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Your next ride- guaranteed to be Obama-certified and Obama-friendly!
Octopus wrote: But this is good since we could replace coal burning plants easier than every gas station and car to a different fuel, every time we find a new way to make energy. Your thoughts?
1) Isn't moving to all electric exactly that? (Changing every gas station and car to a different fuel?)Octopus wrote:But this is good since we could replace coal burning plants easier than every gas station and car to a different fuel, every time we find a new way to make energy. Your thoughts?
Gas stations will stop selling fuel as more people start buying electric cars. I see a smooth transition.Krom wrote: 1) Isn't moving to all electric exactly that? (Changing every gas station and car to a different fuel?)
Yes.Krom wrote:2) We can't make energy, we can only find better ways of gathering it.
And I think it’s easier to upgrade power plants once everyone is fueling from the grid.Krom wrote:3) IMO Electric as it currently stands is not the solution, although continued development is the only way to reach a real solution.
the Peter Builts and Freightliners of the world will still fuel the same until the electric engine gets really good.woodchip wrote:So how will I be able to haul 20 sheets of plywood and tow a 20 foot cargo trailer with the new Govt. Motors mandated electric whiz bang car of the future? I can now understand how abortion on demand will be useful as the new transport of the future will be lucky to fit 2 people let alone a family of four.
We don't know what the first ten years would be like.Burlyman wrote:If people started using electric cars, people who work at oil companies would lose their jobs. I see a rough transition. =P
http://jagadees.wordpress.com/2007/10/2 ... fficiency/Spidey wrote:I happen to know a little bit about electric motors, and the fact is…they can produce the kind of torque internal combustion engines can only dream about.
Anyway with that said, electric cars are only good for abating point source pollution, and actually use much more energy because of all kinds of losses…conversion…transmission…manufacturing…etc. And if you don’t already know the inefficiencies of electric vehicles…you have no right advocating their use.
Only thing that is true is the fact you love to post stuff you read without showing the source or even the capacity to show anything resembling an individual thought.ThunderBunny wrote:Only mad 'cause it's true aren't ya?
One of the links I posted from Tesla's site shows the total picture. And I was referring to this particular statement by you...Spidey wrote:I’m sorry SS, but you are making the exact mistake I was referring to.
Those efficiency numbers are used after the power is generated/converted and already in the car…it does not take into consideration the efficiency of making the power in the first place, and getting it to the car…etc.
Do you know how much loss is in just the transformers used to convert to high voltage and then back to low voltage? Then more loss converting to even lower DC? Then there is the transmission loss over the conductors…etc. (high tension loss)
Then there is the cost in energy to make the batteries…
The list goes on and on.
As a rule of thumb it is most efficient to turn energy into motion with the least conversion steps…and the electric car breaks that rule…and then some.
Understand…I’m looking at the total picture…and you are just looking at the car.
The efficiencies of electric vehicles are quite high and while the total losses from plant to vehicle are much lower than that of the car itself, they remain better than non-electric vehicles.Spidey wrote:And if you don’t already know the inefficiencies of electric vehicles…
50-100K+ dollarsSuperSheep wrote:http://jagadees.wordpress.com/2007/10/2 ... fficiency/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Roadster
http://www.teslamotors.com/efficiency/well_to_wheel.php
I'd say this pretty much sums up the efficiency differences.
Yes, it's called "Am-Trak" and "Gray Hound". both are struggling to stay afloat. Mass transit is inconvenient. You sound like you're talking about teleportation. .. that's hardly proven.Octopus wrote:Personally I don't think cars are the answer to our transportation issue in the future. What we really need is an easy to build network that will allow people to commute from one place in the country to another at the push of a button. And we could use technology that already exists that’s already “proven”.
Remember what the internet did for information? I want the same for logistics and transpiration.
Your from TEXAS, Octopus! Public Transportation works in the east, where they build everything close together. It has severe problems as you move west. We build everything all spread out. It makes public transportation of very limited usefulness.Octopus wrote:What we really need is an easy to build network that will allow people to commute from one place in the country to another at the push of a button.
exactly what do you find hard to believe?Spidey wrote:Sorry SS, I’m not buying it, and if all you have to prove your point is internet & electric car industry propaganda, you’re not going to make points with me.
Excuse me?Spidey wrote:I find it hard to believe you still ask me dumb questions.