China still generates 65% of their electricity from coal. Single digits achievable for them in 14 yrs? Rhetorical question. We know the answer
He's been largely absent since he was completely wrong on Brexit. Maybe he's recovered from that and this is his new play.LegalDrugPusher said:
OP will depressed when this doesn't pan out
nortex97 said:I'm so old, I remember when the Chevy Volt was supposed to revolutionize the whole industry, with all of it's incredible technology/breakthroughs.MouthBQ98 said:
We don't have enough lithium. We simply don't.
lb3 said:...the RGV.MouthBQ98 said:
We don't have enough lithium. We simply don't.
halfastros81 said:
China still generates 65% of their electricity from coal. Single digits achievable for them in 14 yrs? Rhetorical question. We know the answer
Be more common on the roads? Yes. Take over the roads? Not in the next 10 years. Hybrids haven't even done that yet.MidnightMugdown said:
The newest Tesla has a range of 520 miles and can charge in 30 minutes at a supercharger. That's not far off (if not already there) from handling any daily driving demand someone could have. You can certainly argue power generation/battery supply will not be high enough to sustain the demand, but EVs certainly have the potential to absolutely take over the roads.
UTExan said:Earl_Rudder said:
Millions of Chevy truck owners are going to have to hold their noses and go Ford or Dodge.
GM wants to get out of the auto business if they want to ditch gasoline.
Toyota, a real American company will welcome their business.
chimpanzee said:munch96 said:eric76 said:It would be much worse in hills since it would have much more than it's own weight to drag up the hill.chimpanzee said:As soon as someone makes one, we'll find out.eric76 said:
So how far can an electric pickup pull a loaded horse trailer before the battery runs down?
The best Tesla sedan has a ~270 mile range at highway speeds (EPA rated for ~400, but you lose ~30% of that at a 75 mph cruise). If a truck could match the sedan's range and loses another 25% of its efficiency from towing, you're looking at maybe 200 miles.
Maybe everyone needs to start riding shetland ponies so that they have smaller horses and smaller trailers.
Watched another video those guys did with a 4500lb trailer, and it used 1% battery per mile. So, much worse than I estimated.
I assume that is on flat land. How about in the mountains?munch96 said:chimpanzee said:munch96 said:eric76 said:It would be much worse in hills since it would have much more than it's own weight to drag up the hill.chimpanzee said:As soon as someone makes one, we'll find out.eric76 said:
So how far can an electric pickup pull a loaded horse trailer before the battery runs down?
The best Tesla sedan has a ~270 mile range at highway speeds (EPA rated for ~400, but you lose ~30% of that at a 75 mph cruise). If a truck could match the sedan's range and loses another 25% of its efficiency from towing, you're looking at maybe 200 miles.
Maybe everyone needs to start riding shetland ponies so that they have smaller horses and smaller trailers.
Watched another video those guys did with a 4500lb trailer, and it used 1% battery per mile. So, much worse than I estimated.
Rivian is testing their electric truck prototypes and they are saying range is cut in half when towing at max load
https://rivian.com/support/article/how-does-towing-affect-range
At what speed?MidnightMugdown said:
The newest Tesla has a range of 520 miles and can charge in 30 minutes at a supercharger. That's not far off (if not already there) from handling any daily driving demand someone could have. You can certainly argue power generation/battery supply will not be high enough to sustain the demand, but EVs certainly have the potential to absolutely take over the roads.
eric76 said:I assume that is on flat land. How about in the mountains?munch96 said:chimpanzee said:munch96 said:eric76 said:It would be much worse in hills since it would have much more than it's own weight to drag up the hill.chimpanzee said:As soon as someone makes one, we'll find out.eric76 said:
So how far can an electric pickup pull a loaded horse trailer before the battery runs down?
The best Tesla sedan has a ~270 mile range at highway speeds (EPA rated for ~400, but you lose ~30% of that at a 75 mph cruise). If a truck could match the sedan's range and loses another 25% of its efficiency from towing, you're looking at maybe 200 miles.
Maybe everyone needs to start riding shetland ponies so that they have smaller horses and smaller trailers.
Watched another video those guys did with a 4500lb trailer, and it used 1% battery per mile. So, much worse than I estimated.
Rivian is testing their electric truck prototypes and they are saying range is cut in half when towing at max load
https://rivian.com/support/article/how-does-towing-affect-range
BoydCrowder13 said:
Electric vehicle sales are growing by 50% or so annually. Gas powered vehicle sales are increasing by 2%. I wouldn't be surprised to see the majority of vehicles by electric within 15-20 years.
hbtheduce said:BoydCrowder13 said:
Electric vehicle sales are growing by 50% or so annually. Gas powered vehicle sales are increasing by 2%. I wouldn't be surprised to see the majority of vehicles by electric within 15-20 years.
Or the denominator of those two percentages make your analysis faulty.
BoydCrowder13 said:hbtheduce said:BoydCrowder13 said:
Electric vehicle sales are growing by 50% or so annually. Gas powered vehicle sales are increasing by 2%. I wouldn't be surprised to see the majority of vehicles by electric within 15-20 years.
Or the denominator of those two percentages make your analysis faulty.
We'll see. In 2011, electric car sales in the US were 15,000 cars. In 2020, electrical car sales in the US were 400,000.
Pretty crazy growth in a decade.
hbtheduce said:BoydCrowder13 said:hbtheduce said:BoydCrowder13 said:
Electric vehicle sales are growing by 50% or so annually. Gas powered vehicle sales are increasing by 2%. I wouldn't be surprised to see the majority of vehicles by electric within 15-20 years.
Or the denominator of those two percentages make your analysis faulty.
We'll see. In 2011, electric car sales in the US were 15,000 cars. In 2020, electrical car sales in the US were 400,000.
Pretty crazy growth in a decade.
We sold 15 million cars this year. 2% growth is 300,000 cars.
Sofa king stupid!!!!!Shanked Punt said:
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/01/28/general-motors-plans-to-exclusively-offer-electric-vehicles-by-2035.html
This is great news all around, though hopefully they can bring in the deadline yet another five years or so. Its now time to get all the infrastructure in place. This can't come soon enough to help greatly reduce our dependency on oil.Quote:
DETROIT General Motors wants to end production of all diesel- and gasoline-powered cars, trucks and SUVs by 2035 and shift its entire new fleet to electric vehicles as part of a broader plan to become carbon neutral by 2040, the company said Thursday.
The company plans to use 100% renewable energy to power its U.S. facilities by 2030 and global facilities by 2035 five years ahead of a previously announced goal.
Quote:
He added that the infrastructure needed to support a complete transition to EVs would cost the country the equivalent of $135 billion to $358 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal.
lb3 said:Lithium is quite abundant. Our reserves are low because we simply haven't really invested any resources in developing it here.MouthBQ98 said:
We don't have enough lithium. We simply don't.
The rare earths aren't really even an issue if we are willing to strip mine all of the Mojave and parts of the RGV.
Ol Rock said:
I wonder where all of that electricity will come from?
Aggieangler93 said:
I'm in the market for a new gas guzzling carbon producing fuel burning truck. I can't imagine a dirty coal car (read EV) could ever produce enough power to pull a boat, so they can to get stuffed!!!!