I thought I was quite clear that I was only talking about the engine itself And not the entire fuel cycle in my ICE comment.
I thought I was quite clear that I was only talking about the engine itself And not the entire fuel cycle in my ICE comment.
That´s what the post was about, isn´t it?
Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑24 Jun 2020, 20:33FCEV is much better for 300+ miles applications and BEV is usually better under 300 miles.
No, dont agree with that - as I posted, I see FCV's as being Heavy Interstate Trucks and Freight trains. I don't see 300 miles being a good yardstick at all - I see the use case being the decider.Andres125sx wrote: ↑25 Jun 2020, 08:13That´s what the post was about, isn´t it?
Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑24 Jun 2020, 20:33FCEV is much better for 300+ miles applications and BEV is usually better under 300 miles.
I think that the future of air transportation is using synthetic fuels made using captured CO2 and renewable energy (when and only when environmental concerns will be so high to force flight operator to be more "green")
The interview was with someone from a truck company, they´re analysing from their pov, he never mentioned cars or individual transport, he´s talking about trucks. And he was very clear in that regard, weight is crucial to make a truck profitable and over 300miles the excessive weight of the huge battery needed would reduce the payload too much.djos wrote: ↑25 Jun 2020, 09:15No, dont agree with that - as I posted, I see FCV's as being Heavy Interstate Trucks and Freight trains. I don't see 300 miles being a good yardstick at all - I see the use case being the decider.Andres125sx wrote: ↑25 Jun 2020, 08:13That´s what the post was about, isn´t it?
Brake Horse Power wrote: ↑24 Jun 2020, 20:33FCEV is much better for 300+ miles applications and BEV is usually better under 300 miles.
I (and most ppl) could happily drive 800-1000 km's in a BEV on an interstate trip and charge the vehicle while we have lunch or dinner - assuming there is fast charge infra along the way. This isnt an option for long haul trucks, 30-60 mins of charge is simply not going to "re-fill" a BEV truck. that's why I said FCV's will be better for interstate trucks and freight trains.
Yes at the moment they are too heavy, but even so some manufacturers are developing some, so I guess they see it possible in a near future
Yes too heavy and it requires to much volume in case of compressed hydrogen. Cryogenic would make it easier but is also difficult.
True but the statement was pretty blanket and they are planning to make a BEV utility last I checked (I could be wrong).Andres125sx wrote: ↑25 Jun 2020, 19:06The interview was with someone from a truck company, they´re analysing from their pov, he never mentioned cars or individual transport, he´s talking about trucks. And he was very clear in that regard, weight is crucial to make a truck profitable and over 300miles the excessive weight of the huge battery needed would reduce the payload too much.
Obviously cars don´t have that problem, but he´s not from Tesla, he´s from Nikola, even if both names have an obvious relationship, the companies actually are from completely different markets
True, but It included the grid transmission from the source, as it did with the Hydrogen cycle so both are starting from the same point which was: take electricity all the way to "make car move".Greg Locock wrote: ↑26 Jun 2020, 01:43Djos - The 70% figure for EVs does not include generating ANY power. So you are not comparing like with like.
Yes, but they manufacture both so there´s no reason to have an agenda towards any of them. If any of them would have a real advantage (in every scenario) they would focus on it instead of investing on a technology wich don´t provide any advantage. Business is businessdjos wrote: ↑26 Jun 2020, 01:45True but the statement was pretty blanket and they are planning to make a BEV utility last I checked (I could be wrong).Andres125sx wrote: ↑25 Jun 2020, 19:06The interview was with someone from a truck company, they´re analysing from their pov, he never mentioned cars or individual transport, he´s talking about trucks. And he was very clear in that regard, weight is crucial to make a truck profitable and over 300miles the excessive weight of the huge battery needed would reduce the payload too much.
Obviously cars don´t have that problem, but he´s not from Tesla, he´s from Nikola, even if both names have an obvious relationship, the companies actually are from completely different markets