Some places will struggle with BEVs where distances are large. Maybe "long range" versions will be required for these markets, however that might be done.
Many places don't have that problem, of course, especially urban regions.
Some places will struggle with BEVs where distances are large. Maybe "long range" versions will be required for these markets, however that might be done.
I was alluding a bit to this in my previous post. Certain types of urban regions have a charging (BEV) problem, a lack of charging options for dense urban apartment living.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 11:22Some places will struggle with BEVs where distances are large. Maybe "long range" versions will be required for these markets, however that might be done.
Many places don't have that problem, of course, especially urban regions.
BEVs are increasing in popularity in the UK but we do have a lot of reasonably dense urban areas which also have off-street parking. Planning requirements are for parking to be provided where new houses are built so the majority of new developments (in the last twenty years, at least) have driveways. This facilitates people charging a BEV.nzjrs wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 11:33I was alluding a bit to this in my previous post. Certain types of urban regions have a charging (BEV) problem, a lack of charging options for dense urban apartment living.
I asked if anyone knew or had an intuition about the relevance of this type of car buyer to the general market.
We all have our opinions and nothing is going to get solved here, but the reality is what we have with ICE powered vehicles is a 'cake and eat it' situation. They have massive range and can be refuelled in 5 minutes. Currently BEVs don't offer that convenience, possibly they never will? Time will tell...
Oh completely agree there.
This would be the ideal 'job' for a flywheel storage device.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 15:02I don't understand why more regen braking isn't available on ICE cars. Running along at a steady speed on a main road isn't too demanding on fuel, it's the accelerating up to speed that's a big fuel user - put your trip computer to show instantaneous mpg to see the effect of even moderate acceleration. We have lots of cars that are over 1.5-2 tonnes these days and that means a lot of energy is wasted every time they brake. It would be relatively simple to add a generator / motor unit in to the drive train, coupled to a battery or super cap. Then a good chunk of the wasted energy wouldn't be wasted and fuel use would be reduced. That's a relatively easy win all round, isn't it?
Perhaps, although I'd have thought it adds a layer of inefficiency and probably some packaging issues that a simple battery-based regen-store wouldn't.
Not 1100km range (I guess that´s total distance covered with your tank, not the distance between your home and the place to go), but if 650 are enough then this one indeed tick all those boxes. If 650km are not enogh just wait for next generation of batteriesAJI wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 12:00We all have our opinions and nothing is going to get solved here, but the reality is what we have with ICE powered vehicles is a 'cake and eat it' situation. They have massive range and can be refuelled in 5 minutes. Currently BEVs don't offer that convenience, possibly they never will? Time will tell...
Right now, a PHEV would make the most sense for me. I have a medium-large solar setup and mostly work from home so I can charge it easily. I do lots of short trips because I live in a small country town with no public transport options, so EV would be great for that, but I need an SUV because I live in a rural area and have to use un-sealed roads a few times a week. I also need big range for long distance runs and am used to seeing 1100+ kms on my trip computer when I fill the tank. I tow a lot so I like diesel power.
PHEV is 'cake and eat it', BEV will never tick those boxes.
Sorry, didn´t know how to say it, then I noticed they call it tank steer
Short bed, yes, but with two rows of seats, hypercar acceleration and probably on its own league when off-road with 800hp and unmatched traction control thanks to the four motors controlling each wheel independently
yes in theory a plug-in hybrid is the ideal way in the short term isn't it, while energy density of batteries is so much worse than petrol and diesel. Tho they have just been finding that a lot of people don't bother plugging them in, and that makes them worse instead of better. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech ... ggest.html. We booked a test drive of an i3 a year or two ago and the dealer hadn't bothered plugging it either!nzjrs wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 13:49Oh completely agree there.
I sometimes think the popularity / marketability of BEVs comes at the expense of PHEVs, which are, I feel, a better option for a long term move to a different energy economy.
The most cynical version would I guess be, BEVs are a better second car for people than can afford/want/need a second car. But it's not improving the first car energy problem (ok maybe people do use the 1st car less) , or it's not building the economies of scale to long-term solve the first car / personal transport problem.
I guess auto makers know that too, maybe the profit margins work out better on some segments than others.
It's almosy a bit of a "robbing Peter to pay Paul" situation. I hope policy doesn't harm PHEVs to encourage BEVs while hiding the energy generation problems for future policymakers to solve.
You're pretty much describing MHEV's.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 15:02I don't understand why more regen braking isn't available on ICE cars. Running along at a steady speed on a main road isn't too demanding on fuel, it's the accelerating up to speed that's a big fuel user - put your trip computer to show instantaneous mpg to see the effect of even moderate acceleration. We have lots of cars that are over 1.5-2 tonnes these days and that means a lot of energy is wasted every time they brake. It would be relatively simple to add a generator / motor unit in to the drive train, coupled to a battery or super cap. Then a good chunk of the wasted energy wouldn't be wasted and fuel use would be reduced. That's a relatively easy win all round, isn't it?
Andres125sx wrote: ↑07 Feb 2020, 20:31I've been waiting for a while now, as have you, no? Just re-read some of your posts about emerging battery tech from years ago.
I'm not saying it's not going to happen, but I believe you and me belong to the optimists side of the battery tech argument, and it's getting tiresome perpetually being disappointed...
There's also the re-charge time. Will that ever be solved? When the current option is 5 minutes re-fueling and 'the future' is half an hour it's a tough sell, no matter how many times you tell people 'why not just have a half hour break?'
This is the biggest red herring out there.It also ticks another box you didn´t ask for, but surely you´d be happy with it. 0-60mph in 3 seconds
BEV's are a one-trick-pony in this respect.
Who really cares if your BEV can out accelerate an ICE super car? Back in the real world, if you offer 0-100 in 7 seconds and a 5 minute charge or a car that takes 30 minutes to charge, but can do 0-100 in 3 seconds, which one will you choose?
The fact is, BEV manufacturers can't offer option 1, so they push option 2 like it's something everyone needs...