7/24/2008 11:34:17 PM
They need to get the fuck on with it, then.JESUS FUCKING CHRIST IS IT TOMORROW YET?
7/24/2008 11:37:00 PM
wont charging a car everyday raise the electric bill up the ass? way more than keeping the thermostat at 72 during the summer.
7/24/2008 11:50:25 PM
For one, you charge it overnight, which with many utilities is cheaper because of all the access energy they have for the time being in the PM hours.Then, according to CNN, the cars would suck up about as much as four plasma screens. Not cheap, but cheaper than gas, I'd assume.
7/24/2008 11:55:14 PM
It is cheaper, especially if you factor in the fact that using more electricity at night would make electricity cheaper during the day as instead of having to operate day plants which start in the morning and run until night, they can be replaced with more efficient base load plants which run 24/7. That takes time, but utilities are used to dealing with time. The problem remains, however, even after shifting the entire benefit of the changeover to nightime car-charging, you still pay 4 cents a kwh. This is cheaper than gasoline but not substantially cheaper: even at $3.50 a gallon it will take five years to pay off the battery and there is no guarantee gasoline will stay this expensive.
7/25/2008 12:11:08 AM
I wonder how much of the extra power usage could be covered by a few solar panels on your house.
7/25/2008 12:11:25 AM
^^ What's that convert to in $ per mile?I'm only asking you because I believe you'd figure it out before I would. [Edited on July 25, 2008 at 12:16 AM. Reason : curious yellow today]
7/25/2008 12:16:34 AM
i did some cost calculations last year herehttp://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=474626Not sure if they are still valid, but the should be in the ballpark. In short, no, a plug-in hybrid will not raise your electricity bill "up the ass". It will be at most a buck or two for a full recharge, way cheaper than gas at this point
7/25/2008 8:03:40 AM
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/Story?id=5406454&page=1
7/25/2008 8:08:28 AM
i am an intern with a power company. i work with coal-fired boilers. this is what i know about our equipment and service area (i would imagine it's about the same for other areas):the only time our units run at full load is during the day in the summer and sometimes during the colder times of the winter.if everyone was charging cars at night, we could run our equipment at upper loads all night. we could probably actually charge less for that energy because keeping our units at higher loads increases our efficiency and results in less equipment failures (less unit down-time during peak hours + less maintenance costs = $$$). If we charge less for power at night, that's when people will charge their cars. I'm not sure about other areas of the country, but I see no reason from the electric utility standpoint that plug-in hybrids and even all-electrics would cause strains on the grid. hell, we have dozens of combustion turbines that just sit there all night long.yes, your electric bill will go up, but most people's gas bill has the potential to go to next to nothing. fossil and nuclear plants are way more efficient than the internal combustion engines in our cars. power company makes more money. consumer saves money. the oil tycoons go broke. it's better for everyone.i have this same conversation with senior engineers almost weekly.[Edited on July 25, 2008 at 9:12 AM. Reason : and they agree]
7/25/2008 9:10:55 AM
plug-in hybrids + wind, solar, geothermal, nuclear.If we had heavy tax incentives for home/business wind and solar along with new nukes we'd be off oil pretty quick. But congress is full of retards, so that wont happen.
7/25/2008 9:13:22 AM
But congress is full of retards politicians getting paid off by automotive/petroleum industries
7/25/2008 9:15:16 AM
I think most of them just lack the higher brain functions to figure it out. You cant blame big oil for all of it.
7/25/2008 9:52:20 AM
7/25/2008 10:28:00 AM
^Good luck finding batteries that will provide adequate performance and capacity.Even Tesla, the darling of silicon valley, has seen huge problems getting a product to the market.
7/25/2008 10:43:25 AM
7/25/2008 11:06:06 AM
My only question is this...what happens if you need to drive long distances? In any case, this would justify building more nuclear power plants. I don't know why we wouldn't anyway.
7/25/2008 11:15:21 AM
7/25/2008 11:22:16 AM
7/25/2008 11:26:42 AM
I assume it'll work like a regular hybrid after the initial charge is gone.^yeah[Edited on July 25, 2008 at 11:27 AM. Reason : beat me]
7/25/2008 11:27:32 AM
7/25/2008 11:46:03 AM
LAST GAS CHARGE FOR 80 MILES
7/25/2008 11:48:19 AM
7/25/2008 11:50:14 AM
We have batteries that can provide adequate performance and capacity. The problem is that producing lithium batteries is still very energy intensive and as such expensive. It is a catch 22: if energy is cheap then lithium is cheap; but if energy is cheap then we don't need lithium. That is, unless oil is abnormally expensive and coal is the same old rediculously cheap. In that case, burning coal to produce lithium batteries and electricity to drive a car should be cost effective, given time, compared to gasoline alone. But that requires infrastructure we still lack for large-size lithium battery production.
7/25/2008 12:04:55 PM
coal is sky-high right now too, but it's mainly because it costs so much to get it to power plants with diesel-electric locomotives
7/25/2008 12:48:44 PM
7/25/2008 5:33:15 PM
^ I agree with everything in that post.My quoted comment was in response to somebody wondering why we don't have plug-in hybrids RIGHT NOW.Battery technology is still catching up to everything else. It'll get the eventually, if some other form of electrical storage (super capacitors, fuel cells, flywheels, etc) doesn't beat it out in the near future.
7/25/2008 5:36:33 PM
I wonder what the aliens use to power their spacecraft, we should figure that out and use that.
7/25/2008 7:00:21 PM
pretty sure aliens travel in tubes
7/25/2008 7:13:35 PM
dude when I get an electric car I am totally gonna bury the cord and plug my shit in to next door.
7/25/2008 10:11:59 PM
7/26/2008 12:30:26 AM
7/26/2008 1:08:14 AM
I really don't think a 3phase 220 line is going to be all that bad to get to someone's home. It's not quite a do-it-yourself project, but I don't see how it would be a prohibitive investment.
7/26/2008 1:20:00 AM
^^Bullshit. Typical Noen, talking out of your ass again.There are no secondary batteries in existence that can deliver the kind of power-to-weight ratio of gasoline. It's not even close right now.Sure, there are a few exotic battery technologies that show a lot of promise, but they still nowhere near being ready for use. It's not a production issue, it's a research and development issue. A technology issue. And right now the battery technology is the prohibiting factor which has kept electric cars off the road thus far.[Edited on July 26, 2008 at 1:25 AM. Reason : 2]
7/26/2008 1:24:43 AM
http://www.egovehicles.comhttp://www.zenncars.comhttp://www.vectrix.comhttp://www.teslamotors.com
7/26/2008 3:10:23 AM
so, instead of the evil oil companies, we will have evil power companies. w00t!
7/27/2008 11:47:23 PM
power companies are regulated
7/28/2008 7:45:55 AM
lol, the entire nation could go to plug-in hybrids and it wouldn't even affect the size of the power companies very much.You might as well shift your conspiracies to battery makers.
7/28/2008 8:45:22 AM
^^ The oil companies are regulated. So what? "being regulated" does not change the nature of the business: power comes from coal; coal is produced in capitalistic countries by corporations trying to make money and is therefore cheap and reliable. Gasoline comes from oil; oil is produced in statist countries by governments trying to make money and is therefore irrational and unreliable. Back when the vast majority of the world's oil came from corporations oil was cheap and reliable. And yet you sit there and honestly say more government is what is needed.
7/28/2008 10:04:46 AM
Banks are regulated too, and a fat lot of good that did us....
7/28/2008 10:07:43 AM
http://www.autobloggreen.com/2008/07/28/bob-lutz-30k-e-flex-cars-in-europe-in-first-year-1m-worldwide/
7/28/2008 12:57:46 PM
7/28/2008 1:45:10 PM
I've used both within the past two years, and neither of them had it, IIRC.It'd probably be removed the second plug-ins became wide-spread, anyways.
7/28/2008 1:47:39 PM
Progress Energy does offer daytime/nighttime rates, but you must ask for it and they will charge you up-front for the installation and removal of the special meter, under the assumption that the next occupant will want to go back to the regular fixed rate schedule:months of June through September: 16.179¢ per on-peak kWh 4.528¢ per off-peakmonths of October through May:15.296¢ per on-peak kWh kWh 4.528¢ per off-peak kWhhttp://www.progress-energy.com/aboutenergy/rates/NCScheduleR-TOUE.pdf
7/28/2008 2:25:47 PM
7/28/2008 8:52:45 PM
power to weight is pretty unimportant for basic commuter travel. If I lived in a large city I'd probably have an electric car or a motorcycle. As long as your electric car can get up to interstate speed and maintain 60 mph that's really all you need for all practical purposes.
7/28/2008 8:57:16 PM
^^I'm very familiar with battery technology. It is, and has been, the limiting factor keeping electric cars and hybrid plug-ins from the mass-market. And I maintain that it's a technology issue, not an infrastructure or production issue. Even the "cutting edge" batteries such as lithium-polymer, molten salt and zinc-air would have issues with range, limited cycling, memory effect, slow recharge, etc. Please point me to a link showing a battery capable of powering a car that can be charged in 3-5 minutes. I'm interested, to say the least.^On the contrary, battery power-to-weight ratio (along with cost) is the limiting factor in electric vehicles today.Sure, electric motors can deliver plenty of power to the wheels, but supplying that motor with enough energy requires large, heavy battery clusters that force the manufacturer to make major design compromises. Compromises like not having any storage space. Or having to recharge the thing more than 8 hours. Or being so lightweight that you're guaranteed to die in a head-on collision with a real car.[Edited on July 28, 2008 at 11:32 PM. Reason : 2]
7/28/2008 11:31:02 PM
^ this is all true, but they have to start somewhere, and there's nothing that drives that type of development like loads of $$$ from consumer spending.The first cars were pretty much crap compared to stuff even 10 years later. There are a lot of promising new materials in nanoscale research that I think will eventually lead to next-gen battery tech we're waiting for. 30 years down the road, the US is going to be a very different place, for the better, despite the issue of peak-oil.
7/29/2008 2:00:32 AM
I think as long as sony doesn't make the batteries we'll be ok.
7/29/2008 8:55:04 AM
Prawn Star, even if you were capable of recharging the thing in 5 minutes society could never allow you to charge it at home that fast: it would be disasterous to the production and distribution of electricity. As such, that we lack such battery technology is irrelevant: if people want to charge them at home, they are going to charge them over many hours. Which, as a plug-in hybrid, is perfectly fine to leave it plugged in while you sleep. That said, as the range is only 40 miles, being able to charge it in 5 minutes is worthless: you are not going to stop every 40 miles anyway. That would be a rediculous anoyance, in my opinion. Now, it could make sense if your commute to work is 40+ miles that charging it at work would make sense, but there again you have an 8 hour window to do the charging.
7/29/2008 9:41:35 AM