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#85 | |
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Hail to the King baby!
Drives: '19 XT4 2.0T & '22 VW Atlas 2.0T Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Illinois
Posts: 12,301
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This is a very interesting conversation. I've stayed pretty much out of it. But you have to understand that the practicality of any pure EV is dependant on two things: the battery and infrastructure. The current battery technology will result in "about" 100 mile range in a purpose built EV. Regardless of what Tesla claims (230 miles I think), I haven't seen a verified test from an independant source that verifies that. Also, batteries are VERY finicky. They don't like cold and they don't like hot and LiION batteries don't like to be deep drawn or overcharged. Wait for someone to start testing EVs in International Falls, MN in the dead of winter. There is where the Volt will shine. And LiION batteries cost far more than an IC engine. And, although everyone seems to have an answer, I have no idea where you are going to put 400 to 500 pounds of LiION battery when they give up the ghost. Yes, some say that when a battery can no longer power the car you can use it to store energy from the grid and give it back, but again that is the infrastructure issue. Everything I've read says it costs more to recover the materials from a LiION battery than you can sell the material for. Not a good business proposition. So considering the cradle to grave proposition, I'm still not convinced about the total benefits or any vehicle with 100 or more pouds of batteries. But, like this thread, that's only my opinion. And by the way, the Volt is not considered a Hybrid, at least by GM. A Hybrid implies two (or more?) methods of propelling the vehicle. The Volt can only be powered one way....electrically. The IC engine is merely a portable generator capable of producing electricity that powers the electric motors. The IC engine does not power the vehicle, it merely provides an on board source of electricity. What happens in the future is very unclear. Today batteries are a very limited alternative. Would you want a battery if someday biofuels are cheap and easy to obtain and make the U.S. engergy independant??? or do you require ZEV vs. PZEV??? The cost of Fuel Cells, now relegated to Sci Fi discussions apparently are coming down drastically. Their size, mass and cost are orders of magnitude lower with each generation. But they too have huge infrastructure issues. My guess is until the winner becomes apparent, business on it's own won't supply the infrastructure required. That means out tax dollars will go to multiple solutions. But today, nothing beats the ICE. It's a hands down winner if you exclude the politics of global warming and oil. But again, just my opinion.........except about the Volt being a Hybrid.
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"Speed, it seems to me, provides the one genuinely modern pleasure." - Aldous Huxley
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#86 |
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Downright Upright
Drives: Daily Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Cruisin'...
Posts: 4,145
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Market-driven...NO pun intended...
If Tesla can sell more than a few sports cars, and they have, then it only stands to reason that, at HALF the price with TWICE the passenger capacity, there's a likely market for MORE... How many, the market will say... So, along comes Nissan, a "known" entity, with THEIR version... SAME passenger capacity as the Tesla S, but HALF as much again, net price...LESS curb weight... Can they sell some, particularly in Metro areas? The MARKET will decide...but I'm betting Nissan, and Tesla, WILL find buyers... |
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#87 |
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Moderator.ca
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Number 3, I hate having to disagree with you but I would have thought you were aware of the fact that there are two forms of gas electric hybrid: series and parallel. With a parallel, the two systems can operate either independently or co-operatively. With a series hybrid, there is only one method of propelling a car but the secondary system is still there when needed. Volt is a series hybrid, while all other current automotive hybrids are parallel. Even though the Volt isn't a parallel hybrid, its still a hybrid. To call it an electric vehicle would mean that all the parallel hybrids capable of going up to X miles or Y speed without the gas engine turning on should also be called EV's.
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Note, if I've gotten any facts wrong in the above, just ignore any points I made with them
__________________ Originally Posted by FbodFather My sister's dentist's brother's cousin's housekeeper's dog-breeder's nephew sells coffee filters to the company that provides coffee to General Motors...... ........and HE WOULD KNOW!!!!__________________ Camaro Fest sub-forum |
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#88 | |
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Hail to the King baby!
Drives: '19 XT4 2.0T & '22 VW Atlas 2.0T Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Illinois
Posts: 12,301
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A lot of "marketing" lingo for sure. But GM does not consider it a hybrid, which was my point and makes you no less correct.
__________________
"Speed, it seems to me, provides the one genuinely modern pleasure." - Aldous Huxley
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#89 | |||
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I used to be Dragoneye...
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Both arguments could be defended fiercely...because they're the same thing. hehe
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#90 |
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Downright Upright
Drives: Daily Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Cruisin'...
Posts: 4,145
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BTW, "Performance" means 12 different things to a dozen different people/prospects.
Kinda like accurately describing "Ride", "Handling", "Style", "Comfort", "Power" to suitably answer EVERYONE...each means something different to individuals... |
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#91 |
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Downright Upright
Drives: Daily Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Cruisin'...
Posts: 4,145
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To you, and perhaps manymany more, BUT, and it's a not-so-insignificant "but", it WILL make great sense to SOME...and they'll vote with their wallets! And apparently Nissan thinks "some" = 150,000/annum...
They'd be the ones who think we're fools when we subscribe to the old "hot rodder's axiom": "If some is GOOD, and more is BETTER, then TOO MUCH is JUST RIGHT"... hehehe... |
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#92 | |
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Moderator.ca
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Ah ... marketing. No wonder I don't understand.
__________________
Note, if I've gotten any facts wrong in the above, just ignore any points I made with them
__________________ Originally Posted by FbodFather My sister's dentist's brother's cousin's housekeeper's dog-breeder's nephew sells coffee filters to the company that provides coffee to General Motors...... ........and HE WOULD KNOW!!!!__________________ Camaro Fest sub-forum |
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#93 | |
![]() Drives: GTI Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Don't worry bout it
Posts: 328
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Here's an example: If you've read Mountains beyond Mountains, you might know about the story of Paul Farmer spending most of his time in Haiti helping the poor at absolutely no cost and no profit to himself. He might motivate people to go out and commit to various humanitarian activities, like volunteer for Habit for Humanity a few times a year. Just because they didn't go as far as to dedicate their entire lives to opening up a clinic in a third world country doesn't mean they weren't motivated by Paul Farmer. In other words, if something motivates you, it doesn't mean you have to reach as far as your motivating source to be truly motivated by it. |
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#94 | |
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Account Suspended
Drives: 2010 Camaro 2SS/RS Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: New York
Posts: 3,746
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It's going to take years and trillions of dollars to fix the grid. Until then, Volt has the right idea: Charge the battery with dead dinosaurs. |
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#95 | |
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Hail to the King baby!
Drives: '19 XT4 2.0T & '22 VW Atlas 2.0T Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Illinois
Posts: 12,301
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The Volt does NOT charge the batteries with the ICE. It sustains the charge at the minimum level. The expectation is that it is far cheaper for the customer to charge the battery on the grid at night than by using gasoline. This is called "charge sustaining mode" on the Volt. So the electricty to run the Volt comes from the ICE, but it does not supply surplus power to recharge the battery.
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"Speed, it seems to me, provides the one genuinely modern pleasure." - Aldous Huxley
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#96 | ||
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__________________
Note, if I've gotten any facts wrong in the above, just ignore any points I made with them
__________________ Originally Posted by FbodFather My sister's dentist's brother's cousin's housekeeper's dog-breeder's nephew sells coffee filters to the company that provides coffee to General Motors...... ........and HE WOULD KNOW!!!!__________________ Camaro Fest sub-forum |
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#97 | |
![]() Drives: 2010 Kona Blue GT500 Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Texas
Posts: 540
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^^^^ This. Severely off-peak hours (night vs. business hours) should allow for the adoption of EV's without any significant impact to the infrastructure. Over time it will build up but I would bet that the load during peak hours will require an infrastructure upgrade before overnight EV charging will. |
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#98 | |
![]() Drives: corvette Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: usa
Posts: 374
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Yet another situation where the impracticality of electric cars shines through. |
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