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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Sun, 6 Nov 2005 23:32:21 +0000, Clive wrote:
In message , Richard J. writes Clive wrote: In message , David Bradley writes On Sun, 6 Nov 2005 17:31:23 +0000, Clive wrote: In message , David Bradley writes Then I am one ofthe few because there is no such thing as a clean diesel, only a less dirty one. Progress would have been served if the route had been electrified with zero polluting, Such a thing doesn't yet exist. Please explain further. In my book a trolleybus IS zero polluting. David Bradley Not only do trolley buses pollute, (carbon from motor brushes asbestos from brake pads etc.) but there is also the pollution from the source of the traction current supplied. Asbestos is no longer used in brake pads. From the DfT website: "Regulations introduced under the Consumer Protection Act, the Road Vehicles (Brake Linings Safety) Regulations 1999, prohibited the manufacture, supply or fitting of asbestos-based brake linings." Modern trolleybuses [and trams] use brushless AC motors - the amounts of carbon dust released into the environment by traditional trolleybus [and tram] DC motors was hardly enough to be any kind of issue anyway. Both trams and trolleybuses need to make some use of friction braking material. Fundamentally modern trolleybuses and trams have rather similar friction braking arrangements and are about equally polluting at a level which in practice must be considered as negligible, particularly because both trams and trolleybuses do most of their braking electrically, unlike diesel buses which depend heavily on friction braking systems. Yes - there is pollution "from the source of the traction current" for all electric vehicles, trams and trolleybuses. But this pollution is NOT directly dumped into the air breathed on the streets AND the levels are much lower than from diesel vehicles, a fraction by comparison in fact, even if the power is generated by burning fossil fuels in thermal power stations. A study done in Sweden comparing the emission levels into the environment as a whole for Netherlands trolleybuses, which are powered from an electricity grid with a similar generation mix of coal, gas, etc., to our own, showed the following comparison for pollutants emitted directly by diesel buses and indirectly from power stations on behalf of trolleybuses:- NOX - trolleybus 7% of diesel CO - trolleybus 3% of diesel HC - 0% of diesel Particulates - 2% of diesel CO2 - 73% of diesel If I accept that and the juice is generated somewhere, car to explain how, and why are there no losses between power plant and consumer? There are power losses between power plant and consumer. In the UK grid, these losses have been quoted as 9%. The above pollution figures factor in all losses between power station and trolleybuses. |
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