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In any case, 300 miles I could live with, but 150?? On that end of the range it just isn't going to sell.
A little off topic, but I wonder if EVs took off (not literally!!), would manufactuers have to add a fake engine noise to stop a massive increase in pedestrian fatalties? Has anyone even thought of this or are they too busy trying to strech another 5 miles on the range?
Let's face it, many people are too dim or lazy to actually stop and look before crossing a road!!
Devil wrote:There is NO way that the electricity grid in any country I know of could cope with the extra load: as a rough guide, it would require tripling the capacity.


kenbathrhume wrote:
BUT WAIT!!!! Gasoline to wheels is 20% efficient at most. Electric to wheels is much MORE efficient. Maybe 4x. Also electric vehicles would be smaller and lighter. There's no reason to think that in the future people will be driving 8000 pound SUVs. If there is a true "crises" then prices will rise and people will switch to cheaper, lighter vehicles as much as they can.


The problem with today's electric motors is that they are designed to run at one speed and need to be geared or transmissioned somehow like a gasoline engine. This means it's only running at maximum efficiency at one "speed". There is much work underway on a variable electric motor which would not need a transmission, but are set up to run at various speeds. The pioneering work in this area has been done by competitors in the various worldwide solar car races in the last 10-15 years. There was a very good article on one company trying to get investors to start producing these in earnes in the Washington Post Magazine a couple months ago. Here's a little description:Electric motors have been getting efficiencies of 90-95% and even more for decades. It would be great if the "important advances in electric motor efficiency" could take it up to >100%: THEN, we would have the perpetual motion machine!!! And have a "lot more power".

However, a Canterbury University professor of mechanical engineering who saw the motor at the Innovate conference this month said the design was large and complex and he would be surprised if it was more efficient than a conventional electric motor.
"We see crazy designs for things that work but are never going to find a foothold in the market," said Professor John Raine. "Any new design of this kind has to be able to demonstrate a decisive advantage in some area, such as energy efficiency or power to weight ratio or manufacturing cost advantages."


Devil wrote:kenbathrhume wrote:
BUT WAIT!!!! Gasoline to wheels is 20% efficient at most. Electric to wheels is much MORE efficient. Maybe 4x. Also electric vehicles would be smaller and lighter. There's no reason to think that in the future people will be driving 8000 pound SUVs. If there is a true "crises" then prices will rise and people will switch to cheaper, lighter vehicles as much as they can.
Wrong! The average to wheels efficiency of an ordinary mid-sized car today is about 35%, rising to 55% for a hybrid.
Also, electric cars, size-for-size, are much heavier. You can't compare a Hummer with a Corolla, and they will still drive Hummer-equivalents, if they are available. Electric to wheels is typically 80%-85% efficient, provided you have regenerative braking and know how to drive them, but electric to electric in the battery (when it is new) is, at the best, 70% efficient, so the overall efficiency is 56-60%, hardly better than a Prius. Of course, having to accelerate the extra weight of the batteries will require more energy, so the actual energy consumption will rise on a size-for-size comparison.
If everyone charged an electric vehicle each night, the current (pun intended) grids would still be greatly inadequate and would require at least doubling. In reality, it would be tripling, because everyone arriving at work at 8.30 or whenever will need to plug in again for the evening commute back. This is no miracle.
Of course, it would save energy if there were a legal weight limit on drivers and passengers of, say, 75 kg for men and 60 kg for women with swingeing fines for overweight persons in cars :D




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