Posted on 01/16/2022 9:44:54 AM PST by Hojczyk
That’s all well and good, but what about when the battery will no longer hold a charge and the dealer tells you a new battery will cost $15,000?
Well, it's obvious you're not in manufacturing, given your cavalier attitude toward unforeseen engineering challenges with new technology.
Let me ask you: other than reduced "emissions" by individual vehicles, and not paying for gas, what performance benefits do EVs provide that my very well-built IC auto doesn't? And I'm not talking 10-20 years from now; this is the last car I plan to own.
Don’t worry, the government will pay for it…………Wait a second……
They are developing anodes for batteries that will result rapid charging. (Search Niobium Anode battery)
https://www.ai4beginners.com/solid-state-battery-companies/
(Nice picture of a lady with a car at the link!)
They list 7 companies working on solid state batteries for various products.
“QuantumScape’s all-solid-state battery technology is currently the most advanced. Its prototype battery can charge to 80% capacity in 15 minutes and that’s “faster than either conventional battery or alternative solid-state approaches are capable of delivering”.”
I have a car that runs on gasoline because batteries do not work well in the winter months. (If we can get to Solid Hydrogen Fuel cells I might look at an upgrade.)
They just put in a bank of Tesla stations near a local gas station. It was kind of funny seeing three Tesla owners looking bored and sanctimonious at the same time while the rest of us pulled in, got gas and left, ready for another week of driving.
Born and raised in a remote area, I live and operate a business in one-EV’s will work for city transportation-short range-but the distances are too great to make EVs cost effective here or a lot of rural/agricultural areas-county land use rules do not support development of charging stations-or any extensive commercial use of land in an area of small farm/ranch agriculture-our electricity is provided by a rural co-op, water is protected as a resource, and many of us live off-grid by choice, gone Galt...
A few people who commute about 50 miles to the city for work have bought EVs over the past 2-3 years-but only 2 still own one-the others were sold-owners found them to be too expensive to keep up, and not all that reliable for commuting-so back to the 4x4 Pickup or SUV that is standard here...
A gas pump that’s been destroyed is a totally different thing than a severely degraded one.
Here’s an interesting stat;
First gasoline powered car, 1885.
First EV, sometime in the 1830s ( exact date isn’t clear ).
So EVs were around for decades before ICE vehicles.
Charging station are still relativity new and current EV drivers are more likely to educate themselves in the proper use of the system. Just wait until the general public starts using them.
Free Beer Tomorrow.
Imagine the mess of electric cables. Not practical.
https://s.yimg.com/uu/api/res/1.2/OHCUiMtBiHMpzanyWXhdQA—~B/aD02ODM7dz0xMDI0O2FwcGlkPXl0YWNoeW9u/https://media.zenfs.com/en/the_independent_635/2d596085d0de9e07290051a84cd1809c
Toss in the subsidies, and it’s the many working class schlubs paying for vanity purchases by the wealthy few.
So just a few EVs on your street could overwhelm the available juice.
The rat push for EVs is one aspect of their push to destroy the middleclass.
I’ve done the math before. The author is correct, to recharge a large number of vehicles at once would require a HUGE power requirement and there is NO WAY our power grid is anywhere near ready. We would need two to three times the number of power planets to provide the additional power. And then the accompanying infrastructure would need billions of dollars in upgrades.
Actually an electric motor has much more torque than a diesel engine. The problem arises with the battery storage.
Okay, but that still doesn’t address the additional power requirements. Two to three times as many power plants as currently exist will need to be built.
From the linked article:
2. QuantumScape
QuantumScape is an industry-leading public company (NYSE: QS) that is developing solid-state lithium metal batteries for electric vehicles that provides both high specific energy and high energy density. The company is based in San-Jose and backed by Bill Gates, Volkswagen, Continental AG, and George Soros among other prominent investors.
Ditto.
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