Re: Have your cake and eat it too! | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Britt2Asa (Britt2Asa![]() |
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Date: Fri, 21 May 2010 13:28:49 -0700 (PDT) |
Guys,
Its nice to be back! If you don't mind me saying since I work in the
industry and don't just read stuff off the internet, Apple pie is Apple pie but
there are a lot of different receipts. Tesla's application is specific to Tesla.
Other manufacturers do it differently. You know up in Sunderland at the Nissan
plant they will be producing 50,000 LEAFs a year in another 12 months. (Next
years production is from Japan). You say it will never take off? Well not on the
level of taxes and policies the US has but over here with a London Low emissions
zone, CO2 charging and fuel tax it is quickly shifting towards electric cars in
the right application.
The analogy is a bit silly if you don't mind me saying. Do you not think
the battery failed in your computer because the charger was probably not the
best? When you can buy a computer charger/phone charger for a few dollars of
EBAY, don't be surprised when your Li-ion battery only lasts a year or two. The
chargers we use cost 5000.00 EACH (that's pounds, not dollars). Come from Brusa
in Switzerland. We use 2 or 4 on each vehicle. They look at charging on a cell
level, that is each individual cell in each li-ion module is looked at
and the charge is individually controlled. This as you can imagine is very
very expensive to design and build but adds greatly to the battery life.
(estimated 10 plus years in excess of the vehicle life) Don't assume the
batteries in the car you eventually buy have much in common with you computer
other than they are both called Li-ion.
Do you know that an industry is being built up here in the UK in the USA
and Japan to "second life" all these batteries when they are no longer suitable
to work in a vehicle but still can hold energy? You can pile them up on a truck
and get one gigawatt of power as a portable power supply. Use them to store wind
energy generated at night when the grid demand is low, use them as back up power
storage for data centres, hospitals, office buildings. Even seen designs to put
them in sailing yachts as ballast and energy for a supplemental electric motor.
I'm not involved in that side of the business but talk to people who are every
week. The point of this is having a higher value on the used batteries means a
lower whole life cost on the vehicle which makes them more affordable as the
capital cost on electric vehicles is very high currently.
Enough on the lesson. The nameless company I work for is design some stuff
that will be out in the next year or two that is pretty amazing and cutting edge
stuff. Oh and most of the engineering team are serious gear heads. Our
engineering director spent his last two years at Mclaren working on the new
little super car. (MP whatever it is called) He also did most of the
architecture on the SLR. An electric car wouldn't work for me, I drive 400 miles
most day. Diesel BMW is the only way to afford the fuel and emissions taxes and
go that distance but for most people commuting only 10-20 miles a day an EV
would work very well even if just a second car.
I am not giving up the Italian car thing but trust me if you are a car buff
you need to keep your eyes open cause there is some really interesting stuff in
the EV world and more coming out. Over here in the next 2 years we have Nissan,
Merc, Mitsubishi, Audi, Citroen, Fiat, Peugeot, Vauxhall, and possibly Ford (not
confirmed yet but the market rumours are there) all introducing electric cars to
the mainstream market. I bet the Lotus Evora is an EV pretty soon (Lotus and
Jag/Land Rover are constantly running recruitment ads here for engineers in
the electric car industry)
One last little point, I don't know anybody working in the
manufacturing/engineering side of the electric vehicle business who is doing it
to save the world or make the world greener. They are doing it because it is
cutting edge technology and it is fascinating. If you like cars and mechanics
and engineering keep your eyes open on what is coming out because you will find
it as fascinating as I do!
Britt
BR in the
UK
1986 328GTS (LHD 89,940km) Died August 19, 2006 Shrewsbury UK 1980 400i (RHD 74,000 miles) Searching for the right 512TR 1985 Bertone X1/9 2003 BMW 530d 1991 Alfa Spider S4 LHD 1993 Alfa Spider S4 LHD 2010 BMW 320d In a message dated 21/05/2010 19:19:11 GMT Daylight Time,
FList [at] hanshansen.org writes:
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Hans E. Hansen <FList [at] hanshansen.org> wrote: |
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Re: Have your cake and eat it too! Mike Fleischer, May 22 2010
- Re: Have your cake and eat it too! Hans E. Hansen, May 22 2010
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