Results 961 to 975 of 2079
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14th October 2022, 01:34 PM #961GOLD MEMBER
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And the UK government have already started replacing natural gas with Hydrogen. I wonder if that idea will become the second diesel fiasco in a few years.
CHRIS
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14th October 2022, 04:02 PM #962
These two things on Wikipedia go some way to understanding the solutions:
NOx - Wikipedia
Selective catalytic reduction - Wikipedia
This one also points out pretty much the same methods:
Selective non-catalytic reduction - Wikipedia
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25th October 2022, 02:41 AM #963
Nickel is new again
Fast-Charging EV Batteries With Nickel Foil - IEEE Spectrum
Fast-Charging EV Batteries With Nickel Foil
New tech enables standard EV batteries to charge to 70 percent capacity in 11 minutes
.....
For instance, a conventional long-range EV with a 120-kilowatt-hour pack that requires an hour to recharge could be replaced with an EV with a 60-kWh pack capable of 10-minute fast charging while preserving a very similar travel time during long-distance trips.
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25th October 2022, 09:39 PM #964GOLD MEMBER
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why do the always leave out the actual electrical specs required to do that level charging though? I mean do they need 6 or 60kw of power to do the 10 min charge? I think people are ok with elec vehicals now, whats going to hold them back is the infrastructure trying to get the power to them.
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26th October 2022, 04:22 PM #965
There is a sneaky link right at the bottom
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05281-0
and the full 16 page PDF.
If you have trouble with their paywalls etc, use "Bypass Paywalls Clean"
(Support: https://gitlab.com/magnolia1234/bypass-paywalls-firefox-clean
Chrome: https://gitlab.com/magnolia1234/bypass-paywalls-chrome-clean)
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27th October 2022, 08:55 AM #966GOLD MEMBER
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An article on the hype surrounding Hydrogen in transport
What’s more efficient? Hydrogen or battery powered? (volkswagenag.com)
>With the hydrogen-powered electric car, the losses are significantly greater: 45 percent of the energy is already lost during the production of hydrogen through electrolysis. Of this remaining 55 percent of the original energy, another 55 percent is lost when hydrogen is converted into electricity in the vehicle. This means that the hydrogen-powered electric car only achieves an efficiency of between 25 to 35 percent, depending on the model. For the sake of completeness: when alternative fuels are burned, the efficiency is even worse: only 10 to 20 percent overall efficiency.<CHRIS
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27th October 2022, 01:31 PM #967
Does it matter? Or why are people obsessed with fast charging?
Most people will come home, plug their electrical vehicle in and will want it charged before they drive away the next morning, 10-12 hours later. When away from home, they may need a fast charge and then they will go to a commercial charger.
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27th October 2022, 02:00 PM #968
Graeme
It is difficult to say exactly how charging patterns will pan out. It may be given that a large part of renewable power will be solar so that where possible motorists will try to take advantage of off-peak, which will now be through the middle of the day. If retired there will be no problem as you will plug in at a time to suit, but if at work (and not working from home), charging your vehicle at the best price and competing for a charging spot with all your work colleagues may be more problematic.
I expect it will get sorted.....eventually.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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27th October 2022, 02:12 PM #969
Probably right, Paul.
But in the short to medium term, there will probably be "excess thermal power" continuing to be available in the midnight to 6.00 am slot. Those stations do not ramp up and ramp down as quickly as demand!
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28th October 2022, 09:15 AM #970
It's not so much the fast charging, but the access to ANY power for many people, such as high-rise dwellers where there is no power available in the community garage (or there is no garage), or people who have to park on the street in the inner city (even here, as we do). People having to run stupidly long cables down the outside of buildings so they can charge their vehicles. Fast charge (at a servo or similar) for such people becomes paramount, but it will also wear out the battery faster - lithium batteries like slow charging mostly, but that may change I guess. I only use a USB-C charger on my phone if I need fast juice and don't have the time for a trickle.
Edited for clarity.
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28th October 2022, 12:48 PM #971
Sorry, but you have lost me FF.
Cannot see how you can connect a fast charger to a "stupidly long" extension lead - surely it is limited to 10 amps, perhaps 15 amps in some cases.
Appreciate that people without a car park with a powerpoint do have a problem; they will have to rely on commercial charging stations, like servos.
But would any rational person buy an electrical car if they did not have somewhere to park it? Trying to think of something clever to say about smart chargers and less smart owners!
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28th October 2022, 01:41 PM #972
I'm not connecting them Graeme, I'm saying forget about fast charging, ANY charging is a problem for some people.and that therefore:in a fast charging station somewhere.
Original post slightly edited for clarity.
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28th October 2022, 03:03 PM #973
I think everyone is forgetting some really important aspects of how anything is implemented in life.
The infrastructure for anything new isn't available 100% as of Day One.
When cars were first created, one bought their fuel in tin cans that were opened with (what looked like) a can-punch. It was a big deal. There were no "service stations", nor anyone to change the oil.... it ALL had to be arranged. Fuel was order in. In a way it was cute, but terribly inconvenient.
Same with internet. Who here DIDN'T struggle with a 28.8k (or 14.4k) modem and cursed Telstra and their copper pair lines?
A town is created, it didn't just pop out of the earth like a game of Command+Conquer or SIM City.... it was dirt roads and dirt footpaths and no water (but your own tank) and a hole out the back for the Outhouse....
The same will go for this infrastructure.
Ive no doubt the network will be built at a speed that we will boggle at in 5 or 10 years time. We'll look back and see that all the "Yeah But..." arguments were just negative naysayers. Have a little vision!
If there is doubt, I look at China, which I sort of love (not the goddam CCP though). Over there the city electric infrastructure is positively space-aged compared to here. Electrification is EVERYTHING.... electric "city cars" sell like CRAZY... electric scooters are 100% of sales and they can't make them fast enough. If people need to go a long way, they catch a high-speed train that goes at 360km/h.
We are positively prehistoric with our namby-pamby rear-view politics. The last government has positively squandered the opportunity to be "the lucky country". So many HUGE opportunities lost.
People will work around all this arm-waving I'm reading here. Its not the end of the world. The early adopters will take the pain, as they always do, find wild solutions with improbable hacks, and in the end it all catches up for "The Ordinaries".
I suspect, however, that the rapid changes we are seeing in the environment are going to galvanise us as a species to change how we do EVERYTHING and the capitalists will either capitalise on it (or hide in a hole) or the government will simply do it and charge appropriately (as it bloody well should).
(edited slightly for clarity and spuling erras)
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28th October 2022, 07:54 PM #974.
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28th October 2022, 08:38 PM #975GOLD MEMBER
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