MouthBQ98 said:
Surely a way can be found to chemically inert a Lithium Ion battery fire more quickly by affecting the reaction, but I suppose if it really wants to react once it gets going, there may not be any practical options. You have to remove energy fast enough to halt the reaction, or introduce an alternative reactant that releases less energy, but if the original reaction is very energetic itself, there may be no practical way to halt it but by waiting for ot to complete and isolating it from anything else.
You again are betraying a basic lack of understanding as the oil and gas prices are a consequence of our executive branch globally (See: proxy war in Ukraine, and sanctions etc.), to a large extent, yet even despite Biden's best efforts we are supposed to be a net exporter this year.Quote:
Anyway, crude oil prices may fall but they may rise. That is out of our hands as we import so much of it.
nortex97 said:
That's a naive perspective as evs take so much more energy to produce up front and most are charged from oil and gas today. Plus, the reserve is a fraction of actual use, and transportation is still something like 75 percent of your grocery bill. Thinking your ev status insulates you economically from oil and gas price inflation is very myopic, imho.
Again, no issue/agree with nuclear but I think the rest is very short sighted, and I don't even pay for gas, driving a company car/company fuel card, but for my wife who has a 5 mile commute in her vehicle (thank you for worrying about me though).JayM said:
Not following your logic or rationalizations. I'm just saying that when you start paying between $4.50 and $5.00 for gasoline and are having dyspepsia about it, I will be plugging in and plugging along with no thought in my mind about gasoline prices. Won't concern myself about what the executive branch is or isn't doing doing because I won't see that price every week.
I'm all in for nuclear power for power generation.
All the rest of that inflationary impact is passed on to you equally, like it or not. Perhaps even disproportionately, if you like so many other EV drivers profess an intent to replace it in 3 or 5 years with a brand new one.Quote:
About 60 percent of global oil consumption is in the form of fuel. Much of what remains goes into a staggering array of products and household goods, many of which don't have obvious connections to oil.
Shoes and handbags made from vegan leather, for instance, are petroleum-based. So are nylon stockings, microfiber fleece and all sorts of other clothing made from synthetic materials. "If you wear eyeglasses, the cost of polycarbonate lenses just went up," Lipow said, adding that he believes prices will go up on almost all goods with oil connections.
Everything made out of or packaged in plastic will be more expensive. "A lot of plastics are made with polypropylene or polyethylene, and the basic building blocks of those are propane and ethane," said Stewart Glickman, an energy equity analyst at CFRA Research. "Those typically are a percentage of the price of a barrel of oil."
Glickman said consumers can expect to pay more for smartphones, computers and TVs all of which have plastic parts. And car prices are likely to stay in the stratosphere for longer. They don't just run on gas petroleum is a building block in tires to plastic body panels to foam seat cushions.
Rising oil prices will also show up at the grocery store. "The agricultural industry is in the higher-impact segment," said Faisal Hersi, an energy analyst at Edward Jones. Industrial fertilizer contains fossil fuels, so more expensive fertilizer means higher prices on grains. That has its own impact; plus it also gets passed on to customers when they put meat, eggs or dairy products in their carts."
1) The cost. Even the cheap models are expensive. And that price doesn't tell the whole story. They are heavily subsidized by the gov't to keep the prices at a point where people MIGHT be able to afford them. The gov't is essentially paying for part of the purchase price.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
what's interesting is how many of these are flat out wrong.....but hey...if the confirmation bias fits......StandUpforAmerica said:
An interesting thread....1) The cost. Even the cheap models are expensive. And that price doesn't tell the whole story. They are heavily subsidized by the gov't to keep the prices at a point where people MIGHT be able to afford them. The gov't is essentially paying for part of the purchase price.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
Quote:
The cost. Even the cheap models are expensive. And that price doesn't tell the whole story. They are heavily subsidized by the gov't to keep the prices at a point where people MIGHT be able to afford them.
Do you buy anything? Do you eat? Do you travel?JayM said:
It won't always be that way. The country will go on past us and they will need energy. I know it's hard to consider this seriously when it doesn't affect us now.
StandUpforAmerica said:4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
Kansas Kid said:StandUpforAmerica said:4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
I love his fifth one on weight and concern about parking garages which I have heard from others. Do people realize they weigh about the same or less than SUVs and I haven't heard calls for these same garages collapsing from SUV which are way more prevalent than EV cars.
It's not the little ones that weigh the same as SUVs, it's the big ones. The Big Berthas.Kansas Kid said:StandUpforAmerica said:4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
I love his fifth one on weight and concern about parking garages which I have heard from others. Do people realize they weigh about the same or less than SUVs and I haven't heard calls for these same garages collapsing from SUV which are way more prevalent than EV cars.
PlaneCrashGuy said:Kansas Kid said:StandUpforAmerica said:4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
I love his fifth one on weight and concern about parking garages which I have heard from others. Do people realize they weigh about the same or less than SUVs and I haven't heard calls for these same garages collapsing from SUV which are way more prevalent than EV cars.
Hey guys ignore the engineers who design parking garages that are warning us about the weigh; Kansas Kid looked up curb weights on Google and said we're fine.
Kansas Kid said:PlaneCrashGuy said:Kansas Kid said:StandUpforAmerica said:4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
I love his fifth one on weight and concern about parking garages which I have heard from others. Do people realize they weigh about the same or less than SUVs and I haven't heard calls for these same garages collapsing from SUV which are way more prevalent than EV cars.
Hey guys ignore the engineers who design parking garages that are warning us about the weigh; Kansas Kid looked up curb weights on Google and said we're fine.
Let's see, Teslas are by far the most common EV. The heaviest Tesla is a model X at 5,200- 5,400 pounds.
A Chevy suburban weights 5,600-6,300 which is similar to most large SUVs. A Ford F-150 can be up to 5,740.
So why is it the EVs are a concern for parking garages and SUVs and full size pickups aren't? Do EVs have magic weight that weighs more than SUVs?
I can understand where there are structures that may have an issue with heavier vehicles than 30-50 years ago but this issue predates EVs.
PlaneCrashGuy said:Kansas Kid said:PlaneCrashGuy said:Kansas Kid said:StandUpforAmerica said:4) Energy density. All of these commercials saying "360 miles on a single charge" are probably true if the car/truck is unladen and driving in a temp range where neither the heat nor the A/C needs to be running. That is...well, let's just call it unrealistic.
— Physics Geek (@physicsgeek) September 15, 2023
I love his fifth one on weight and concern about parking garages which I have heard from others. Do people realize they weigh about the same or less than SUVs and I haven't heard calls for these same garages collapsing from SUV which are way more prevalent than EV cars.
Hey guys ignore the engineers who design parking garages that are warning us about the weigh; Kansas Kid looked up curb weights on Google and said we're fine.
Let's see, Teslas are by far the most common EV. The heaviest Tesla is a model X at 5,200- 5,400 pounds.
A Chevy suburban weights 5,600-6,300 which is similar to most large SUVs. A Ford F-150 can be up to 5,740.
So why is it the EVs are a concern for parking garages and SUVs and full size pickups aren't? Do EVs have magic weight that weighs more than SUVs?
I can understand where there are structures that may have an issue with heavier vehicles than 30-50 years ago but this issue predates EVs.
Is this satire? A heavier car exists so it's not a problem? I'm probably wasting my time. If you're not listening to the Professional Engineers that design the damn things, why would I expect you to listen to me.
tk for tu juan said:
The factored design live load in each space of a parking garage is around 11,000 to 12,000 lbs. Move on
Kansas Kid said:tk for tu juan said:
The factored design live load in each space of a parking garage is around 11,000 to 12,000 lbs. Move on
I think he is referred to older structures (40-50+) that haven't been well maintained. What he doesn't seem to understand is that cars have already gotten a lot heavier since 1980
yet this is only just now being raised by the anti EV crowd.
Quote:
Parking garages across the US could be at risk of collapse over the weight of heavier electric vehicles, experts warned, as one such garage fell in Lower Manhattan, killing one person and injuring five.
The battery of an electric GMC Hummer, for example, weighs about 2,900 pounds, roughly the entire weight of a Honda Civic.
Likewise, the Audi E-tron SUV weighs about 5,765 pounds, much heavier than the Ford Explorer SUV, which weighs about 4,345 pounds.
tk for tu juan said:
With or without the existence of EVs, those older garages will have to be modified to meet current design codes any time an improvement is proposed and/or a rehabilitation project begins.