Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow.

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   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,381  
Saw where Berea KY has Tesla police cars.
Luckily not from my rearview mirror.
They were touting reduced operating cost.
But the funny was that they brag on no exhaust. Unfortunately they do have an exhaust its just not at the rear of the car.

IMG_4439.JPG


About 50% of KUs power comes from coal about half from natural gas. They have a small hydro base.

Im all for EVs and will probably get one. But I will use solar and wind to do the bulk of my charging. Being retired I dont need to go every day.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,382  

When $300 billion of this $423 billion subsidizing is moved from fossil fuels to renewables more will want EVs I expect.
This is the key from that article:

Asked how this can be turned around, Steiner told CNBC: “Well, many economists essentially agree that if you were to introduce a carbon price that reflects the true cost of using that fossil fuel in our economies today, you would actually very quickly create a market whereby producers but also consumers of fossil fuels, would actually move out of this sector.”

Been saying it for years - you make consumers pay the real price for gas, as in the total of what it costs to obtain that barrel of oil all the way thru to the environment costs, and this is a problem that solves itself. We’ve intentionally undermined the free market, making people think gasoline is affordable and effective when it very much isn’t, then get outraged when we’re finally forced to subsidize better alternatives. It’s all according to plan though, it’s just a plan put together by oil companies wanting to get rich and politicians wanting to avoid hard choices so they can get re-elected. But as we’re seeing, there’s no free lunch and at some point the ponzi scheme implodes on itself.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow.
  • Thread Starter
#5,383  
This is the key from that article:

Asked how this can be turned around, Steiner told CNBC: “Well, many economists essentially agree that if you were to introduce a carbon price that reflects the true cost of using that fossil fuel in our economies today, you would actually very quickly create a market whereby producers but also consumers of fossil fuels, would actually move out of this sector.”

Been saying it for years - you make consumers pay the real price for gas, as in the total of what it costs to obtain that barrel of oil all the way thru to the environment costs, and this is a problem that solves itself. We’ve intentionally undermined the free market, making people think gasoline is affordable and effective when it very much isn’t, then get outraged when we’re finally forced to subsidize better alternatives. It’s all according to plan though, it’s just a plan put together by oil companies wanting to get rich and politicians wanting to avoid hard choices so they can get re-elected. But as we’re seeing, there’s no free lunch and at some point the ponzi scheme implodes on itself.
Thanks this helps me better understand why some people hate on EVs. People tend to get uptight when they know they're going to lose some of their freebies.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,384  
I'm not arguing that at all; I just don't believe in buying into the latest fad. Once the technology is more defined, I can get some of my questions answered, and somebody starts making an affordable, dependable EV I will probably buy one. There are just too many variables including safety. I don't live near a city, and keep the tanks of my pickups over 1/2 full most of the time, including when traveling. On more than one occasion I've sat in snow and ice storms for an hour or more while an accident scene was cleared. What will it do to battery range when you keep running the heater, wipers, and lights? How much is that range reduced when you are pushing through 6 inches of snow?
It's not uncommon for me to drive 200 miles to my mother's house in the AM, visit for a few hours and do what I can to help out; then come home. Will a battery recharge in that time?
Yeah, early adopters have to put up with a lot of problems. Either they have special needs or are members of some geek squad. I may be in the market for an EV - in 10 years.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,385  
When they're idiot proof idiots will buy them.
Here's a true life example, I wonder how a self driving car would handle it. Years ago coming home, 55 mph posted speed two lane road, no passing zone. As I approached a side road with of course a stop sign the driver ran stop sign RIGHT as I got to it. That vehicle was a school bus full of kids. I'm doing the speed limit.
Should I swerve in other lane? Remember...no passing zone. Hit the brakes? ...for what reason (that's what your computer driver would do). What a quandary yet we're alive to tell.
I downshifted and floored it, passing front of bus by a couple feet, speeding to avoid oncoming car head-on then getting back in our lane.
All was well.
Is that what a self driver would do?
One of many examples.
Self-drivers don't have to be perfect, they just have to be better than a human. That is not a high bar. A self-driving school bus would never have run a stop sign.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,386  
The evidence is in all the news stories where a Tesla crashes and burns and since it's all electric good samaritans can't even get the doors open. There was another just last week.

"Herman told KHOU-TV that officials “feel very confident just with the positioning of the bodies after the impact that there was no one driving that vehicle.” Herman described a person found in the front passenger seat and another in the rear passenger seat after the crash. The New York Times also reported that Herman said officials believed “no one was driving the vehicle at the time of the crash.”

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that while computers have their place, operating 2 ton masses of steel with occupants on board ain't one of them.
As I understand the system, that is not possible. It will not start or drive without a driver.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow.
  • Thread Starter
#5,387  
As I understand the system, that is not possible. It will not start or drive without a driver.
Yes . Today Tesla is at level two like most other.. True self-driving would be a level five so there's three and four to conquer first.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,388  
There's an interesting article in the October 2021 National Geographic about EV transportation.

That's where I saw the item about how much electricity and battery weight it takes to move an airplane.

It would take 4.4 million laptop batteries to get a 747 off the ground, but they'd weigh 8X the weight of the airplane.

Pound for pound, liquid fuel is and alway will be the winner for power to weight ratio. It's not even close.

And airline travel is not going away. So the focus has shifted to more efficient aircraft, engines and cleaner fuel from recyclable sources. Right now, that type of fuel is 6-8 times more expensive. Until it is mandated, there's no money in scaling up to produce it.

All this can be applied to automobiles. Costs vs benefits. "Average" people can't currently afford the costs of EVs.
 
   / Battery based electric vehicles of today and tomorrow. #5,389  
Pound for pound, liquid fuel is and alway will be the winner for power to weight ratio.
I wish I was this smart and confident.
 
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