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Home > General > Are EVs for the well heeled? |
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Andy131 Member Since: 09 Dec 2009 Location: Manchester Posts: 2185 |
Hydrogen will in my opinion have a roll to play. Spent 2 years doing very little else but testing and modifying them at work. They like to be started and kept running, so your average shopping trolley is not a good use, but they work well as a hybrid, so for example a bus that has a fuel cell would actually be a BEV with a fuel cell running constantly in the background charging the battery.
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24th Jan 2022 12:31 pm |
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IanMetro Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Somerset BS21 Posts: 3142 |
I think that hydrogen will pay a bigger part in the future than we now think.
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24th Jan 2022 12:57 pm |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13290 |
Hydrogen seems a likely solution for big off road machines , tractors diggers etc
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25th Jan 2022 9:18 pm |
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AT1963 Member Since: 23 Nov 2021 Location: Leicester Posts: 252 |
The other concern i have is towing with an EV.
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26th Jan 2022 5:04 pm |
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NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
EV's have bags of torque from the moment you start rolling, which is ideal for towing.
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26th Jan 2022 5:36 pm |
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AT1963 Member Since: 23 Nov 2021 Location: Leicester Posts: 252 |
Thanks noDosh
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26th Jan 2022 5:58 pm |
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pinhead Member Since: 12 Nov 2013 Location: yorkshire Posts: 120 |
I dont tow with an E V yet but I will soon
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26th Jan 2022 7:22 pm |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13290 |
A possible ev towing solution is a battey powered axle on trailer/caravan, extending range.
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26th Jan 2022 9:55 pm |
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TooBlue Member Since: 30 Oct 2019 Location: Midlands Posts: 265 |
I just don't see any point in battery operated cars, when I already have two perfectly good old diesel cars. |
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26th Jan 2022 10:08 pm |
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NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
But one day you won't have two perfectly good ones. Eventually they will fail to the extent that they cannot be safely or economically repaired.
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26th Jan 2022 10:59 pm |
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Andy131 Member Since: 09 Dec 2009 Location: Manchester Posts: 2185 |
Problem is the govt is forcing me to buy a milk float, they have banned the sale of petrol and diesel cars from 2035. Even worse I can only buy a car that totally over complicates things by being part petrol and part milk float from 2030. Diesel isn't even on the cards.
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27th Jan 2022 8:35 am |
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dondiddy Member Since: 16 Apr 2017 Location: Hamilton Posts: 753 |
It`s interesting to see both camps of thought with some" creative" reasoning for and against EV`s. I normally drive everywhere and I was out my car the other day with a rare walk along a main road to visit an address and had the "pleasure"of breathing in exhaust fumes from the passing traffic including some older diesels where you could taste the fumes as they drove past. I would not like to think what it would do to anyones long term health if they had to walk or cycle along that road to work or school everyday. My journey to work is a 10mile round trip which is not great use of a diesel so when I was changing my D4 last year (The WBAC price was too good to pass up!) I decided to give a hybrid a go. I spent the same money as I would have spent on another D4 or RRS.
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27th Jan 2022 9:46 am |
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NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
So "The Government" - a mechanism broadly designed for protecting the population from its worst excesses (yeah, right), will force you into a hybrid in 8 years time. They will then drag you, screaming, from your cozy corner in the pub to buy a full BEV in 13 years time. The Freelander 2 was launched in 2007. Who would have imagined such a vehicle for comfort, capability or price in 1999? Or in 1994? In 1994 we were queuing up to buy these (I know, because I was selling them at the time) As for "milk float" they don't even share the same battery chemistry. You may as well describe your FL2 as a steam engine. Petrol Hybrids have been available in the UK for a number of years now with few reports of issues (ignore the Full Fat Range Rover debacle, that was just Land Rover being Land Rover). Full BEV has similarly been here for some time. There has been some dross, but you can't deny the quality of the products now pouring out from across China, Europe and the US. Your argument is wholly based on emotion and a reluctance to let go of the familiar. I understand that, change can be frightening if you see folk run from it screaming "Different! Different!" I wonder how many people ran away from Tharg when he stood there by a blazing fire, cooking his kill for the day. I bet the sweet smell of tasty roast meat won them over in the end though. So it shall be with electric. Once you taste it, you'll want more. Current driveway contents: 2021 V60 Cross Country B5 2009 FL2 dog bus and shooting wagon On Order: 2023 Fisker Ocean Ultra - deposit paid. |
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27th Jan 2022 10:26 am |
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chicken george Member Since: 05 Dec 2007 Location: N. Yorks Posts: 13290 |
Electric drive is truly wonderful, smooth responsive quiet, Ideally batteries do need to be lighter and have more capacity. but for many drivers the capacity available now is ample.
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27th Jan 2022 5:34 pm |
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