspects, ramifications and impacts it will have long term.
So far I've read great replies here from very knowledgeable people. Look deeper.