RaceRed5.0
Well-Known Member
Why are we getting electric crap? Can't we focus on flying cars. Man Back to the Future was way off.
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Not sure I made a comparison - I’m illustrating that there are many ways to generate electricity, that it’s ubiquitous - in my experience, they even have electricity in Texas... I’m not sure about the relevance of your overlay - it seems like what Germany is doing might work better in Texas. Is there any handy data about Australia?
Bad comparison.
https://www.aer.gov.au/wholesale-ma...generation-capacity-and-output-by-fuel-sourceIs there any handy data about Australia?
Not recycling Lithium batteries is going to become a major ecological disaster. If you don't recycle them then they have to be buried in special pits eventually your going to run out of room. These batteries need dealt with now or electric cars will be the cause of one of the worst ecological disasters in history.it does not make any economic sense to recycle the batteries. Batteries contain only a small fraction of lithium carbonate as a percent of weight and are inexpensive compared to cobalt or nickel. The average lithium cost associated with Li-ion battery production is less than 3% of the production cost. Intrinsic value for the Li-ion recycling business currently comes from the valuable metals such as cobalt and nickel that are more highly priced than lithium. Due to less demand for lithium and low prices, almost none of the lithium used in consumer batteries is completely recycled.
While lithion is 100% recyclable, currently economics do not add up to recycle it
Recycled lithium is as much as five times the cost of lithium produced from the least costly brine based process. It is not competitive for recycling companies to extract lithium from slag, or competitive for the OEMs to buy at higher price points from recycling companies.
This one is my favorite. Take a look at the tabs for emissions and climate. Ones going down (good) and ones going up (bad).The amount coming from renewables.
https://www.energy-charts.de/ren_share.htm?year=all&source=ren-share&period=monthly
It was about range. For Germany that is is size of a mid-sized state (Indiana) a 300 mile range for a day might be all they need, and recharging can happen while at a destination (not mid-trip). Even in New South Wales (the size of Texas) the population is not spread all over the map.Not sure I made a comparison - I’m illustrating that there are many ways to generate electricity, that it’s ubiquitous - in my experience, they even have electricity in Texas... I’m not sure about the relevance of your overlay - it seems like what Germany is doing might work better in Texas. Is there any handy data about Australia?
I see the S550 living on in modified form for hybrids (V8 and EB4) while an entirely new chassis (maybe same platform as the EV SUV) will be used for an EV mustang. That way you can have a tuned chassis for each architecture (since an ICE platform does NOT make a good EV platform).I see the Mustang being a hybrid with the ecoboost before a true EV, but you never know. Although there isn't much free space to place a battery pack with the hardware required to make an ICE work (gas tank taking up a fair amount of space).
Not much of a fan of EV cars in general, but the wheels and carbon fiber trim on that Mustang look b-e-a-utiful! Love it!Check out the video we put of Bill talking with Josh from Webasto about the Mustang Lithium! Including footage of the interior!
Mustang Lithium
10 minutes is still way too long to think of an EV as a real competitor to an ICE vehicle. And it's only a hope/dream that charging time will be that short.That would likely take a full charge from the current 30-50 minutes to under 10 minutes most likely.
The only real way a EV can compete with a ICE car is if it has the same range and having that ranger at ICE car prices.10 minutes is still way too long to think of an EV as a real competitor to an ICE vehicle. And it's only a hope/dream that charging time will be that short.