Author Topic: Interesting read on electric cars  (Read 145396 times)

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Offline Rodt

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #550 on: July 22, 2022, 08:03:51 AM »
I may be thinking about it a bit too simplistically but if electric is the way we are going (or even a hybrid) why can't they have simple things like a solar panel incorporated into the roof, bonnet etc or even be these. I saw an article some time ago about a caravan awning being a flexible solar panel so it can be done.

Also have been thinking that with the big 4wd's or maybe even the smaller vehicles why couldn't they have a built in generator. Still uses fuel yes but a hell of a lot less than filling the vehicle up.

Just two ideas but I think it is this sort of innovation that will get this technology wider acceptance as the biggest opposition that I see at this stage is the fear of getting stranded.

Offline Pottsy

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #551 on: July 22, 2022, 09:01:35 AM »
I may be thinking about it a bit too simplistically but if electric is the way we are going (or even a hybrid) why can't they have simple things like a solar panel incorporated into the roof, bonnet etc or even be these. I saw an article some time ago about a caravan awning being a flexible solar panel so it can be done.

Also have been thinking that with the big 4wd's or maybe even the smaller vehicles why couldn't they have a built in generator. Still uses fuel yes but a hell of a lot less than filling the vehicle up.

Just two ideas but I think it is this sort of innovation that will get this technology wider acceptance as the biggest opposition that I see at this stage is the fear of getting stranded.

Check out the Nissan XTrail E version touted for 2023, it has a ICE which powers a generator and regenerative braking and down hill running etc
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Offline 2Strokeit

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #552 on: July 22, 2022, 09:45:48 AM »


I may be thinking about it a bit too simplistically but if electric is the way we are going (or even a hybrid) why can't they have simple things like a solar panel incorporated into the roof, bonnet etc or even be these.

Problem I can see with that is how do you reliably shut power down from one panel or zone  in an accident? Not just the power wire but every cell could spark. Has the runaway lithium battery fire problem been solved, it's been how many years?


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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #553 on: July 22, 2022, 06:33:01 PM »
I may be thinking about it a bit too simplistically but if electric is the way we are going (or even a hybrid) why can't they have simple things like a solar panel incorporated into the roof, bonnet etc or even be these. I saw an article some time ago about a caravan awning being a flexible solar panel so it can be done.

Also have been thinking that with the big 4wd's or maybe even the smaller vehicles why couldn't they have a built in generator. Still uses fuel yes but a hell of a lot less than filling the vehicle up.

Just two ideas but I think it is this sort of innovation that will get this technology wider acceptance as the biggest opposition that I see at this stage is the fear of getting stranded.

 ;D ;D ;D

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Offline edz

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #554 on: July 23, 2022, 09:06:24 AM »


Been thinking that with the big 4wd's or maybe even the smaller vehicles why couldn't they have a built in generator. Still uses fuel yes but a hell of a lot less than filling the vehicle up.




Sort all the problems for cars / trucks / homes with a fingernail size pellet of basicaly harmless radioactive material to heat a closed circuit water system, to generate steam / power a small turbine make electricty .. the unit would be roughly the size of a milk crate plus a water tank and radiator ..
They do have micro reactors already, The issue is more about letting the radioactive material out into the public .
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Offline Mace

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #555 on: July 23, 2022, 04:00:08 PM »
I may be thinking about it a bit too simplistically but if electric is the way we are going (or even a hybrid) why can't they have simple things like a solar panel incorporated into the roof, bonnet etc or even be these. I saw an article some time ago about a caravan awning being a flexible solar panel so it can be done.



Feasible, but...

A 30kw car battery takes 30,000 watts to charge.  That's 100 hours of charging time @ full panel capacity of a 300w panel...  If you could get say 1200w capacity out of a vehicle roof space, that would take 25 hours to charge (at full panel capacity).  So to fully charge would likely take 3 to 4 days.

So integration of solar panels into a vehicle shell would assist, but perhaps not so much in the big picture.

New panel technology may change this.

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Offline Fizzie

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #556 on: July 24, 2022, 06:58:15 AM »
Not disagreeing with you in any way, Mace, but a solar panel on the roof would certainly help keep the battery topped up. & if you're only doing short runs, it may be sufficient ???
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Offline mumbls

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #557 on: July 24, 2022, 01:26:13 PM »
Feasible, but...

A 30kw car battery takes 30,000 watts to charge.  That's 100 hours of charging time @ full panel capacity of a 300w panel...  If you could get say 1200w capacity out of a vehicle roof space, that would take 25 hours to charge (at full panel capacity).  So to fully charge would likely take 3 to 4 days.

So integration of solar panels into a vehicle shell would assist, but perhaps not so much in the big picture.

New panel technology may change this.

 :cheers:

That may be correct, but it would be interesting in the real world. My wife is a good example, she does 5ks to work and the car sits outside all day (8.5 hrs). Yes the car would need mains connection from time to time, but the panels should do the bulk of it. Be interesting to see how many commuters fit this profile? 
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Offline Fizzie

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #558 on: July 24, 2022, 03:55:13 PM »
It would be an interesting one to check out ???

As Mace said: A 30kw car battery takes 30,000 watts to charge.  That's 100 hours of charging time @ full panel capacity of a 300w panel.

No arguments there, but looking at it incredibly simply ;D, that 30kw = ~400k range, so 3kw = 40k & 1.5kw = 20k. Using that same 300w panel, that should be only 5 hours to recharge that 1.5kw!
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Offline austastar

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #559 on: July 24, 2022, 07:53:31 PM »
Hi,
   An example of the limitations of driving on solar only is the Darwin to Adelaide solar challenge.
Not exactly a utilitarian vehicle.
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Offline Robbo

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #560 on: July 24, 2022, 08:20:13 PM »
Here ya go, a simple electric truck.

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Offline poid

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #561 on: July 24, 2022, 09:07:30 PM »
It would be an interesting one to check out ???

As Mace said: A 30kw car battery takes 30,000 watts to charge.  That's 100 hours of charging time @ full panel capacity of a 300w panel.

No arguments there, but looking at it incredibly simply ;D, that 30kw = ~400k range, so 3kw = 40k & 1.5kw = 20k. Using that same 300w panel, that should be only 5 hours to recharge that 1.5kw!

you're not getting 400km range out of a 30kw battery, nor the full 300w out of the panel. In Sydney a 300w would put out an average of 1.2kw a day across a year. A Tesla model 3 uses around 13-16kwh/100km for most people, depending on conditions and model. So less than 10km a day on average.

Fiskar is doing a whole roof panel for their Ocean SUV, and claim it can produce ~2,400km worth of charging a year if the car is in the sun the whole time. So that's ~6.5km a day of driving range on average. I don't think I'd be parking a Fiskar in the sun all day.
« Last Edit: July 24, 2022, 09:41:51 PM by poid »
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Offline MDS69

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #562 on: July 25, 2022, 08:37:50 PM »
I saw a meme somewhere recently, probably Facebook, saying along the lines that if you want to drive/own an EV you should be made to charge it via solar or a wind farm and not use mains power or generator etc. I like that way of thinking.

Offline gronk

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #563 on: July 26, 2022, 09:55:25 AM »
I saw a meme somewhere recently, probably Facebook, saying along the lines that if you want to drive/own an EV you should be made to charge it via solar or a wind farm and not use mains power or generator etc. I like that way of thinking.

The speed at which they are shutting fossil fuel power stations down, that idea may have to be mandatory !
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Offline Mace

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #564 on: July 26, 2022, 10:08:36 AM »
The speed at which they are shutting fossil fuel power stations down, that idea may have to be mandatory !

People with home solar - like ourselves, are the most likely first adapters to EV's, so no issues with that.  With home solar approaching 25% of residents in some areas many will see the benefits of adding an EV battery to their solar set up at a far cheaper cost than a Power Wall. The new term is V2H - Vehicle to Home.

https://theconversation.com/can-my-electric-car-power-my-house-not-yet-for-most-drivers-but-vehicle-to-home-charging-is-coming-163332

A 13.5 kwh power wall costs $12k plus installation so about $16k all up.  A new EV will cost you $20-25k more than the comparable ICE vehicle and gives you at least 30kwh capacity and possibly 50kwh.   

On our radar...

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Offline gronk

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #565 on: July 26, 2022, 07:48:20 PM »
People with home solar - like ourselves, are the most likely first adapters to EV's, so no issues with that.  With home solar approaching 25% of residents in some areas many will see the benefits of adding an EV battery to their solar set up at a far cheaper cost than a Power Wall. The new term is V2H - Vehicle to Home.

https://theconversation.com/can-my-electric-car-power-my-house-not-yet-for-most-drivers-but-vehicle-to-home-charging-is-coming-163332

A 13.5 kwh power wall costs $12k plus installation so about $16k all up.  A new EV will cost you $20-25k more than the comparable ICE vehicle and gives you at least 30kwh capacity and possibly 50kwh.   

On our radar...

 :cheers:

How do you think that would work ?  You use the EV to go to work, come home and charge it ?  What with ?
And then you say you’ll use the EV battery as a power cell for your home ?

The solar on your roof can certainly power your home…during the day(if sunny )
The solar on your roof could also charge the EV ( if the system was big enough )….but the EV is at your work, and doesn’t come home till it’s nearly dark.
So now the dilemma is…..the EV needs charging….with grid power…and you’ll pay a lot more than the house kw/h price to charge it.
But you still have no home use for the EV battery as it’s charging ?
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Offline alnjan

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #566 on: July 26, 2022, 08:11:48 PM »
Don't know how much truth there is to this article, it's on facebook and no factchecker has denied it yet so it must be true ;D

I have rad else where the biggest issue with the fast charger sets ups is the conventional family hoe does not have the capacity to deliver a fast charge for the EV.   

For the rest of the story maybe someone from the area may be able to comment.

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=10225541231970095&set=a.3978068002545
Cheers

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #567 on: July 26, 2022, 08:37:11 PM »
long live petrol and diesel!
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Offline gronk

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #568 on: July 26, 2022, 10:17:01 PM »
long live petrol and diesel!

Yep, for a while yet !!
I don’t believe EV’s are the future…more a stop gap until the next “solution”..

Fuel cells, fusion , hydrogen, ..but not as we know them now.
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Offline Fizzie

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #569 on: July 27, 2022, 07:50:26 AM »
long live petrol and diesel!

Think it depends on what you call "long" ???

10 years, yep definitely, beyond that I'm not too sure ???

& not too sure what it's going to mean for those of us that would usually be looking at replacing their car in that 10 years time :'( ???
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Offline NZMarkb

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #570 on: July 27, 2022, 08:22:40 AM »


10 years, yep definitely, beyond that I'm not too sure ???


Seriously, I remember in the 70's they were telling us oil was running out
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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #571 on: July 27, 2022, 11:31:40 AM »
Seriously, I remember in the 70's they were telling us oil was running out

...and another ice age was coming...
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Offline NZMarkb

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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #572 on: July 27, 2022, 11:46:04 AM »
...and another ice age was coming...

Yes I remember that too :cup:
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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #573 on: July 27, 2022, 02:01:56 PM »
...and another ice age was coming...

And now it’s climate change…..we’ll see what became of it in 40 years ?

Sorry, not me…I won’t be around !!
« Last Edit: July 27, 2022, 10:06:00 PM by gronk »
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Re: Interesting read on electric cars
« Reply #574 on: July 27, 2022, 03:15:30 PM »
Seriously, I remember in the 70's they were telling us oil was running out

... and they were telling us nothing would save the Governor General
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