I wouldn't say Elon's woke per se.Teslag said:
Now do Tesla
Trump will fix it.
I wouldn't say Elon's woke per se.Teslag said:
Now do Tesla
I don't think they do either, but people who see people driving electric vehicles assume they do and driving the counterpoint nuts is valuable too.Kansas Kid said:hph6203 said:
Not to mention you get to tell people you're saving the planet and watch their faces go red from anger/frustration. $16 a month for a priceless experience.
I think most Tesla owners on Texags don't think they are saving the planet at all. Only the nut jobs in CA think that.
Quote:
Meanwhile, the NMC battery in the desk line-up is already famous as Dahn and Tesla's "million-mile battery." But, Metzger says, it's due for a major name change.
"This cell it has now 19,500 cycles [and counting]. Each cycle is 300 kilometres. So, if it were at 20,000 cycles it would be 6 million kilometres."
That is to say, 3,728,227.15 miles.
Batteries in a lab have been making incredible breakthroughs since before I was born. Meanwhile, a brand new Ford pickup with an EV power train has a likely $26-35K+ replacement cost t install when it's done, right after the warranty in something like 7 years, largely due to all the cooling/heating circuitry and massive possible litigation cost overhead.hph6203 said:
20,000 cycle life battery claimed by Jeff Dahn's laboratory.
https://electricautonomy.ca/2023/08/29/tesla-jeff-dahn-group-battery-research/Quote:
Meanwhile, the NMC battery in the desk line-up is already famous as Dahn and Tesla's "million-mile battery." But, Metzger says, it's due for a major name change.
"This cell it has now 19,500 cycles [and counting]. Each cycle is 300 kilometres. So, if it were at 20,000 cycles it would be 6 million kilometres."
That is to say, 3,728,227.15 miles.
Fine, pursue it.hph6203 said:
Yes, and battery technology in consumer products have also progressively improved. Is a 20,000 cycle life battery imminent in consumer products? No, but it shows an advancement in the technical limit of batteries.
Batteries currently have a cycle life of 2-3,000 for NCM batteries and 3,000 for LFP batteries and those numbers have progressively improved over the years. Same goes for energy density and charge rates. A battery failing early in an EV is not out of the question, but it's not the norm.
That's why electric vehicles are a technology worth pursuing, because the technological advancements come faster than combustion vehicles and they are combined with a more rapid drop in costs due to the novel nature of the technology. Resulting in a vehicle that is both cheaper to operate and cheaper to buy with less maintenance and fewer air pollutants.
nortex97 said:Fine, pursue it.hph6203 said:
Yes, and battery technology in consumer products have also progressively improved. Is a 20,000 cycle life battery imminent in consumer products? No, but it shows an advancement in the technical limit of batteries.
Batteries currently have a cycle life of 2-3,000 for NCM batteries and 3,000 for LFP batteries and those numbers have progressively improved over the years. Same goes for energy density and charge rates. A battery failing early in an EV is not out of the question, but it's not the norm.
That's why electric vehicles are a technology worth pursuing, because the technological advancements come faster than combustion vehicles and they are combined with a more rapid drop in costs due to the novel nature of the technology. Resulting in a vehicle that is both cheaper to operate and cheaper to buy with less maintenance and fewer air pollutants.
But it's being forced on the rest of us, dangerously, at the cost of our national interests, child labor, terrible environmental effects, and individual freedom/safety. And my iPad Pro is already down 6 percent in 20 minutes since unplugging it. Almost none of us can leave our phones unplugged for 2 days or more, and even fewer make sure not to charge it in compliance with recommendations for battery longevity. I've rarely gotten more than 36 months out of a top end battery for my ICE vehicles in Texas, no matter what Interstate etc. claim/state.
At 100K+ miles in a hot environment (such as Texas) there is a reason warranties end. There are many reasons I won't ever buy one, in other words, no matter the religious dedication to them some have.
hph6203 said:
It's just.... Ignorance. Total lack of understanding of the technology and the systems that surround it. Y'all could start a club. You both are/were wrong about inflation too. He predicted mortgage rates would be 15% by now.
You are projecting, again, among other logical reasoning fallacies.Quote:
The fact that the underlying technology is similar (but not the same) is not indicative that the longevity of the device is going to be the same. That's ignorance.
Number of charge cycles impacts the longevity of the product. An iPhone/iPad experiences daily charge cycles, an EV experiences a charge cycle roughly once every week based on an average driver. This extends the useful life (time) of the product.nortex97 said:You are projecting, again, among other logical reasoning fallacies.Quote:
The fact that the underlying technology is similar (but not the same) is not indicative that the longevity of the device is going to be the same. That's ignorance.
Wow.
Your ignorance is only compounded by your arrogance and anger. Adding extraneous/irrelevant data points doesn't make your diatribe any more on point. The Ford Lightning battery warranty was discussed in the video, and costs to replace it, which I posted.hph6203 said:Number of charge cycles impacts the longevity of the product. An iPhone/iPad experiences daily charge cycles, an EV experiences a charge cycle roughly once every week based on an average driver. This extends the useful life (time) of the product.nortex97 said:You are projecting, again, among other logical reasoning fallacies.Quote:
The fact that the underlying technology is similar (but not the same) is not indicative that the longevity of the device is going to be the same. That's ignorance.
Wow.
Thermal fluctuations negatively impact battery longevity. An iPad is only somewhat protected from high temperatures (i.e. the device will shut off if it gets too hot), but there is no mechanism in the iPad to make sure that it maintains a set temperature. If you leave an iPad in a 150-degree car it will approach 150 degrees. If you leave an iPad in -32 degree car it will approach 32 degrees. You leave an EV parked in a parking lot in the sun it has thermal management systems to ensure the upper and lower ranges are bounded, utilizing a heat pump to maintain temperatures. This extends the useful life of the product.
The rate of charge of a battery negatively impacts the longevity of the battery. A phone battery will charge to 80% within 2 hours even on a slow charger, and to 80% in 40 minutes on a fast charger. It takes an EV a minimum of 8 hours to charge on a home charger, and even when going to a fast charger the thermal management system kicks in to ensure optimal temperatures are maintained.
Charging to 100% negatively impacts the longevity of NCM battery (the battery in your phone, iPad and in long range Tesla's), something routinely done with consumer electronics (your iPad) and rarely done with an electric vehicle. Superchargers by default stop at 80%, most EV owners set their home charger limit to 80-90%.
The number of charge cycles a battery gets in a lab is based upon consistent testing where the thermals are maintained to set temperatures and the rate of charge is consistent across tests. Just because a battery gets 2000 charge cycles in a lab does not mean that it will get 2000 charge cycles in the real world, and iPhone/iPad batteries are abused far more than EV batteries, because the primary utility of an iPad/iPhone degrades with time by virtue of it having an older processor/smaller hard drive/worse screen and the consumer is conditioned to want a new iPhone every 2 years and a new iPad every 4 years. The auto consumer is conditioned to want a new car every ~7 years, and has the expectation that the car will last for 15-20 years.
All that adds up to either you're being ignorant in saying they're the same, or you know they aren't and won't admit it, because the majority of the people reading this thread don't and you can fool them into thinking you're honest.
There are problems with electric vehicles. It is not the battery longevity or the cost of the battery, though there will be improvements there. The biggest struggle for electric vehicle adoption is the charging infrastructure and the grid resiliency to support it. Does that mean we should abandon pursuing electric vehicles? No. Our grid needs upgrading whether we adopt electric vehicles or not, so we might as well build a robust one. I am not conservation-minded, we should be utilizing as much energy as we possibly can.
Your ability to wrongly impute what I am suggesting or have stated is rivalled by only one other poster.hph6203 said:
You understand that 3,000 cycle life suggests a battery longevity of nearly a million miles right? Which is a counter argument to your ignorance. One cycle of an EV battery is roughly 300 miles and that range is increasing.
Ford's Powertrain warranty on their gas cars is 5 years 60,000 miles. The battery and drive unit warranty on a Tesla is 8 years 120,000 miles. Are you suggesting that a Ford is expected to die after only 60,000 miles?
I checked out the video since you keep referring to it. The Ford warranty for the battery is 8 years and 100,000 miles. But the guy in the video in no way suggests that the battery is simply going to stop working at that time. The powertrain warranty on the regular F150 is 36,000 miles. Does the engine just seize at that point?nortex97 said:Your ability to wrongly impute what I am suggesting or have stated is rivalled by only one other poster.hph6203 said:
You understand that 3,000 cycle life suggests a battery longevity of nearly a million miles right? Which is a counter argument to your ignorance. One cycle of an EV battery is roughly 300 miles and that range is increasing.
Ford's Powertrain warranty on their gas cars is 5 years 60,000 miles. The battery and drive unit warranty on a Tesla is 8 years 120,000 miles. Are you suggesting that a Ford is expected to die after only 60,000 miles?
Check out the video above. Or, you can look up the ford warranty directly on your own, it's probably accessible pretty easily, right?
The batteries are tested for bad cells. Bad cells may exist in one or more modules. The Lightning extended range battery consists of nine modules. Bad cells identified are replaced by the module. I guess if I still like my truck and considering what it cost, I'd pay the 30 grand for the battery. It is cheaper than a new truck ICE or otherwise. I don't have to borrow money to pay for the repair.slaughtr said:I checked out the video since you keep referring to it. The Ford warranty for the battery is 8 years and 100,000 miles. But the guy in the video in no way suggests that the battery is simply going to stop working at that time. The powertrain warranty on the regular F150 is 36,000 miles. Does the engine just seize at that point?nortex97 said:Your ability to wrongly impute what I am suggesting or have stated is rivalled by only one other poster.hph6203 said:
You understand that 3,000 cycle life suggests a battery longevity of nearly a million miles right? Which is a counter argument to your ignorance. One cycle of an EV battery is roughly 300 miles and that range is increasing.
Ford's Powertrain warranty on their gas cars is 5 years 60,000 miles. The battery and drive unit warranty on a Tesla is 8 years 120,000 miles. Are you suggesting that a Ford is expected to die after only 60,000 miles?
Check out the video above. Or, you can look up the ford warranty directly on your own, it's probably accessible pretty easily, right?
The guy in the video suggests that at that 100,000 mile point, a vehicle that started with a 300 mile range may be left with 250 miles of range. Okay, I'd say that might be right. So? The battery might cost $35,000 to replace, but that might be after 250,000 or 300,000 miles. How many ICE vehicles are still on the road after that many miles? It's a complete non issue to me. I have one EV and two ICE vehicles. I fully expect the EV to outlast the ICE vehicles and be less hassle to own.