Electric vehicles to pay for detroit bailout?

In summary: Sinclair C5?) prove the critics wrong, build one with a healthy profit margin and cash-in. Let Honda/Toyota/VW build the cheap ones.
  • #141
it was more the power requirements than the economics.
For a small in-town delivery truck, like a US post van then plugin is a no-brainer.

But that's a 30,000lb truck with a 300hp motor. To do that on plugin is not going to be practical with todays batteries.

Assuming capital cost isn't a factor for utilities, the battery pack for a tesla is pretty state of the art =53KWh at 400kg
If the diesel truck gets 9mpg and gas is about 34Kwh/ga - diesel a bit better, that's 4kwh/mi
So assuming the ICE is 50% efficent and the electric is 100% it should do twice that.
Even then the tesla battery pack is only going to get it about 20miles.

I think for 10ton trucks hydrocarbon fuels are going to be around for a while.
 
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  • #142
mgb_phys said:
it was more the power requirements than the economics.
For a small in-town delivery truck, like a US post van then plugin is a no-brainer.

But that's a 30,000lb truck with a 300hp motor. To do that on plugin is not going to be practical with todays batteries.
I don't follow? Electric motors have been built to thousands of HP. Batteries can be stacked into the megawatt range.

Assuming capital cost isn't a factor for utilities, the battery pack for a tesla is pretty state of the art =53KWh at 400kg
Actually Tesla's battery is old tech. It was literally made by aggregating thousands of small lithium cobalt batteries - laptop batteries. Renault, Nissan, Chevy are using different, newer chemistries, mostly LiFePO.

If the diesel truck gets 9mpg and gas is about 34Kwh/ga - diesel a bit better, that's 4kwh/mi
So assuming the ICE is 50% efficent and the electric is 100% it should do twice that.
Even then the tesla battery pack is only going to get it about 20miles
I've not seen any 50% efficient ICE's, but anyway the Tesla has had several internal and external reports showing it gets ~4 miles / kWh at 60 mph. Above I was assuming the EV version of this 10 ton truck to be 4x worse than that, say 1 mile per kWh. Thus a range of 120 miles requires a 120 kWh battery, $100k cost, ~850kg (~9% vehicle weight), at 3000 deep charge cycles for the battery + electricity at 12 cents / kWh gives me 43 cents / mile.

I think for 10ton trucks hydrocarbon fuels are going to be around for a while.
For long haul, cross country vehicles, I agree. For around town fleet vehicles like these, that need no distributed infrastructure, I think you'll drive past more than one within a couple years.

BTW, I had occasion last week to see a prototype Army combat vehicle: tracked 30 tons plus, serial hybrid, i.e. only electric motors attached to the tracks. It accelerates faster off the line than the US Army's gas turbine main battle tank.
 
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  • #143
One thing on electric vehicles, what are you going to do to power them? For example, if we start plugging in millions of electric vehicles into the electric grid, we're going to need to ramp up the power supply a whole lot aren't we? Which right now means a lot more coal plants?
 
  • #144
mheslep said:
I don't follow? Electric motors have been built to thousands of HP. Batteries can be stacked into the megawatt range.
But not fitted on a regular vehicle.

Tesla has had several internal and external reports showing it gets ~4 miles / kWh at 60 mph.
That's for a lightweight aerodynamic sportscar I was trying to estimate the power demand of the truck based on mpg - obviously just a ballpark figure.

For long haul, cross country vehicles, I agree. For around town fleet vehicles like these, that need no distributed infrastructure, I think you'll drive past more than one within a couple years.[quote/]
My bet would be first for vehicles that do a lot of stop start and operate where you don't want noise = dustbin trucks, or where you need a lot of power while stationary = cranes, hoist trucks

BTW, I had occasion last week to see a prototype Army combat vehicle: tracked 30 tons plus, serial hybrid, i.e. only electric motors attached to the tracks.
Leibherr make a hybrid 350ton haul truck! It makes the transmission a lot simpler, but it doesn't have batteries!
Quite a few underground mine cars (10-20ton tractors) are now electric, the big saving is in ventilation - it takes a lot of air flow to remove diesel exhaust from a deep mine. There's also a lower fire risk.
But they typically only run at 10km/h on worling levels so range and power is not as much of a problem.
The main drawback is the charge time - mines run 24x7 so you have to have extra trucks sitting there recharging.
 
  • #145
mgb_phys said:
But not fitted on a regular vehicle.
What's your point? Electric motor power density reaches 4kw/kg (2.4 HP/lb), no combustion engine I've seen short of a gas turbine reaches that power density. So let's be clear: power density is not a problem with this class of batteries and motors. Energy density is difficult problem #1, which manifests itself as range limitation in EVs. We agree that battery weight and up front capital cost limits range (for now), but even so I've shown a couple hundred miles is feasible on heavy trucks. That, IMO, is sufficient for a certain class of trucks, because the overall cost per mile is so appealing.

mheslep said:
For long haul, cross country vehicles, I agree. For around town fleet vehicles like these, that need no distributed infrastructure, I think you'll drive past more than one within a couple years.
mgb_phys said:
My bet would be first for vehicles that do a lot of stop start and operate where you don't want noise = dustbin trucks, or where you need a lot of power while stationary = cranes, hoist trucks
Good points.

mgb_phys said:
Leibherr make a hybrid 350ton haul truck! It makes the transmission a lot simpler, but it doesn't have batteries!
Eh?
mgb_phy said:
Quite a few underground mine cars (10-20ton tractors) are now electric, the big saving is in ventilation - it takes a lot of air flow to remove diesel exhaust from a deep mine. There's also a lower fire risk.
But they typically only run at 10km/h on worling levels so range and power is not as much of a problem.
The main drawback is the charge time - mines run 24x7 so you have to have extra trucks sitting there recharging.
Charge time is difficult problem #2 for EVs (for some needs, like 24x7 operations). It shows up in other industries too - warehouse electric forklifts and airport ground equipment. The solution for some in those industries is battery exchange - it's been done for years. One EV 'system' company (Better Place) is basing their entire business model around battery exchange.
 
  • #146
mheslep said:
What's your point? Electric motor power density reaches 4kw/kg (2.4 HP/lb),
My point was about energy density. From a rough estimate it didn't seem that a 120 mi range was feasible

Eh?
I see your battle tank and raise you a haul truck!

warehouse electric forklifts and airport ground equipment. The solution for some in those industries is battery exchange - it's been done for years.
I think there is a general lack of working space/personnel underground.
interestingly they don't consider electric as a safety feature, they deliberately run trucks with very small onboard diesel tanks - the main fire risk is the tyres.
 
  • #147
mgb_phys said:
I see your battle tank and raise you a haul truck!
Ah. See your haul truck and raise you this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Muskie" r. Why do they go electric? Fuel load would be too heavy for a 24x7 walking excavator.
 
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  • #148
mheslep said:
Why do they go electric?
Because if they go the rampage and start destroying the puny humans you can pull the plug ;-)

http://www.landliving.com/image/Excavator_1.jpg
 
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  • #149
Nebula815 said:
One thing on electric vehicles, what are you going to do to power them? For example, if we start plugging in millions of electric vehicles into the electric grid, we're going to need to ramp up the power supply a whole lot aren't we? Which right now means a lot more coal plants?
No.

ScienceDaily (Dec. 14, 2006) — If all the cars and light trucks in the nation switched from oil to electrons, idle capacity in the existing electric power system could generate most of the electricity consumed by plug-in hybrid electric vehicles. A new study for the Department of Energy finds that "off-peak" electricity production and transmission capacity could fuel 84 percent of the country's 220 million vehicles if they were plug-in hybrid electrics...
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/12/061211221149.htm
 
  • #150
mgb_phys said:
Because if they go the rampage and start destroying the puny humans you can pull the plug ;-)
I've never seen one of those bucket excavators outside of books. My 4 year old's 'Big Machines' book says they're not used in the US - wrong type of geology.
 
  • #151
Happened to see I Robot the other night. Of course he's driving around in EV, but where he drives is interesting: large underground tunnels everywhere he goes. Creating the tunnels aside, I suspect operating them with personal vehicles is only practical on a large scale with zero emission EVs. Another reason to dump ICE.:tongue:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Bzg1mzwZDko&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Bzg1mzwZDko&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowScriptAccess="always" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
http://www.vidivodo.com/183990/i-robot-part-2
 
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  • #153
mheslep said:
Wonderful photographic history of the electric car in today's WSJ, going back to the 19th century.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...70542192.html?mod=WSJ_hps_sections_lifestyle#

A very interesting link indeed.
Looking at the timeline, in 1899 the first car ever to reach 60mph was electric, from then all electric cars seem to fall off the chart and list max. speed as 35 or 40 mph, It makes no sense to me how any car company would produce such dismal products, and expect to make sales.
Over 100 years later and the first signs of serious engineering seems to be coming into the picture. When I see some of the things that are on the road, it is proof that people will buy what is offered and that demand of the people does not drive what is built.

I know there are many factors to consider, but it is an amazing picture any way it is looked at.:uhh::frown::smile:
 
  • #154
RonL said:
A very interesting link indeed.
Looking at the timeline, in 1899 the first car ever to reach 60mph was electric, from then all electric cars seem to fall off the chart and list max. speed as 35 or 40 mph, It makes no sense to me how any car company would produce such dismal products, and expect to make sales.
Nothing dismal about electrics for the first ~10 years of the century. Speed limits were 12-20mph. Horses everywhere. Good roads nil. NY city traffic (horse drawn, gasoline, pedestrian, electric, bicycles) would come to a stand still, 100 years ago. Stock gasoline vehicles did only marginally better for awhile.

Edit: after reading about the era, and looking again at your post I have to grin. Women used the electrics back then, all the ads targeted the ladies. Men wanted the speed.
 
  • #155
mheslep said:
Electric motor power density reaches 4kw/kg (2.4 HP/lb), no combustion engine I've seen short of a gas turbine reaches that power density. So let's be clear: power density is not a problem with this class of batteries and motors. Energy density is difficult problem #1, which manifests itself as range limitation in EVs.

The acceptance issue will be lifetime per-mile expense while providing the same "look what I've got" prestige as cars have always tended to give.
 
  • #156
Are hybrids and electrics, with all the batteries and so forth, really a viable technology for the future, or would a more realistic alternative be in finding a way to double the fuel economy of the current IC engines...?
 
  • #157
Nebula815 said:
Are hybrids and electrics, with all the batteries and so forth, really a viable technology for the future, or would a more realistic alternative be in finding a way to double the fuel economy of the current IC engines...?

Even the best IC engines can't match the efficiency of a turbo diesel.

Even the best turbo diesel can't match the efficiency of the engine in Toyota's Prius.

Even the best Prius engine can't match the efficiency of a Stirling engine.

The Prius is a step in the right direction, but it still uses engine direct drive. What's required is this:

Engine --> generator (small) --> batteries --> electric motor/generator (large) --> drivetrain

Drivetrain --> electric motor/generator (large) --> batteries

Part of the Prius' design philosophy was to do away with two generators (makes sense). However, their philosophy also was to pick an engine powerful enough for driving 100 mph, and use the batteries for boosting acceleration as well as capturing energy for regenerative braking.

A much more efficient design uses the batteries as primary, with a typical commute as the target goal, +50% more just to keep most people happy. People would be able to plug into their household current, and if their commute was typical, their engine would not be used until they exceeded the distance.

The engine in such as design would be less than what was required to maintain normal driving speeds. It might, for example, hold 45 mph in a sustained effort. However, it would run 24/7, if needed, which would allow, say, a 12-hour per 24 hour driving cycle at 70 mph.

Even if you never plug them in, these 4-person vehicles are getting 100 mpg, simply because of these design modifications.
 
  • #158
mugaliens said:
Even the best IC engines can't match the efficiency of a turbo diesel.
Even the best turbo diesel can't match the efficiency of the engine in Toyota's Prius.
That's VW's arguement. You are better off with just a 70mpg diesel engine than a 30mpg gasoline engine + hybrid for most users.
Especially with new technology like the instant start that turns the engine off when you stop at lights.
If >50% of your grid power comes from coal (as in USA and Germany) they claim that a small diesel is greener than even a plugin.
Of course VW make a lot of diesel engines so they might be a little biased!

Part of the Prius' design philosophy was to do away with two generators (makes sense). However, their philosophy also was to pick an engine powerful enough for driving 100 mph, and use the batteries for boosting acceleration as well as capturing energy for regenerative braking.
The prius had a difficult job, it had to have the same looks and performance as a regular car to gain acceptance, given the constraints it did a reasonable job.
Now you would probably be better making something like a Smart car with direct electric drive and a constant rate diesel driving the generator with a pure plugin to follow.

A lot of the current hybrids are obviously just to cash in on either tax breaks or green-ness.
We have a fleet of hybrid Ford SUVs where the battery capacity and tiny electric motor is just about sufficent for parking them but the regular gas engine cuts in as soon as you get to walking pace.
Mercedes even make a hybrid luxury limo, it has a 300hp engine and a 20hp electric motor - but allows your CEO to show how green he is.
 
  • #159
I think one thing with electric vehicles and/or hybrids is that they need to get where they have the same capabilities as big gasoline and diesel engines. Americans like to drive big SUVs and pickups (I am one of them---cars IMO are too small and too low to the ground and a pain-in-the-rear to get in and out of).

People also use their SUVs and pickups for hauling lots of groceries, towing things like boats and campers, and so forth.

And of course simply by their design, no SUV or pickup will be as aerodynamic as a car. So electric and hybrid technology need to get where we could have say a electric or hybrid Ford F-150 that literally can get say 60 mpg while providing the same capability as an F-150 with a 300+ hp gasoline or diesel engine.

One question though, if electric motors have a lot more torque than IC engines, why are freight trains pulled by locomotives that are engine-powered as opposed to electric powered? Only the lighter, passanger trains are electric-powered...?
 
  • #160
Nebula815 said:
One question though, if electric motors have a lot more torque than IC engines, why are freight trains pulled by locomotives that are engine-powered as opposed to electric powered? Only the lighter, passanger trains are electric-powered...?
Freight trains in Europe are electrically powered, the most powerful locos in the world are the channel tunnel freight trains.
For purely electric you need the infrastructure of power lines. There are many freight trains where the diesel engine in the loco generate electric power with electric traction motors. The advantage of diesel-electric is that you can put motors in the cars and spread the motive power over the whole train, that gives you much better acceleration. This only matters if you are going fast and stop and start frequently so is more of an advantage for passenger trains and fast freight services.

The difference between Eu and USA freight is mostly geography an historical accident. The US has long distances and single line tracks so single large slow trains with lots of locomotives is a good fit. Europe has a denser network of tracks an destinations so smaller high speed freight trains make more sense.
 
  • #161
mgb_phys said:
Freight trains in Europe are electrically powered, the most powerful locos in the world are the channel tunnel freight trains.
For purely electric you need the infrastructure of power lines. There are many freight trains where the diesel engine in the loco generate electric power with electric traction motors. The advantage of diesel-electric is that you can put motors in the cars and spread the motive power over the whole train, that gives you much better acceleration. This only matters if you are going fast and stop and start frequently so is more of an advantage for passenger trains and fast freight services.

The difference between Eu and USA freight is mostly geography an historical accident. The US has long distances and single line tracks so single large slow trains with lots of locomotives is a good fit. Europe has a denser network of tracks an destinations so smaller high speed freight trains make more sense.

Thankyou for the information, very interesting, so in certain diesel locomotives, the diesel engine essentially runs an electrical generator that then sends power to electric motors in all the train cars, if I am reading right?
 
  • #162
Nebula815 said:
Thankyou for the information, very interesting, so in certain diesel locomotives, the diesel engine essentially runs an electrical generator that then sends power to electric motors in all the train cars, if I am reading right?

In almost all passenger trains yes, it gives you the best acceleration because the power is spread along the mass of the train, it also gives a smoother ride because there is no bump as the strain is taken up by each coupling.

It's not as common in freight cars because they are much cheaper than passenger carriages and the trains are split up and remade more often so it it would be a pain to have special power cars among the general freight wagons.

You still use diesel electrics because although there are efficiency losses in the generators and motors it saves the weight and maintenance complexity of a huge gearbox and transmission (imagine the clutch for a 10,000ton train !). The motors are in the locomotive boggies and driven from the generator in the loco.
It also means the engine can be built to run at a constant speed and power level which makes it more efficent and quieter/cleaner.
 
  • #163
Sorry, I just saw this...
mheslep said:
No. [that electric cars don't require more coal plants]


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/12/061211221149.htm
Well yes, it will require a few more coal plants just not many more. But more importantly, they do also require significantly more coal-based power. Ie, coal plants will need to increase their output at night.

All of that is discussed in the article.

It does also say that the net effect would be a reduction in CO2 output since electric cars are more energy efficient than the gas cars they would replace. It isn't clear, but it doesn't suggest to me that they have included in the study the potential for significant energy efficiency gains that are likely to come for cars in the near future. In other words, if a Prius owner buys a Volt, I highly doubt there will be a net carbon benefit. What fuel economy did they use? The fleet average requirement is 25mpg, but who is really more likely to buy a Volt, a 34mpg Civic owner or a 12 mpg Suburban owner?

Either way, the goal of an electric car isn't just a small improvement in CO2 production. I rather think people would be pretty upset if they bought an electric car for the sake of being green and found their "emission free" car only actually reduced their CO2 emissions by (for example) 20%.
 
  • #164
RonL said:
A very interesting link indeed.
Looking at the timeline, in 1899 the first car ever to reach 60mph was electric, from then all electric cars seem to fall off the chart and list max. speed as 35 or 40 mph, It makes no sense to me how any car company would produce such dismal products, and expect to make sales.
Over 100 years later and the first signs of serious engineering seems to be coming into the picture. When I see some of the things that are on the road, it is proof that people will buy what is offered and that demand of the people does not drive what is built.

I know there are many factors to consider, but it is an amazing picture any way it is looked at.:uhh::frown::smile:
I'm not quite sure you see what is really going on with that timeline. It is showing electric cars only. The issue isn't that electric car offerings have gotten worse, it's that gasoline powered cars have gotten better faster. Ie, it was advances in internal combustion engines that made airplanes possible at about the same time. Here's a timeline/history of the ICE:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_internal_combustion_engine
 
  • #165
Nebula815 said:
One question though, if electric motors have a lot more torque than IC engines, why are freight trains pulled by locomotives that are engine-powered as opposed to electric powered? Only the lighter, passanger trains are electric-powered...?
Even the 'diesel' locomotives mostly use electric motors for the traction motor, and the diesel driving a generator. Google diesel-electric locomotive.
 
  • #166
russ_watters said:
Sorry, I just saw this... Well yes, it will require a few more coal plants just not many more. But more importantly, they do also require significantly more coal-based power. Ie, coal plants will need to increase their output at night.

All of that is discussed in the article.
Per the article, no more plants necessary up to "84%" of electric conversion of the fleet. I doubt that last 15% would convert even in 50 years.

Regarding the increased coal plant production at night, we'd see some, I expect not much. Coal and nuclear plants run mainly base load already, i.e. coal doesn't idle much at night. Gas plants are typically charged with the peaking loads. To illustrate, gas electric capacity actually http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epa/epat2p2.html" coal capacity in the US, even though actual generation from coal exceeds gas by 2:1. That is, many more gas plants sit idle in the winter and at night. So as the article says we'd expect some more SO2 emissions in the near term to the extent coal electric replaces gasoline in transportation, but not much.

russ_watters said:
It does also say that the net effect would be a reduction in CO2 output since electric cars are more energy efficient than the gas cars they would replace.
It is more than the just the vehicle efficiency improvement in moving from ICE to EV. To the extent electric transportation is sourced by nuclear, hydro and other renewables the emissions go to zero. Natural gas is also an improvement over gasoline in joules produced per carbon emissions, regardless of end use efficiency. So all those Prius owner in San Francisco, Ca, where very little coal is used, could safely assume big improvements in overall emissions improvements.

russ_watters said:
It isn't clear, but it doesn't suggest to me that they have included in the study the potential for significant energy efficiency gains that are likely to come for cars in the near future. In other words, if a Prius owner buys a Volt, I highly doubt there will be a net carbon benefit. What fuel economy did they use?
If we look at the sources supplying the grid the benefits must be large if the vehicle replaced is a Prius or even better. This is true in terms of emissions, but more importantly (for me) a PHEV Volt can eliminate the need for oil imports as it switches to another primary energy source; the Prius can not (switch sources)
 
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  • #167
russ_watters said:
I'm not quite sure you see what is really going on with that timeline. It is showing electric cars only. The issue isn't that electric car offerings have gotten worse, it's that gasoline powered cars have gotten better faster. Ie, it was advances in internal combustion engines that made airplanes possible at about the same time. Here's a timeline/history of the ICE:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_internal_combustion_engine

To me it was just interesting that in the early 20's electric cars made up a 1/3 of all sales (I realize the market was small) then from the 40's until the mid 90's almost nothing.
to me it is also amazing that the mindset of most people is, batteries need to compete with fuel in the energy density, when maybe 90% of most transportation use, can be handled with the low image lead acid battery.
Just my opinion and I'm aware it dose not match up with most people.:smile:

Ron
 
  • #168
RonL said:
To me it was just interesting that in the early 20's electric cars made up a 1/3 of all sales (I realize the market was small) then from the 40's until the mid 90's almost nothing.
Slight quibble: In 1900 1/3 of sales were electric. By 1921 the mass electric auto sales were all but gone, the electric trolleys soon to follow.

to me it is also amazing that the mindset of most people is, batteries need to compete with fuel in the energy density, when maybe 90% of most transportation use, can be handled ...
An automobile is still a fairly large investment for most people. Given that investment, it is a large burden to tell them they can't drive out of their region even occasionally because the batteries deplete 1/2 way to grandma's house.
 
  • #169
mheslep said:
Per the article, no more plants necessary up to "84%" of electric conversion of the fleet. I doubt that last 15% would convert even in 50 years.
Yes, it would take a while to meet their projections.
Regarding the increased coal plant production at night, we'd see some, I expect not much. Coal and nuclear plants run mainly base load already, i.e. coal doesn't idle much at night. Gas plants are typically charged with the peaking loads.
According to the wiki on coal power, it is loaded at 67%, so that's quite a bit of headroom for extra night generation. But anyway - it's your article that says there would need to be a lot more coal power generation...
It is more than the just the vehicle efficiency improvement in moving from ICE to EV. To the extent electric transportation is sourced by nuclear, hydro and other renewables the emissions go to zero.
Again, you posted the article, and that isn't what it says. Heck, you even said (correctly) above that nuclear plants are base loaded. And hydro is already utilized at essentially 100% as well.

Here's the full text of the study:
http://energytech.pnl.gov/publications/pdf/PHEV_Feasibility_Analysis_Part1.pdf
http://energytech.pnl.gov/publications/pdf/PHEV_Economic_Analysis_Part2_Final.pdf

Some quotes:
For the nation as a whole, the total greenhouse gases are expected to be reduced by 27% from the projected penetration of PHEVs. The key driver for this result is the overall improvement in efficiency along the electricity generation path compared to the entire conversion chain from crude oil to gasoline to the combustion process in the vehicle. Fundamental to this result is the assumption that a PHEV by itself would be more efficient than a conventional gasoline car because of the regenerative braking capability that stores the kinetic energy in the battery during deceleration and because the engine operates at near optimal conditions more of the time than in conventional vehicles.
So a 27% reduction in pollution, mostly covered by regenerative braking and the lack of idle consumption. In other words, if you switch from a 25 mpg car to a 30 mpg car, you get the exact same environmental benefit as switching to a full electric! And if you switch to a hybrid, you get a much better environmental benefit than if you buy an electric car!
Natural gas is also an improvement over gasoline in joules produced per carbon emissions, regardless of end use efficiency. So all those Prius owner in San Francisco, Ca, where very little coal is used, could safely assume big improvements in overall emissions improvements.
I don't see in the article a statement about what how much of each (coal and natural gas) would be added under their calculations, but it doesn't really matter: the 27% pollution reduction is the bottom line either way.

As far as I'm concerned (and I've repeated this many, many times), until we get rid of our coal power plants, the environmental benefit of switching to electric cars is marginal at best.

The political benefit, however, is real but harder to quantify.
 
  • #170
RonL said:
...
to me it is also amazing that the mindset of most people is, batteries need to compete with fuel in the energy density, when maybe 90% of most transportation use, can be handled with the low image lead acid battery.
Just my opinion and I'm aware it dose not match up with most people.:smile:

Ron

mheslep said:
...
An automobile is still a fairly large investment for most people. Given that investment, it is a large burden to tell them they can't drive out of their region even occasionally because the batteries deplete 1/2 way to grandma's house.

You both make good points.

In reality 85% of Americans have 50 miles or less round trip commute to work. The Chevy Volt will get you to work on battery power (40 miles @ 100 MPH max). The EV1 gen 1 with lead acid batteries would get you to work and back on a charge (75-100 miles @ 80 MPH max), gen 2 would do the same thing on NiMH batteries (75-150 miles @ 80 MPH max). The ZENN will also get you to work with its lead acid batteries (40 miles @ 25 MPH max). Granted some of these options would require you to charge up at work, or because of there designation of Neighborhood electric vehicle won't get you onto the freeway. They would work for a daily driver.

If you were going to grandmas house, or on vacation most people are traveling over 150 miles. Being limited to 150 miles with 8 hours recharge time is going to make an EV impractical. However most people fly to there long distance destination. However there is the option of renting a gas powered car to get you out of your region. After all, right now I think the best option for EVs is to be a daily driver. How many people honestly need to carry more then five people and a weeks worth of groceries? I just think most Americans need to change the way they look at transportation. In reality it is unlikely if most Americans travel over 100 miles in a given day more then once a month, if that. Need to haul 4x8 sheet goods, or 8 foot 2x4. Finally how many of the big SUVs and pickup trucks have actually seen anything other then a paved street, or hauled something other then kids, a dog, and groceries?

Also the big reason I'm in favor of the US private transportation sector switching over to electric powered cars is not for environmental reasons, but for economic security reasons. When OAPEC gets it in there collective heads to hit us with another oil embargo to get something they want, were in big trouble. They've done it twice to us, in 67 and 73. We've been forced to do what they wanted or face an economic collapse that would make the one in 2008 look like a Sunday afternoon pick nick.
 
  • #171
Argentum Vulpes said:
...

If you were going to grandmas house, or on vacation most people are traveling over 150 miles. Being limited to 150 miles with 8 hours recharge time is going to make an EV impractical. However most people fly to there long distance destination. However there is the option of renting a gas powered car to get you out of your region. After all, right now I think the best option for EVs is to be a daily driver. How many people honestly need to carry more then five people and a weeks worth of groceries? I just think most Americans need to change the way they look at transportation. In reality it is unlikely if most Americans travel over 100 miles in a given day more then once a month, if that. Need to haul 4x8 sheet goods, or 8 foot 2x4. Finally how many of the big SUVs and pickup trucks have actually seen anything other then a paved street, or hauled something other then kids, a dog, and groceries?
I agree with you up until the paragraph quoted above. Some people will find it to their advantage to have short range only, cheap per mile car and rent to travel, say students in particular. Good for them. But most people http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE5BF34J20091216" to their out of town destination over the holidays. It is not practical to have 74 million travelers suddenly rent ICE cars on the holidays. Remember the scale of the problem:
http://www.thedailygreen.com/cm/thedailygreen/images/XI/heavy-traffic-I95.jpg

I find the common assertion "Americans need to change the way they look at transportation" followed by the usual diminishing remarks about kids and groceries annoying, as I generally find comments suggesting people be made to do what others think are best for them annoying. Working to find technically and economically acceptable solutions that some people want, and later many people want as the technology improves, is a more productive approach. After all this is a technical forum.
 
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  • #172
russ_watters said:
According to the wiki on coal power, it is loaded at 67%, so that's quite a bit of headroom for extra night generation. ...
Yes, though I read the reason for that idle coal capacity is generally due long term out of commission plants, waiting for some kind of scrubbing equipment upgrade, maintenance, or for other like reasons, unlike gas generation which is the first source taken off line during slack demand due to the greater expense of gas (historically). I read that starting up a the boiler and fuel transport for a coal based steam generation plant is time consuming, much more so than spinning up a gas turbine.

I had read the reference PNNL report some time ago and was relying on the Science Daily digest summary for my prior post; I'll review the primary reference and address the rest of your post shortly.
 
  • #173
mheslep said:
I read that starting up a the boiler and fuel transport for a coal based steam generation plant is time consuming, much more so than spinning up a gas turbine.
For a big station it's a major undertaking
Large coal plants normally run for years at capacity as a baseline load. Along with nuclear it's usually the cheapest source (once you have built the station)

Gas is the most expensive source, but it's the cheapest station to build and can be started the fastest - in minutes if you design it that way.
 
  • #174
mheslep said:
I agree with you up until the paragraph quoted above. Some people will find it to their advantage to have short range only, cheap per mile car and rent to travel, say students in particular. Good for them. But most people http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE5BF34J20091216" to their out of town destination over the holidays. It is not practical to have 74 million travelers suddenly rent ICE cars on the holidays. Remember the scale of the problem:
http://www.thedailygreen.com/cm/thedailygreen/images/XI/heavy-traffic-I95.jpg

I find the common assertion "Americans need to change the way they look at transportation" followed by the usual diminishing remarks about kids and groceries annoying, as I generally find comments suggesting people be made to do what others think are best for them annoying. Working to find technically and economically acceptable solutions that some people want, and later many people want as the technology improves, is a more productive approach. After all this is a technical forum.

What I find annoying is that most Americans are so ingrained that a vehicle is a way to show off your wealth so there ends up many large gas guzzling land yachts on the road. Also the next time you turn on the TV just pay attrition to how many ads are played for large SUV and trucks, compared to small cars.

Also in that picture I can see only maybe 9 commercial vehicles on the road, all of the other vehicles on the road cars/SUV that I'm willing to bet are running with single occupancy. Just for fun next time you are on the road look at each car, truck, and SUV you see. How many people are in that vehicle? If it is a truck, is it carrying anything in the bed, or dose it have some commercial application? If it is a SUV, how many people are in it, or has it seen any off roading?

For technical solutions, let's get a light rail system in this country that isn't a joke. Most passenger trains average around 34 MPH, and the only high speed rail that is in the US averages 68 MPH. Coal to liquids would defiantly help. Get more of our goods back onto freight trains and off of long haul trucks. H2, LNG, or bio diesel for petrol gas replacement. These would all help or eliminate our dependence on foreign oil, however I still firmly think that Americans need to change the way that we view/use our transportation system. If that happened I'm sure traffic congestion, and our addiction/need for foreign oil would disappear.

It makes no sense to stay in a hostile environment with blinders on, fingers firmly in the ears, and yelling "la la la". Thinking if I just stick it out something will change even though I've been bitten twice. Then again maybe we do need a swift kick in the economic pants from OAPEC cutting us off again.
 
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  • #175
Argentum Vulpes said:
all of the other vehicles on the road cars/SUV that I'm willing to bet are running with single occupancy.
Problem = congestion, too many large cars on the road with one occupant. But nobody wants to buy small ghey european cars because they are all rugged individualists who at any moment might have to turn off the I95 to drive across a mountain or over a ranch.

Simple solution gentlemen, I give you the ... motorbike ...

You drive your Canyonero to work because although your job involves auditing expenses claims you know you are really a cowboy at heart. Well with a motorbike you can be Dennis Hopper in Easyrider - while driving to work to audit expenses claims.
[URL][PLAIN]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/22/Canyonero.JPG/180px-Canyonero.JPG

Other advantages, no need for hands free cell laws - you try and use a cell phone on a bike you lose it. No need for MADD, you can drink and ride but generally only once. And if enough middle aged managers buy Honda fireblades it also solves the pension crisis.

Then you only have the problem of soccer moms transporting 5 year olds in 4ton army trucks.
Well if madison avenue can convince them that tipping over SUVs are the safest form of transport then you can probably sell them this.

220px-BMW_C1_FF_200_(frontale).jpg

The SUV of motorbikes (and it's a BMW - what more could you want)

Then again maybe we do need a swift kick in the economic pants from OAPEC cutting us off again.
You do know where most of America's oil comes from?
 
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