ddrueding
Fixture
Once batteries hit a range of one thousand miles this will be less of an issue.
Actually at about 300 miles range is probably a non-issue. 1000 miles would just by the icing on the cake. By the time most people drive 300 miles, they'll be stopping at least 30 minutes to eat/use the restroom. We'll certainly have 30 minute fast recharge at rest stops once enough people own EVs.Once batteries hit a range of one thousand miles this will be less of an issue.
Once batteries hit a range of one thousand miles this will be less of an issue.
The newfangled vehicles should behave similarly to current gasoline-powered vehicles, i.e., somewhere in the 250-400 mile range. 1000 miles is unnecessary for standard applications. The extra batteries would be more expensive and heavier, too.
I'll agree that it isn't entirely practical regardless of the energy densities they may devise. But compared to having a massive number of electric charging locations where the proprietor will not be making the margins they do on gas, many other things are feasible.
From what I've read the margins on gas are very slim, something like 10 cents a gallon.
The fact that the whole process is several times less efficient than gasoline's doesn't concern you?
Once batteries hit a range of one thousand miles this will be less of an issue.
Or hydrogen production? I don't know enough about the latter to comment really but I do know there is virtually an unlimited supply of hydrogen available vs. a very finite amount of crude oil left.
These batteries ever need replacement? What will that cost? How about when the temperature drops down to say zero degrees what is the range then?
...
Unintended consequences are a bitch!
It's worth spending 15 minutes reading about the Hydrogen Economy:
Free hydrogen does not occur naturally in quantity, and thus it must be generated from some other energy source ... Hydrogen is therefore an energy carrier (like electricity), not a primary energy source (like coal).
In other words, there's only an unlimited supply of hydrogen if you use lots of energy to manufacture it - more unintended consequences.
"Currently it takes 2½ times as much energy to make a hydrogen fuel cell than is obtained from it during its service life."
Thanks for the link that's a very informative page. I see what you mean about efficiency; Quoting from the link...
Ouch!
Fuel cells require high purity hydrogen because the impurities would quickly degrade the life of the fuel cell stack.
For me the range limit is not as much of a concern as is the charging time.
Not to mention what the effect on the power grid is going to be when peak usuage increases 100 fold or more. Everyone gets home from work at night and plugs in their buggy at the same time to recharge and they'll be brown outs all across the country.
New power plants aren't cheap or fast to build. It takes many years just to get a new fossil fuel plant permitted - Nuclear even longer. On top of that there is the construction time. Besides any increase in the consumption of fossil fuels not only increases the harm to the enviroment but hastens the day when fossil fuels will no longer be available. Then where do you get you juice from?
Why aren't these two related in your mind?
I know there's megawatt loads on the grid. Take a datacenter for example. A backup diesel generator of say 1.5MW is a 16 cylinder turbocharged engine the size of a small minibus, using 2" thick copper lines for transmission to the switching gear. Those lines couldn't be used to plug into a vehicle because of minimum bend radius and sheer weight. And of course the battery in question will melt into a pile of slag before achieving capacity.
Where I work we use about 15,000,000 kwh of electric per month. We are supplied by two, 3 phase, 69000V lines.
There are times throughtout the year when the power company ask us to cut down to the minimum for 8 - 12 hours. Basically, lighting.
Our electric grid needs some serious updating and upgrading before electric vehicles move out of the nitch market.
Assuming no connection to the grid. Assuming you capture more energy during productive hours than you can use in a day. What is the best method of energy storage for use as electricity later in the year?
A smart grid with smart loads would allow for these kinds of alterations without user intervention. I still don't see the problem.
Famous last words before the big blackout... :bigeek:
Assuming no connection to the grid. Assuming you capture more energy during productive hours than you can use in a day. What is the best method of energy storage for use as electricity later in the year?
A smart grid with smart loads would allow for these kinds of alterations without user intervention. I still don't see the problem.
Ah yes, I forgot about that even though I can look out my window and see one.
And more broadly: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_energy_storage
Large bladders in the attic and basement. Would require significant structural reinforcements, and the drop wouldn't be significant (12ft?), but it would be darn awesome.
Edit: Also, if you caputured rain runoff from the roof, your first cycle would be free
Not really practical.Can someone with free time calculate if this is practical?
Does that say you are only dropping the water 2 meters?
That tank sounds huge. I don't think most houses could support 300,000 kg in the attic.