Posted on 05/25/2009 2:52:04 PM PDT by The_Sword_of_Groo
True, I realize electric motors supply instant torque. Can you amplify on your reply a bit please? I am not sure which of my comments you are replying too.
If it cost 60,000 or so it is not going to do well. The eight wheel drive could be utilized in off road vehicles and garner a huge following. However,(again with the but) there is still the range limit. While 200 miles would be ok for a commute vehicle in some areas it would not work in a lot of areas. I used to commute 90 miles one way, every day, that means I would have to recharge this car every night. 10 hours charging time means I have no vehicle once I get home.
Once again we are back to cost and the cost of the electricity to recharge it, especially in view of Bozo's cap and trade BS he wants to impose on people.
Imagine if you would how many clutches the average diesal locomotive would go through in a year and the expense of changing them.
Or replacement of the parts involved in the operation of a clutch
I think it is an academic exercise. An experiment in applied mechanics. It is pure research to learn new ways to build a car.
Having said that, I think they are onto something. As an aluminum extrusion designer, I was really impressed with the use of the floor designed using extrusions that slide together in modular units rectangular in cross section to receive the very special series wired batteries.
and it can conveniently serve as your packaging for the afterlife. casket or urn, it will make either turn.
Without the batteries, it’s a diesel-electric which is way heavier, less efficient and more expensive than a conventional diesel car.
The man who accomplished the impossible.
He made segways look cool.
CaC2+H2O?
After the caving trip, When you dump the stuff in your carbide light into the restaurant toilet and then light a match.......vaboooom!
Don’t know old man but the formula looks good!:)
Ok, then my point exactly, if both the hybrid and the diesel electric are too heavy and costly and don't deliver the goods, why not just plain old diesel engines in cars that have been proven, in some areas, to deliver 50+ miles per.
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