Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 17, 2:44*am, Ken Wheatley wrote:
On 2011-09-16 22:23:00 +0000, Railwayman said: There wont be any need for trains once cheap electric vehicles become more widely used. Especially if we have nuclear-brewed electricity that's 'too cheap to meter'. Cars have been the future of transportation for quite some time, and probably will be for a while! What is the range of a battery only car? |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 17, 4:44*am, Andy Breen wrote:
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 12:32:22 +0100, Robert Cox wrote: On 2011-09-17 12:11:41 +0100, 77002 said: On Sep 17, 2:44*am, Ken Wheatley wrote: On 2011-09-16 22:23:00 +0000, Railwayman said: There wont be any need for trains once cheap electric vehicles become more widely used. Especially if we have nuclear-brewed electricity that's 'too cheap to meter'. Cars have been the future of transportation for quite some time, and probably will be for a while! *What is the range of a battery only car? How long is a piece of string...? About 100 miles for the first tranche of large-production mainstream designs, seems to be the consensus. At the top end 200-odd miles seems to be do-able - if you've got the money to pay for the vehicle. Charge times are still the major issue, though. It's unlikely that the battery-only car could be viable other than as an urban or local hopabout without investment in a supporting infrastructure of battery-change stations (which, after all, is slightly less daft than a supporting infrastructure of places storing and dispensing highly flammable fluid.. ;-) Then there's the potential bottleneck of raw material for battery production. It's not for nothing that many of those minerals are referred to as "rare earths". Thank you. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Cars have been the future of transportation for quite some time, and probably will be for a while! Hmm.. transport came in this order first the roads then the canals then the railways then air. Railways are a new technology and it's only the f**ked up transport economics we have in this country, denying a fair playing field for railways, that has stopped them reigning supreme the way they do elsewhere. Railways are indeed a nineteenth century technology but proper roads were invented by the Romans, which makes roads an outdated BC technology. The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Mind you, if we turned our cities over to cycles, affording them similar priority, that would probably be the finish for cars. I personally would far prefer to do my numerous short car journeys on a bike and it's only the lack of a death wish that has stopped me from doing so. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 17, 6:04*am, allantracy wrote:
Cars have been the future of transportation for quite some time, and probably will be for a while! Hmm.. transport came in this order first the roads then the canals then the railways then air. Railways are a new technology and it's only the f**ked up transport economics we have in this country, denying a fair playing field for railways, that has stopped them reigning supreme the way they do elsewhere. Railways are indeed a nineteenth century technology but proper roads were invented by the Romans, which makes roads an outdated BC technology. The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Mind you, if we turned our cities over to cycles, affording them similar priority, that would probably be the finish for cars. I personally would far prefer to do my numerous short car journeys on a bike and it's only the lack of a death wish that has stopped me from doing so. Should have typed "Electic Cars have been the future of transportation for quite some time". At one point there were electic charging points in some parking lots in California. They have all gone now. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "allantracy" wrote The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Battery technology can never be made efficient, so even with nuclear or other renewable generation of electricity, battery cars can never be made efficient. One possibility is a means of transmitting electricity direct to vehicles. The railways have solved this with OHLE or 3rd rail supply. It has been done with road vehicles (trolleybuses). The other possibility is an efficient means of storing energy in road vehicles without reliance on carbon emissions. In principle this can be done by using electricity from renewables to electrolyse water, using the hydrogen as the energy store, and regenerating the electricity on board in a fuel cell. Peter |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:21:58 +0100, Peter Masson wrote:
"allantracy" wrote The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Battery technology can never be made efficient, Define the meaning you are picking for "efficient" in this context.. so even with nuclear or other renewable generation of electricity, battery cars can never be made efficient. See above. What do you mean by this? Cost? Energy density? Charge cycling efficiency? Lifespan? Charging time? The other possibility is an efficient means of storing energy in road vehicles without reliance on carbon emissions. In principle this can be done by using electricity from renewables to electrolyse water, using the hydrogen as the energy store, and regenerating the electricity on board in a fuel cell. In other words, an energy storage medium with output converted to electricity.. Last I heard (about a year ago, and from someone involved heavily in hydrogen cell development), H2 cells and batteries were technologies advancing at comparable rates, and although he was backing H2 cells, it was too early to call which would win out. -- Speaking for myself, and no-one but myself |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Andy Breen" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:21:58 +0100, Peter Masson wrote: "allantracy" wrote The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Battery technology can never be made efficient, Define the meaning you are picking for "efficient" in this context.. so even with nuclear or other renewable generation of electricity, battery cars can never be made efficient. See above. What do you mean by this? Cost? Energy density? Charge cycling efficiency? Lifespan? Charging time? charge cycle efficiency. The other issues can in principle be overcome, but the laws of physics will not let you charge and discharge a battery without significant energy losses. Peter |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 17, 7:39*am, "Peter Masson" wrote:
"Andy Breen" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:21:58 +0100, Peter Masson wrote: "allantracy" wrote The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Battery technology can never be made efficient, Define the meaning you are picking for "efficient" in this context.. so even with nuclear or other renewable generation of electricity, battery cars can never be made efficient. See above. What do you mean by this? Cost? Energy density? Charge cycling efficiency? Lifespan? Charging time? charge cycle efficiency. The other issues can in principle be overcome, but the laws of physics will not let you charge and discharge a battery without significant energy losses. Are there not also weight, and size issues with batteries. Gasoline/ petrolium is fairly light and very efficient. A trunk full of batteries is heavy, even if we are talking about the recent battery developments. There is clearly something to be said for Electric/trolley buses. They are still very much in use in Boston, MA and San Francisco, CA. |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:39:20 +0100, Peter Masson wrote:
"Andy Breen" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:21:58 +0100, Peter Masson wrote: "allantracy" wrote The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Battery technology can never be made efficient, Define the meaning you are picking for "efficient" in this context.. so even with nuclear or other renewable generation of electricity, battery cars can never be made efficient. See above. What do you mean by this? Cost? Energy density? Charge cycling efficiency? Lifespan? Charging time? charge cycle efficiency. The other issues can in principle be overcome, but the laws of physics will not let you charge and discharge a battery without significant energy losses. More chemistry than physics in a battery, surely. The physical limitations apply equally to any stored-energy medium (and thus as much to H2 tankage as power stations as batteries..) - you always get less out than you put in. OK, I'll grant you that heat dissipation can be an issue in charging batteries, but the degree to which it's an issue depends on the type of battery (thinking back, here, to discussions of heat issues in spacecraft that couldn't depend on constant solar charging..). The real question is - is charge cycle efficiency enough of a restrictive factor. It's not like the alternatives don't have serious issues of their own. Inductive charging or power supply is lossy, H2 is /really/ good at leaking out of storage (and producing the stuff and compressing or liquifying it are all monsterously lossy processes). Given that we (as a planet) are not short of renewable electricity production potential, but that most of it is inconveniently placed for current - and even more so for likely - population concentrations, any "good enough" means of energy storage is likely to be, well, "good enough". -- Speaking for myself, and no-one but myself |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sep 17, 8:22*am, Andy Breen wrote:
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 07:44:04 -0700, 77002 wrote: On Sep 17, 7:39*am, "Peter Masson" wrote: "Andy Breen" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:21:58 +0100, Peter Masson wrote: "allantracy" wrote The future for cars looks very bleak unless they can be persuaded to run on electricity. Though there was a steam car around a while ago how ironic would that be? Battery technology can never be made efficient, Define the meaning you are picking for "efficient" in this context.. so even with nuclear or other renewable generation of electricity, battery cars can never be made efficient. See above. What do you mean by this? Cost? Energy density? Charge cycling efficiency? Lifespan? Charging time? charge cycle efficiency. The other issues can in principle be overcome, but the laws of physics will not let you charge and discharge a battery without significant energy losses. Are there not also weight, and size issues with batteries. *Gasoline/ petrolium is fairly light and very efficient. *A trunk full of batteries is heavy, even if we are talking about the recent battery developments. But the break point between the two is a moving thing, not least because IC engines have been getting more complex as additional pollution control gear has been added. Example, from the bottom end of the power range I'll admit. Small electric outboard motors for boats are now getting very competitive with small petrol outboards. They cost more, but they are much lighter and easier to handle and much cheaper to run. In fact, a local builder offers them as their preferred option on boats up to 23'... http://www.torqeedo.com/en/hn/home.html Five years ago none of that would have been true - electric outboards back then were very much what they'd been for the previous 90-odd years. These things really are a different world (and yes, I've seen one in use, and they do seem to have run-times comparable with a small petrol engine with integral tank. When I need to replace the 6bhp o/b I have then I'll be seriously considering one). That's a low-power example, but it's not going to stop there. Often wondered if there is an application for a streetcar/tram or electric/trolly bus that runs under wires where practical, but utilizes batteries for stretches where wires are not practical, or unsightly. An electro diesel tram train might be another possibility. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Delay HS2’s (London) Euston plans, says ex-civil service head | London Transport | |||
WCML OHLE ... | London Transport | |||
Monday start for full WCML timetable | London Transport | |||
Lower Price Baume and Mercier Hampton Classic Mens Watch 8606 | London Transport | |||
TfL Real-Time Information - A classic cock-up | London Transport |