A state of the art BEV (battery electric vehicle) can get a 300 mile range, recharge to 80% capacity in 15 minutes, doesn't pollute at all, can out-accelerate any gas car, will be much cheaper to refuel, and won't have the maintainance issues anything with an engine will have. A hybrid may be a more efficient gas car, yet it's still a gas car with all the inherent drawbacks. There's still those 650,000 cancer deaths annually from fossil fuel use.
Anyone here know the real reason the auto industry won't produce BEVs which make more sense than hybrids or fuel cells? The reason is that the only thing they usually need is tires. They just don't break. Over the life of a car the automakers make several times the initial purchase price of the car in parts. USPS used to have a fleet of electric mail delivery vehicles. The drivers loved them. They were ideally suited to the task for which they were designed. Know why they don't have them any more? The mechanics union complained because they seldom needed maintainance and they were afraid of eventual layoffs.
And before anyone starts with the usual "drawbacks" of BEVs, here's a short list:
Myth #1: BEVs are slow
Reality: They can use energy storage just like hybrids and accelerate to 60 mph in as fast as three seconds. The older ones which were slow lacked energy storage and used heavy lead acid batteries not up to the task of feeding the motors the needed current. The new ones can outaccelerate any gas car. The
T-zero BEV beat a Doge Viper in the quarter mile.
Myth #2: BEVs don't have the range needed for most drivers
Reality: A state of the art BEV has a range of 250 to 300 miles. Battery technology is advancing at a rapid pace. 250 miles is adequate for 99% of the drivers 99% of the time. Even when it isn't, the range is not a serious drawback any more as you'll see next.
Myth #3: BEVs take a long time to recharge
Reality: Current battery designs can reach 80% SOC (state-of-charge) in 15 minutes. Newer designs may do it in eight. The older lead-acid batteries took overnight to recharge. This makes the range issue moot. A 15 minute stop every 200 miles or so is not a serious problem on a long trip. After all, you need bathroom and food breaks.
Myth #4: BEVs are lousy in cold weather
Reality: Current lithium ion and lithium polymer batteries work well in temperatures of -40°C. Again, the older battery technology caused the cold weather problem.
Myth #5: BEVs are much more expensive than gas cars or hybrids
Reality: Only because they're not mass produced. One of the biggest problems is that nobody makes a large battery expressly designed for BEV use. Want to know why? Because the battery manufacturers spent R&D time working on one and then the automakers decided to pull out of the BEV market, in effect making all that R&D money wasted. If/when the automakers really want to mass produce a BEV, it will acutally cost less than a comparable gas car.
Myth #6: The battery packs on BEVs will eventually need to be replaced at great expense.
Reality: True and false. Yes, they will eventually wear out but with modern charging algorithms which preserve battery life this will be long after the rest of the car wears out. Some BEVs have well over 150,000 miles in service and the batteries are still as good as new.
Myth #7: Even if everything else is true, won't lack of charging stations prevent widespread BEV use?
Reality: Gas cars were adopted before there were gas stations everwhere. Somehow we managed. Setting up a charging station is trivial compared to setting up a gas station. If the public wants BEVs, the charging stations for them will exist.
Myth #8: Aren't fuel cells a better alternative?
Reality: Not a chance. It takes energy to make hydrogen for a fuel cell and energy to transport it. This is energy from the grid. A fuel cell is less efficient than a battery. Hydrogen is highly explosive and not something which should be in a moving vehicle. A fuel cell is really a less efficient battery, that's all.
If I think of any more I'll add to my list. It's amazing how the automakers have brainwashed the general public, including the otherwise intelligent people on this site, with regard to BEVs. The fact is that all of the alleged drawbacks of BEVs are for BEVs based on old technology, in some cases century old technology. Hybrids are merely a way of appearing green while satisfying the oil industry by still consuming fossil fuels. Fact is that the oil industry is deathly afraid of the public adopting BEVs en masse.