we need bob lazar to save us...
So you need hydride but its a weapon material so you cannot buy it you can make your own though but if you live in a 2 up 2 down that isn't going to happen, i have a feeling i now know why Hydrogen cars haven't caught on when you can simply plug an EV into the mains at home and if you have solar panels you can charge it with free electricity.
The other problem is its an odourless gas that cannot have an odour added (as other odourless gasses have)as it doesn't like it so if you has a leak into your car you wouldn't know, light a ciggy - BOOM.
It could work for people running local fleets that come back to a depot to refuel (buses, trains, local delivery vehicles), but not for general public usage.
a bit long winded but yes,better than zero emissiomAs i see it "probably the best car for the environment when compared to those that burn fossil fuel" is likely more accurate.
But surely having a car that was 'Battery Swap Compatible' would be a selling point. It would not be necessary for every car type, for instance most small town cars rarely travel more than 30 miles, but for the 'repmobiles' and motorway mile munchers, it would be a necessity. And it would be in the interest of the likes of BMW, Audi, Tesla etc. to work to a compatible format.I have thought this was a sensible thing to do, but the realities of our capitalist culture won't allow this to work unless everyone had the same car (or car built on same chassis design).
But manufacturers are in competition with each other & people don't want to all drive the same car do they.
I have thought this was a sensible thing to do, but the realities of our capitalist culture won't allow this to work
It's a complex topic, lots of counter arguments and vested interests. It will be fascinating to see how it all pans out.
One thing for sure is that brewing beer is a lot simpler ... and that's complicated enough sometimes!
But surely having a car that was 'Battery Swap Compatible' would be a selling point. It would not be necessary for every car type, for instance most small town cars rarely travel more than 30 miles, but for the 'repmobiles' and motorway mile munchers, it would be a necessity. And it would be in the interest of the likes of BMW, Audi, Tesla etc. to work to a compatible format.
Whatever you do don't rapid charge! You'll only get 300 charge/discharge cycles if you charge nice and slowly. I have, for reference owned 2 electric vehicles and have an extensive knowledge of battery technology. I even have a degree in chemistry so my knowledge isn't just something I picked up online.e.
And the current recharging state of the art can deliver >200 miles of charge in 30-40 minutes. So 15-20 minutes to take a 200-mile range up to 300-miles, which is enough for most people. So you have to ask - what is the market opportunity for any kind of replenishment that is much faster than that, whether faster recharging or battery replacement? At the very most, it's going to be a niche, which means it will be expensive, which means it will be even more of a niche. I guess the big opportunity would be for people who can't charge at home or at work, but I'm not sure that's going to be such a big market either.
I'm unusual, I regularly have to do a 250-mile journey, and sometimes do a 500-mile journey. I used to have a petrol car with ~270-mile range so I know how it feels to do these journeys with limited range. It would be very tempting to buy a long-range version that could do the 250 miles without stopping - I regularly do it like that but as often as not my bladder can't, and to be honest it is nice to stretch one's legs during a journey like that. So I could live with a 10-minute fast charge en route just as a quick top-up. But it's worth noting that I don't care about any extra range beyond that 250 miles (beyond a bit of allowance for battery degradation and doing it in winter).
.
.
So I don't think technology is so much the problem, as the details of roll-out. For instance, I'd be OK rapid-charging whilst I have my lunch, but only if I know I can rock up to a charger and start straight away, which makes lots of assumptions about investment in infrastructure that might only be used a fairly small amount of the time. Having to wait 40 minutes before I could start charging would be a pain, a journey that takes 8 hours is long enough as it is - and for that one trip I'd be prepared to pay if it meant I could guarantee a slot.
Who'd replace a battery for a minimum of £6,000 when the car would then only be worth a few grand like most car are after a few years?
It's not just recharging which degrades batteries. Time is an equal enemy. You may find, for instance, that you can do 60,000 miles in 5 years
So few EV fanatics ever tackle perhaps the biggest drawback of battery power. As one of the top men at Nissan said when they released the Leaf "the life of the battery determines the life of the car". Back then they didn't realise that the batteries would average a mere 50-70,000 miles.
Enter your email address to join: