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Nissan Leaf EV to Have Ultra-Cheap Battery Pack
fast company ^
| May 5, 2010
| Ariel Schwartz
Posted on 05/08/2010 7:37:51 AM PDT by mylife
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So I hear that the fed is giving a 7.8K tax credit to make these things affordable.
Thats right, YOU get to pay 7.8K for every smug liberal ahole that buys one of these.
When did we vote on that?
1
posted on
05/08/2010 7:37:52 AM PDT
by
mylife
To: mylife
How much are we going to charge (pardon the pun) idiots who drive these for vehicle removal when their glorified Power Wheels dies in the middle of the road?
2
posted on
05/08/2010 7:38:37 AM PDT
by
pnh102
(Regarding liberalism, always attribute to malice what you think can be explained by stupidity. - Me)
3
posted on
05/08/2010 7:39:01 AM PDT
by
mylife
(Opinions: $1 Halfbaked: 50c)
To: pnh102
4
posted on
05/08/2010 7:39:47 AM PDT
by
mylife
(Opinions: $1 Halfbaked: 50c)
5
posted on
05/08/2010 7:41:10 AM PDT
by
mylife
(Opinions: $1 Halfbaked: 50c)
To: mylife
6
posted on
05/08/2010 7:41:35 AM PDT
by
cavador
(Wash your Hands-Cover that sneeze!It helps stop the H1N1 Virus)
To: mylife
Will they be like the battery packs for computer laptops, and have a couple of cells go bad making the entire pack useless?
7
posted on
05/08/2010 7:42:52 AM PDT
by
laker_dad
To: mylife
"Leaf's 24 kWh battery pack costs just $9,000"A gallon of gasoline contains 40 kWh of energy. 24 kWh of gasoline costs less than two bucks.
8
posted on
05/08/2010 7:44:07 AM PDT
by
norwaypinesavage
(Galileo: In science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of one individual)
To: mylife
The $33,000 vehicle, set to be released later this year, is the first affordable all-electric vehicle from a major auto manufacturer.$33K = affordable??
9
posted on
05/08/2010 7:47:27 AM PDT
by
DTogo
(High time to bring back the Sons of Liberty !!)
To: norwaypinesavage
>> A gallon of gasoline contains 40 kWh of energy. 24 kWh of gasoline costs less than two bucks.
Yeah, but once you burn up the gas, it’s gone. You can charge the 24kWh battery pack up again and again and again! (With electricity from an oil or coal fired electric power plant. ;-) )
10
posted on
05/08/2010 7:50:54 AM PDT
by
Nervous Tick
(Eat more spinach! Make Green Jobs for America!)
To: mylife
Gosh, an ultra-cheap battery that only costs $9,000? Wow!
And more KW-sucking greenies attached to the power grid with one hand, while they vote to close down coal, oil, and nuclear power plants with the other.
11
posted on
05/08/2010 7:51:38 AM PDT
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: norwaypinesavage
“A gallon of gasoline contains 40 kWh of energy.”
By my figures, this is wrong. The right answer is 28 kwh. Plus, the engine is only 40% efficient so that makes it effectively 11.176 kWh of useful energy.
12
posted on
05/08/2010 8:00:04 AM PDT
by
babygene
(Figures don't lie, but liars can figure...)
To: mylife
It looks like an inverted bathtub.
I went to Lowes to buy a battery for my riding lawn mower, it was like $25 but they gave me a $5 credit for the old battery, or the "core".
So I get the new battery, go to the checkout line, and they charge me only $20, with an EXTRA $5 CHARGE TO RECYCLE THE "CORE"...this was about 2 years ago.
So, I have vowed to just never take them another core, I'd rather just drop it off at the local recycling center and buy the battery outright...but, it won't be from Lowes.
A lesson lies therein for the coming "electric car" craze...those batteries are going to be E X P E N S I V E...especially at first, THEN you're going to have a hell of a time "disposing of them". You've got to buy them, and then pay to "throw them out".
All I know about batteries is, they go dead a lot faster than an internal engine goes dead.
I hope they only sell them to the fringe, lunatic environuts.
13
posted on
05/08/2010 8:01:14 AM PDT
by
FrankR
(Standing up against tyranny must start somewhere, or the future will belong to the tyrants.)
To: DTogo
14
posted on
05/08/2010 8:01:24 AM PDT
by
mylife
(Opinions: $1 Halfbaked: 50c)
To: babygene
Wikipedia, if you can believe them, says 36.6 kWh per US gallon. (Sorry, I did the calculation of 40 in my head.) The useful efficiency of electricity is not 100% either. You have wires, chargers, dischargers, motors, inverters, transmission systems, regeneration for braking, etc. It's certainly higher than an IC powertrain, but no where near 100%.
15
posted on
05/08/2010 8:17:17 AM PDT
by
norwaypinesavage
(Galileo: In science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of one individual)
To: norwaypinesavage
16
posted on
05/08/2010 8:24:36 AM PDT
by
babygene
(Figures don't lie, but liars can figure...)
To: DTogo
LOL, just what I was thinking. Of course when I buy a car I take care of it and drive it until it just won’t run anymore or I give/sell it to a needy family member.
Still even a new car for me is a good used car. LOL
If I can’t pay cash I don’t buy it.
17
posted on
05/08/2010 8:30:39 AM PDT
by
WHBates
To: mylife
18
posted on
05/08/2010 8:44:23 AM PDT
by
VOA
To: pnh102
“
How much are we going to charge (pardon the pun) idiots who drive these
for vehicle removal when their glorified Power Wheels dies in the
middle of the road?
“
I suspect one of my barely-literate relatives will clean up
when it comes time to put one of these dead cars (and their battery) into
a land-fill.
(or make $$$ off the recycling scheme that surely must have already
been constructed by Obama and Co.).
19
posted on
05/08/2010 8:47:22 AM PDT
by
VOA
To: norwaypinesavage
...and then there’s the question where the energy to heat the darn thing in winter comes from. I figure you’d need a couple of kWs at least. So you’ll be driving slower or not go very far...
20
posted on
05/08/2010 9:50:03 AM PDT
by
Moltke
(DOPE will get you 4 to 8 in the Big House - HOPE will get you 4 to 8 in the White House.)
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