Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,018 Threads: 53
Reputation:
5
Location: The delightful town of Knaresborough, North Yorkshire
It certainly seems that electric cars are not really the answer. Smaller cars, driven half the distance, seem to come out far better.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,393 Threads: 106
Reputation:
28
Location: Darkest Bedfordshire
Any strategy which proposes scrapping existing vehicles and buying new is more about sales than it is about the environment.
The cleanliness of electric power is inseparable from the means of generation - Norway - hydroelectric is pretty clean. Eastern europe - coal fired - baaad.
And yes, a 2-tonne car is not only wholly unnecessary but massively less fuel efficient than, say, a 500kg car.
Joined: Nov 2018 Posts: 215 Threads: 0
Reputation:
2
Location: Norfolk
Car type: 1934 RP Saloon
Apparently Ireland has some busses running on hydrogen, so they could pop over on the ferry for a top up.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,230 Threads: 33
Reputation:
7
Location: Salop
Car type: '28 GE Cup. '28 AD Chummy '30 RL Saloon. '34 RP Saloon. Too Many toys!
I have thought for some time that the current 'EV' is a stepping stone. Even a fast charge could be very inconvenient.
I think hydrogen will be the future. As you just top up like you do with hydrocarbons and off you go again. And much of the mechanicals are straight from the EV parts book..
The charge time isnt really a problem with cars, with life as present we would easy survive here with overnight charging, but the charge time is seen as a problem by the public. What may be more of an issue is if you live in a block of flats or in a terrace house is where you can actually charge it?. Or rather charge it cheaply at night. Daytime charging will become more expensive. Anyway I digress.
Charging is certainly an issue with commercial vehicles/buses etc. They don't earn money sat round charging up. And they do big miles every day. Thats the main reason I see battery electric being a dead end.
I had a hybrid on hire for my last week with my previous employer. No a plug in hybrid, a hybrid. If you drove like miss daisy it was leccy, put your foot down the engine kicked in. it went like a rocket. When I finished with it, it had 45quids worth of fuel to refill, but I had done over 700 miles. I was impressed. it was Korean.
Joined: Aug 2020 Posts: 68 Threads: 2
Reputation:
1
Location: Australia
Car type: RN box saloon
My limited understanding of hydrogen tells me that there is considerable greenhouse gas involved in the production. If so what is the point? I have owned a few cars that ran on LPG some dedicated, some dual fuel - saved heaps of money on fuel and the engines seemed to last forever. Now it seems some methods of hydrogen production use gas, if that is the case another whole step is involved, so again what is the point?