Posted on 10/17/2017 10:52:16 AM PDT by AngelesCrestHighway
A global tipping point for electric cars could come as early as 2022, as battery costs decrease and concerns about range and infrastructure ease. Thats from analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, who in a little over a years time have turned even more optimistic about the future dominance of electric cars over internal-combustion vehicles. In a Tuesday note, the analysts forecast that one in three cars will be purely electric by 2030; their July 2016 prediction was one in 10 by the same year. There are several factors converging that have led us to revise our thinking a combination of changing customer preferences, increasingly viable product, regulation, and infrastructure, they said in the note.
(Excerpt) Read more at marketwatch.com ...
(imagine the stress of being stuck in traffic with a low battery - and the temp is sub-zero...)\
Again dont confuse libos with truth and facts.
Oh they’re coming after me now!
MAGA!
They have never recommended loading up evs with heavy weight, or towing stuff. Kills the distance.
Yeah i am sure they will buy a used hattery back at the price you expect.
In my job, I frequently drive more than 300 in a day. Plus I’m not home every night so I can’t simply plug in to sleep. $35 K is also well beyond what I’d ever pay for just a car.
“Nothing will replace push rods and pistons - NEVER!”
You’ve got me waxing nostalgic - back to the dystopian future...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P9Q05UyIOX4
Thrilling, how many times in succession?
A Top Fuel dragster is impressive as well, once.
Heating/cooling had little effect on range in my experience. Not trivial, but far from debilitating.
Or if it is, it won’t be once 100 million of these things are tooling around.
Good point. Currently the roads are paid for by gas and diesel taxes per gallon. Some kind of tax on electricity used to charge a vehicle will have to happen to maintain the roads or no one is going anywhere unless they figure out a way to make cars hover instead of roll on wheels. I think that one will take a long time to happen; like centuries unless some aliens visit and give us the tech.
We will probably wonder why we didn't think of it since it will probably be something relatively simple like controlling a magnetic field under the vehicle that doesn't even take power to maintain or very little if it does. Look how simple the wheel and fire are and how long it took humans to discover them then use them in all the different ways we do.
Now that I think about it, once we eliminate wheels and the need to overcome the friction it generates to move the vehicle, all kinds of doors open up but also problems to solve like how to move the vehicle and just as important; how to stop it.
Yeah, I was also thinking about the range at freezing temperatures. It cuts down battery output quite a bit.
I used to race RC cars back in the 70’s, when electric cars replaced gas cars. They are tremendously trouble free, quiet, clean and reliable compared to gas. I would love to see that benefit in “real” cars. However, I’m not an idiot. I know that scale changes the challenges. Electric cars have reached a point where they are a nice niche product for urban dwellers. Their biggest advantage is the ability to convert braking energy back to power, rather than scrubbing it all off as heat. But for anything that can’t be done almost as well with a golf cart with an enclosed interior, they are not ready for prime time.
Teslas are cool. They have a lot of torque, but they are strictly a “run around town” type of car. And if you can afford one, it’s really great for that - because you also have the Mercedes for the longer range stuff.
>> Electric cars? using HEAT =less available
>> drive time/distance.
That is true. However, in all gasoline vehicles, if it’s not winter, which is the case in the vast majority of times and places, then “waste heat” is just plain WASTE. Most people never even think about that.
Not to mention the deleterious effects heat has on drivetrain components.
Charging occurs mostly when home power load is minimum. Electricity is actually cheapest then because suppliers _want_ people to consume power off-peak.
“Could”
No one has created a full working prototype for a car yet, much less have perfected the quality/reliability mass production techniques for making large quantities of this particular battery bank.
With no guarantee any of these batteries will be able to replace any of the existing millions of ev batteries. And the timetable to do that.
You say this like you can get one tomorrow. No big schmeal.
Acceleration on EVs is enough that they need special tires. That awesome torque shreds tires; I chewed up a set of 65k mile tires in 17k miles.
EVs aren’t for everyone. You have options.
...strange how many people seem to think EVs are being forced upon everyone. It’s an option, folks, you can use it or not as it works for you.
Where are all of the electric farm tractors, combines, construction equipment, irrigation pumps, stationary engines. There aren’t any-not enough torque in electric engines
GA charges EV drivers $200/yr in lieu of gas taxes.
Exactly!
They get my V8 when I am out of ammo and then they pry my cold dead hands off the steering wheel.
HEMIS NAILHEADS COBRA JETS CAMMERS -
poor kids nowadays. They don’t know engines from elephants. Most of them couldn’t wire up a table lamp. The women go all gaga over the man buns and plumbersexual look though.
Hairdryers are not on for 8 hours continuously. 1500 watts all night for full 8 hours is and extra 360 kilowatt hours a month just by itself, now multiply that by 2 cars times the neighborhood size, and that little neighborhood transformer never cools down overnight.
I see you dont actually read and respond to what people write, you just spout out whatevr you want to say.
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