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Electric Bus in U.K. 'Clean Air Zone' Burns Uncontrollably, Sending Toxic Black Smoke Into the Air
Rumble Via Liberty Daily ^
| 9 October 2023
| Staff
Posted on 10/10/2023 6:13:46 AM PDT by Red Badger
VIDEO AT LINK......................
Ironic...............
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine; Military/Veterans; Outdoors
KEYWORDS: automotive; bus; europe; ev; fire; green; rivian; tesla
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To: Red Badger
What is a clean air zone? Some touchy feelie words that have no real meaning.
2
posted on
10/10/2023 6:15:43 AM PDT
by
The Louiswu
(Pray for Peace in the world.)
To: Red Badger
Probably negating a decade of green busing.
It’s interesting, I hear from politicians and climatologists about global warming.
I never seem to hear from engineers in the energy and transportation sectors…
RoI, efficiency, non black box calculations, etc.
3
posted on
10/10/2023 6:18:20 AM PDT
by
EEGator
To: Red Badger
“Sending Toxic Black Smoke Into the Air”
...maybe they should try windmills on top of the buses? Or, knock out the chassis and go Fred Flintstone style?
4
posted on
10/10/2023 6:18:31 AM PDT
by
albie
To: The Louiswu
Hogwarts has cast a spell that doesn’t allow dirty air in the area.
5
posted on
10/10/2023 6:19:11 AM PDT
by
EEGator
To: The Louiswu
It’s like a ‘Gun Free Zone’ in Southside Chicago.................
6
posted on
10/10/2023 6:21:11 AM PDT
by
Red Badger
(Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
To: Red Badger
The same people complaining about toxic stuff in food are standing there breathing that toxic smoke getting orders of magnitude more toxins than their food ever gives them.
7
posted on
10/10/2023 6:24:25 AM PDT
by
CodeToad
(Arm Up! They Have!)
To: The Louiswu
“What is a clean air zone? Some touchy feelie words that have no real meaning.”
It’s a zone where you have NON-POLLUTING vehicles, Einstein, you know, like the bus in the video.
8
posted on
10/10/2023 6:24:42 AM PDT
by
BobL
(Trump gets my vote, even if I have to write him in; Millions of others will do the same)
To: Red Badger
9
posted on
10/10/2023 6:28:20 AM PDT
by
ZULU
(HOOVER, FREEH, MUELLER, COMEY, WRAY, SUCCESSION OF STATIST TRAITORS)
To: Red Badger
It’s just the Electric Bus end of life EXPLOSION , cars also do it
To: butlerweave
Just like a STAR going SUPERNOVAE...............
11
posted on
10/10/2023 6:33:05 AM PDT
by
Red Badger
(Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
To: BobL
NO wind is allowed in those areas either.
To: Red Badger
Did the bus have the “required” permit decal displayed for burning EV in a no pollution zone?
13
posted on
10/10/2023 6:49:03 AM PDT
by
Lockbox
(politicians, they all seemed like game show hosts to me.... Sting…)
To: Red Badger
The bus is communicating with the outside world via smoke signals - “Help! Help me! PLEASE! My hair’s on fire! And so are my toes! Errr ... I mean TIRES!”
14
posted on
10/10/2023 6:59:22 AM PDT
by
Montana_Sam
(Truth lives.)
To: Red Badger
I think it was actually a diesel bus
15
posted on
10/10/2023 7:01:00 AM PDT
by
AppyPappy
(Biden told Al Roker "America is back". Unfortunately, he meant back to the 1970's)
To: Red Badger
interesting
cuz many more will be using buses
once evs are fully adopted
16
posted on
10/10/2023 7:06:59 AM PDT
by
joshua c
(to disrupt the system, we must disrupt our lives, cut the cable tv)
To: Red Badger
It’s impossible for that bus to be spewing so much black smoke there, it’s a Clean Air Zone.
To: butlerweave
It’s just the Electric Bus end of life EXPLOSION , cars also do it. I have been tinkering with lithium-based rechargeable batteries for years. I have specialized charging tools and battery condition evaluation tools. People believe that the lithium-based rechargeable batteries found in laptops and phones are the same animal as electric vehicle batteries. Laptop and phone batteries can catch on fire as well, but this is far less common for a number of reasons, but mostly because they are not designed for high discharge and charge rates. The real education for a tinkerer comes when you start experimenting with batteries designed for high charge and discharge rates as found in model planes, cars, and drones, and also bicycles, minibikes, cars etc... This is the real preview for full sized EV batteries. And they can actually be dangerous. I usually charge mine outside on a concrete surface far away from other combustible substances. Others go to the trouble of making structures out of concrete blocks for charging them. I have a friend from childhood who is an engineer who was tasked for years with evaluating the safety of lithium-based batteries for a company he worked for... he will not allow kids or any visitors to charge any type of lithium battery in his house while it is unattended. He witnessed too many failures. New lithium-based batteries will sometimes combust under certain conditions while being charged and discharged and also spontaneously. But typically as you have noted, it is batteries that have been used for a while that catch on fire. It only takes one defective cell so a multi-cell battery might seem to be working just fine day after day even while one cell within the assembly continues to overheat and becomes worse and worse and finally reaches a temperature where it finally explodes or catches on fire and the whole pack goes up in flames. It is obvious that every cell in a multicell battery pack should have some sort of heat sensors and ancillary circuitry to monitor and report back to a microcomputer that would warn about a potentially devastating failure before it happens and automatically isolate the cell. This would result in greater expense and bulk in vehicles that are already an iffy proposition when it comes to the bottom line. The alternative that seems to be just fine with proponents is to have ever increasing numbers of potential firebombs running up and down our streets and also being charged and stored in people's homes and businesses. The Chinese currently produce far more electric vehicles than all other countries in the world combined. They also produce over 60% of the lithium-based batteries used in electric vehicles and all other rechargeable devices. The Chinese have a long record of not caring very much about the safety of the items that they export.
18
posted on
10/10/2023 7:26:12 AM PDT
by
fireman15
(Irritating people are the grit from which we fashion our pearl. I provide the grit. You're Welcome.)
To: butlerweave
Sorry about the html problem.
It’s just the Electric Bus end of life EXPLOSION , cars also do it.
I have been tinkering with lithium-based rechargeable batteries for years. I have specialized charging tools and battery condition evaluation tools. People believe that the lithium-based rechargeable batteries found in laptops and phones are the same animal as electric vehicle batteries. Laptop and phone batteries can catch on fire as well, but this is far less common for a number of reasons, but mostly because they are not designed for high discharge and charge rates.
The real education for a tinkerer comes when you start experimenting with batteries designed for high charge and discharge rates as found in model planes, cars, and drones, and also bicycles, minibikes, cars etc... This is the real preview for full sized EV batteries. And they can actually be dangerous. I usually charge mine outside on a concrete surface far away from other combustible substances. Others go to the trouble of making structures out of concrete blocks for charging them.
I have a friend from childhood who is an engineer who was tasked for years with evaluating the safety of lithium-based batteries for a company he worked for... he will not allow kids or any visitors to charge any type of lithium battery in his house while it is unattended. He witnessed too many failures.
New lithium-based batteries will sometimes combust under certain conditions while being charged and discharged and also spontaneously. But typically as you have noted, it is batteries that have been used for a while that catch on fire. It only takes one defective cell so a multi-cell battery might seem to be working just fine day after day even while one cell within the assembly continues to overheat and becomes worse and worse and finally reaches a temperature where it finally explodes or catches on fire and the whole pack goes up in flames.
It is obvious that every cell in a multicell battery pack should have some sort of heat sensors and ancillary circuitry to monitor and report back to a microcomputer that would warn about a potentially devastating failure before it happens and automatically isolate the cell.
This would result in greater expense and bulk in vehicles that are already an iffy proposition when it comes to the bottom line. The alternative that seems to be just fine with proponents is to have ever increasing numbers of potential firebombs running up and down our streets and also being charged and stored in people's homes and businesses.
The Chinese currently produce far more electric vehicles than all other countries in the world combined. They also produce over 60% of the lithium-based batteries used in electric vehicles and all other rechargeable devices. The Chinese have a long record of not caring very much about the safety of the items that they export.
19
posted on
10/10/2023 7:28:20 AM PDT
by
fireman15
(Irritating people are the grit from which we fashion our pearl. I provide the grit. You're Welcome.)
To: Red Badger
Breath deep the air of green energy.
20
posted on
10/10/2023 7:30:15 AM PDT
by
BigFreakinToad
(Remember the Biden Kitchen Fire of 2004)
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