PZ99
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The flaw in that logic is it doesn't take 15 minutes to fill your car with petrol. On a petrol stop, you fill the car, you pay the bill, you move the car elsewhere, have your break, and let the next car fill up.In my opinion cars with extreme range like that are not necessary and will have more drawbacks than positives.
There is almost no real world practical benefits to having 1000 Km range, think about it, do you ever actually drive 1000 km's without stopping for 15 mins or so to use the bathroom and stretch your legs? probably not, you probably make multiple stops on that 1000km trip anyway, so you are better off having a 500 or 600 km range battery, and charge for 15mins somewhere along the way on a usual pee break you will make anyway, and then your battery will be 40% lighter, which makes your car more efficient over all and saves unnecessary tyre wear.
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If you had 600km of range at the start of a trip (because you charged at home), you 1000km road trip would look something like this.
Drive for 500km (5 hours)
< charge for 15mins while you pee >
Drive for another 300km (3 hours)
< charge for 10 mins while you pee and grab a coffee >
Drive for another 200km (2 hours)
You will probably find that you normally stop for much longer than that in your petrol car anyway.
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Last weekend I did a two vehicle road trip with family, Me in my Tesla the sister and brother in-law's car was petrol, people other mistakenly think that in such a road trip the Tesla will be the car causing the delays and inconvenience, however before the road trip even began my brother in-law had to make a special trip to the petrol station before we left that morning, where as my Tesla was full having charged over night, when we arrived in the town I was able to plug my car into a free charger right in the centre of town and walk away and enjoy family time, so I picked up a free charge and didn't suffer any time loss.
Once we got home, I just plugged the car into my home charger and hit the shower, however the brother in-law was on empty by the time we got home and had to make a special trip to the servo and waste another 10 - 15mins of his time so he had full to go to work the next day.
The simple point is that refuelling a petrol car is something that most people a desensitised too, however when you look at it from the EV perspective, its not at all convenient most of the time, and wastes alot of time, 8 hours a year on average.
The flaw in that logic is it doesn't take 15 minutes to fill your car with petrol. On a petrol stop, you fill the car, you pay the bill, you move the car elsewhere, have your break, and let the next car fill up.
On an EV recharge - your car stays plugged in for the entire time you're there.
That means you're gonna need a trrrrruckload of EV stations to cater for folks on a 1000k trip. It's not practical.
Australia doesn't have the electrical capacity in the grid to supply the amount of chargers you're going to need.
I would even go as far as suggesting a federal wire and pole upgrade would be required. Can't see it happening now.
I sure as hell wouldn't wanna be around when there's a few dozen cars queued up for a charge during a load shedding event or three in summer
Your proposal has one major obstacle.. land space
Your proposal has one major obstacle.. land space
It won't be a disadvantage for me at all.
I can charge up and do the trip with whatever breaks I need safe in the knowledge the car will do the entire trip without any external aid.
I think such a vehicle will be common place before the infrastructure would ever be available for the required number charging stations needed in this country
We have a poor record of infrastructure rollout and our political system is too unwieldy to ever get this sort of thing right. NBN being a classic example.
If or when they do get it right hopefully the EV's might be cheap enough for us poor folk to buy one outright
As I said it’s up to you, but I think once you have done a road trip in a decent EV with 500km or so or range, you will find the range of the car isn’t a limiting factor once you.I wouldn't call it "range anxiety" - just more convenience.
I highly doubt we've reached the zenith of battery technology that I'd need another 300kg in the future.
If the price of EV's is lower in the future it'll avoid anachronisms such as luxury car taxes.
Using more energy and more tyres is something I haven't worried about since the 70's.
As someone who's done a reasonable amount of long distance driving around Australia, my observation is that it's not so much about range per se as it's about the certainty of refueling.You will probably find that you normally stop for much longer than that in your petrol car anyway.
As someone who's done a reasonable amount of long distance driving around Australia, my observation is that it's not so much about range per se as it's about the certainty of refueling.
In short there's lots of places selling petrol and diesel such that missing one, or finding it's broken, or deciding to take a 100km detour that wasn't planned isn't an issue. For that matter very rarely have I even needed to consciously find a petrol station - there's simply a lot of them and they're very easily recognised even from a distance such that simply filling up when I see one has been sufficient.
That approach works in Australia even if you really are driving from Adelaide to Perth. If the tank's less than half full and you see a servo then fill up there and you'll be fine. It also works fine in more densely populated countries - I've driven around the UK using the same approach, never did I consciously look for fuel just bought some when I saw it and if the tank was getting low.
Once public EV chargers are similarly ubiquitous the concerns will go away.
In the meantime well it's great that there's another EV charger 200km after this one, but if I decide along the way that I'm going to take a scenic detour to look at whatever and that adds another 60km ach way well then now it's 320km between charges. Etc. How often I do that isn't important - I only need to get stuck in the middle of nowhere once for it to be a major problem.
Realistically 500km should be fine, I can't see a problem with that in practical use, but I do see an issue once people start talking about 150km range and so on as some seem to favour as a cost reduction measure.
That is it in a nutshell, in the 1980's-90's lpg was the new wonder fuel, but very few other than those who lived in the city bought an lpg only car, most converted to dual fuel.As someone who's done a reasonable amount of long distance driving around Australia, my observation is that it's not so much about range per se as it's about the certainty of refueling.
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When every car is electric that will be a small recharging station.and when they need permanent high capacity then can build huge charging locations
check out this super charger
View attachment 112443
When every car is electric that will be a small recharging station.
Real life experience driving an EV in regional areas.
It just confirms my belief that hybrids are the way to go for the foreseeable future.
How well do electric cars really work in the bush?
We hit the highway for an all-electric 1,200km regional road test and made it home — just.www.abc.net.au
He should have chosen a Tesla to drive.
yes , agree I read the article, whatever the optimism or enthusiasm of the journalist, i would summarise his/her experience as dreadful...Real life experience driving an EV in regional areas.
It just confirms my belief that hybrids are the way to go for the foreseeable future.
How well do electric cars really work in the bush?
We hit the highway for an all-electric 1,200km regional road test and made it home — just.www.abc.net.au
In 1901 40% of cars were electric and 20% were petrol, the difference is development of ICE engines has come a long way, batteries haven't, but I'm sure that will change in the near future.Electric Cars ?
Been around for years. Why President Eisenhower himself drove around in the families electric car for ages and used it in his 1952 election campaign.
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