reb
Veteran Member
Saw the Bollinger website yesterday. Almost sold me, but for two problems--estimated 200 mile range and $125k price tag. One would have to carry a generator to recharge it in my area.
I always wondered about a different type of hybrid. A pure electric car with a clean/high efficiency/constant speed diesel powered generator to extend range.
Why would Europe buy Chinese cars? We can build them ourselves.Great article, Thanks
China is the EV capital of the world when it comes to number of EV makers period. US and Europe will be niche players but China will rule the battery and EV vehicles the rest of our life times I expect. Tesla had good reasons to build the first factory outside of the USA and chose China based on those reasons. There are ships to cover Asia and trains to Europe.
The issue with batteries is not how long they will last or how many charges they are good for...it is and always will be how long a charge lasts...
I always wondered about a different type of hybrid. A pure electric car with a clean/high efficiency/constant speed diesel powered generator to extend range.
Replace the diesel generator with a smaller hydrogen or similar fuel cell to keep the charge up and recharge when not in use...no need for other (outside) recharging/fueling systems etc...
Why would Europe buy Chinese cars? We can build them ourselves.
Hydrogen is very inefficient to create. Simply compressing it to a volume small enough to carry a useful quantity uses a lot of power. And if you think ethanol is corrosive and troublesome, hydrogen makes ethanol look like an amateur.
I always wondered about a different type of hybrid. A pure electric car with a clean/high efficiency/constant speed diesel powered generator to extend range.
Still doesn't come close to the efficiency and low cost of fixed plant power generation.
Well, you don't see much Chinese influence on Volvo, and I'm quite sure that Volvo will be made in Sweden in the future. Europe are much more protective when it comes to manufacturing, the Chinese brands that want to sell will eventually have to set up production lines here if they hope to succeed. And EU is very worried about becoming depending on China, it's a dictatorship that has bought knowledge cheap and we the idiots have given them all they wanted on a silver plate.Volvo is one China brand popular in Europe already. China owns the lion share of EV battery industry and EV passenger bus and EV trucks shipped worldwide. Tesla in China is going to cobalt free iron based EV battery. When it comes to EV's and Space Race China has the most USA trained engineers. China is leading the EV self driving effort and their advances in 5G technology is lowering the cost of self driving technology. Europe and perhaps the USA will forget about the 2020 Pandemic and continue to sell key food and manufacturing companies to China since they now have the money and technology from the rest of the world. Claiming the Dark side of the moon showed their technology advances over the rest of the world.
Well, you don't see much Chinese influence on Volvo, and I'm quite sure that Volvo will be made in Sweden in the future. Europe are much more protective when it comes to manufacturing, the Chinese brands that want to sell will eventually have to set up production lines here if they hope to succeed. And EU is very worried about becoming depending on China, it's a dictatorship that has bought knowledge cheap and we the idiots have given them all they wanted on a silver plate.
It will be produced in Europe if it going to sell at a volume, at the moment it's not a mass sold car. And European Volvo customers are probably not very interested in a PRC made Volvo so time will tell.
But thanks to US president Donald Trump we are getting PRC made Volvo's in Europe at the moment....
European customers to get China-made Volvo XC6 - paultan.org
And Europe is a very difficult market to work in, as an example Honda that's are a large player has failed almost totally in Europe, most Japanese brands struggle, the Korean brands do better than the Japanese. US brands except Tesla have very little sale, here in Scandinavia we have som US pickup sales, new RAM and F150 is not uncommon, same with Chevy.
On trucks or cars?What is most common in Norway, Scandinavia and Europe?