Pmsl that what happens to old washing machine motors then haha
Found at least bizarre, article that shows how easy it is to bend the truth
https://apple.news/AxGja6kvkSVyQ6Klj68TTsg
The truth is that Europe doesn’t have much resources to make own batteries for electric cars, only Norway has the rare earth minerals. However. Their excavation is very damaging to the environment, so it will be very expensive for Europe to extract them.
China, on the other hand, is not bothered that much with environmental issues and hence is one of the largest producers of these rare earth minerals. However, they are now powerful enough not to sell them at a fraction of their cost to us and started producing batteries. As a result, the price of production in China is naturally significantly lower than in Europe
Chinese electric car manufacturers get a massive profit per car sold in Europe vs in China. They can even absorb the tariffs and still make massive profits according to this blogger
His figures need verifying, but sounds plausible. Anyway, someone is trying to manipulate us. I will keep driving my petrol car for some time…
If you want wind turbine, then let me know and I will introduce you to Ripple Energy - we both should get some money off. It is not as economically viable as looks (invest £1.8k and get enough electricity to power your house for 20+ years when wind turbine wears out), but still better than nothingPoint I am making is i have done as much as I can afford at this time to reduce my emissions, if i could have afforded a solar or small turbine to feed a home battery i would have done that as well.
If you want wind turbine, then let me know and I will introduce you to Ripple Energy - we both should get some money off. It is not as economically viable as looks (invest £1.8k and get enough electricity to power your house for 20+ years when wind turbine wears out), but still better than nothing
By the way, did you sleep in your car? I would imagine it would hold perfect temperature because of limited space. And there are beds made specifically for electric cars. I often think about buying an electric car so that I travel to client's site and sleep in it - I no longer find it glamorous staying in hotels for business, so why not save money and have your home with you all the time? Yes, there is an inconvenience of not having a toilet, but, if people lived through 60s and 70s when toilets outside the house were still quite common, then you know you can manage it
well done for making a better choice. where do the materials to make the battery in poland come from? those who care about sustainability have a hard time trying wade through all the smoke and mirrors big business put in our way.Whilst I do not disagree with anything said in the video and I fully accept the environmental damage caused by mining the batteries I was aware of this prior to getting an EV.
BUT i chose a model made in the Czech Republic and battery made in Poland, not China (Hyundia Kona)
I do over 15k a year and keep my cars for 4 or 5 years, the difference in exhaust emissions and being future LEZ compliant made me change form diesel.
I have smart charger that only charges when the grid has capacity or takes excess when the grid is over capacity, it also links with my energy supplier to ensure it only uses Green energy (i can't verify if this is true tho).
Point I am making is i have done as much as I can afford at this time to reduce my emissions, if i could have afforded a solar or small turbine to feed a home battery i would have done that as well.
i am not saying EVs are perfect very far from it, but oil running out and we can't keep burning it for ever.
I made the change as it was the end of my last car deal it was not that much more expensive so for me was a straight choice. I am not saying everyone should ditch their cars immediately absolutely not, but if like me you come to choose your next vehicle, if it works for you ie you cab access a home charger or sensible price public charger then give it consideration.
Likewise when boiler needs replacing I will look at the options but do not expect to do that for years as its only a few years old serviced and working fine, so no need to think about a change.
well done for making a better choice. where do the materials to make the battery in poland come from? those who care about sustainability have a hard time trying wade through all the smoke and mirrors big business put in our way.
For the record the MG5 was the other cheap EV i looked at did not like the quality of it and the fact it was Chinese maybe subconsciously swayed me I do not know tbh
A simple google search will answer your question.One point I hear thrown about is the energy needed to mine and process raw materials then produce the batteries lowers or is worse than the offset against ICE cars but I've yet to see any evidence either way on this.
I still think my BEV is the near perfect solution - for me, the weight, expense and complexity of a Hydrogen power plant on board, combined with having to go back to the old-fashioned inconvenience of having to go somewhere other than my front drive for fuel would be a massive step back. I make a 450+ mile round trip to the midlands in my 38kWh Ioniq once or twice a month. I charge to 100% overnight and normally stop for 20 minutes halfway through the 3.5 hour journey which I also generally used to do in my old Polo. Then do the same on the way back. I'm doing 1300 very mixed miles a month at the moment, and I genuinely can't see what benefit any kind of hybrid power plant would bring me other than some kind of comfort blanket.What I would like to see an EV with a good size battery and a hydrogen range extender engine/generator not driving the wheels but charging the battery with no emissions that is the near perfect solution.
Point is why did manufacturers make EVs that could not use the full network available like the 22kw AC charger that would make a real difference.
The DC rate is ok but I know older ones can not get as high as this.
I still think my BEV is the near perfect solution - for me, the weight, expense and complexity of a Hydrogen power plant on board, combined with having to go back to the old-fashioned inconvenience of having to go somewhere other than my front drive for fuel would be a massive step back. I make a 450+ mile round trip to the midlands in my 38kWh Ioniq once or twice a month. I charge to 100% overnight and normally stop for 20 minutes halfway through the 3.5 hour journey which I also generally used to do in my old Polo. Then do the same on the way back. I'm doing 1300 very mixed miles a month at the moment, and I genuinely can't see what benefit any kind of hybrid power plant would bring me other than some kind of comfort blanket.
I can see that people without home charging might find additional benefits but, even so, Hydrogen has been completely debunked as a suitable fuel for family cars - the lifecycle from generation through to compression, storage, transport and finally conversion back to electricity is just too inefficient to be the future of passenger car transportation at ~30%.
The convention is that AC charging is slow and DC charging is rapid. The only ones who bucked this trend as far as I know were Renault with the earlier Zoes which could charge at 43kW on AC, but they dropped this because of inherent limitations with power loss and cable sizes. Newer Zoes still have a 22kW 3-phase AC charger on board, but they're about the only ones to have this as standard. The truth is, most people in the UK charge at 7kW overnight on our domestic single-phase devices and charge at 50kW+ on the road on public rapid chargers. Providing a 3-phase on-board AC charger of either 11kW or 22kW is an additional expense which the vast majority of UK drivers would never benefit from.
But when would they ever be of use? You're either on a journey where waiting for a reasonable charge of a 50kWh battery will take two hours, which is not acceptable, or you're charging overnight where you don't need your car to be charged in two hours and then the station tied up for 10 hours idle whilst nobody else can use it. As above, three 7kW chargers instead of a single 22kW charger makes a lot more sense to my mind. Three people can charge overnight instead of one.in my area there numerous 22kw public chargers but most like me cannot take advantage of the higher speed, onlt less than half of it
It may make sense for some heavy plant and freight use cases, but not for private passenger transportationJCB and a few others they are pushing on with hydrogen
That'd be using a 30% efficient fuel with a 30% efficient power plant. Burning things is generally the most efficient way of extracting heat, but just archaic and woefully inefficient in terms of extracting kinetic energy.a normal ICE engine can run on hydrogen with modest changes
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