• Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!

    You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!

Electric Cars/Trucks and winter weather testing with results. What do you think? Who has taken one in Freezing cold long distance to a Ski mountain?

Granite1

Active member
Joined
Apr 28, 2021
Messages
248
Points
43
There's already not enough raw earth minerals (80 percent controlled by our enemy China) to produce all these EV batteries. Now you want to have 2-3 times as many to swap over?????? Who's going to pay to have all these spare batteries laying around-each one cost thousands and thousands????? In addition, 2-3 times more environmental damage, and 2-3 times more electricity that we don't have to keep them all charged. EVs for the masses can only happen in fairytale land.
 

ThatGuy

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 10, 2021
Messages
1,604
Points
113
Location
America
typical stoner response… sad.
Excuse Me What GIF by Bounce
 

Not Sure

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 14, 2013
Messages
2,858
Points
63
Location
Lehigh County Pa.
Website
www.youtube.com
There's already not enough raw earth minerals (80 percent controlled by our enemy China) to produce all these EV batteries. Now you want to have 2-3 times as many to swap over?????? Who's going to pay to have all these spare batteries laying around-each one cost thousands and thousands????? In addition, 2-3 times more environmental damage, and 2-3 times more electricity that we don't have to keep them all charged. EVs for the masses can only happen in fairytale land.
An ICE module with a generator that replaces the battery 😅🤪
 

Granite1

Active member
Joined
Apr 28, 2021
Messages
248
Points
43
Only in fairyland can you drive your EV up to a station and have it swapped over just like that. For example, to change a long range battery in a 2022 Tesla Model 3 takes six hours. If you own one, I hope you never have to buy one---a new OEM battery cost $14,000. Don't worry though, in fairyland these drive up swap stations are going to have dozens of them just laying around to swap over.
 

IceEidolon

Active member
Joined
Aug 10, 2017
Messages
556
Points
43

Definitely an unsafe chemistry no matter how you look at it.
So is gasoline. Cars have been burning up as long as there's been cars - it tends to happen with just about any material with enough energy density to run a vehicle.
 

SteezyRob

Active member
Joined
Oct 12, 2022
Messages
333
Points
43
Location
Vail Corporation Headquarters
4) I'm worried about net EV safety - Here's something I never hear anyone say (again, because IMO the entire media are EV cheerleaders), but highways are going to be more dangerous once everyone's driving insanely fast cars which accelerate like rocket ships and which are each 300 to 800 pounds heavier than their ICE counterparts? The average car crash is probably going to have about 1000 additional pounds of mass. No manufacturer can invent a solution to F=MA. Not to mention, the cars are more flammable. Maybe I'll be wrong, but I think it's odd nobody even mentions this. My long-term prediction here (this is probably 10 or more years out) is that after highway fatalities increase in a statistically significant fashion, governments will mandate governors on EV cars to restrict their top speed as well as maximum allowable acceleration. Think of it like NASCAR restrictor plate racing, but on our roads.
True but I think that manufacturers are going to go crazy with the whole safety thing real soon. Reporting you to authorities if you breaks laws, starting off with big ones and slowly adding more and more until you can't go over the speed limit without risking going to jail.
 

trackbiker

Active member
Joined
Feb 8, 2005
Messages
357
Points
28
Location
Eastern PA
No mention of hydrogen powered EV's ?
Fuel Cells are the future. The only reason batteries are the current offering is because most people have access to electricity at their homes for charging. Trucks and other fleet vehicles will run on hydrogen fuel cells. They already have their own gas/diesel fueling stations where they refuel when they return to the terminal. H2 can be generated by solar power on warehouse roofs, be compressed, and used to fuel trucks and other fleet vehicles. Fuel cells are lighter than batteries and provide more equivalent MPG. Truck stops will add hydrogen fueling stations so over-the-road trucks can refuel. You don't have to have one on every corner to get started but that will eventually come. There weren't gas stations on every corner when ICE vehicles came into being.
Plug Power in Latham, NY is one of the leading companies in the technology.
 

Ski2LiveLive2Ski

Active member
Joined
Mar 20, 2013
Messages
650
Points
43
I find the focus on range to be misguided. Electric cars obviously have worse range and take longer to "refill" than a gas or diesel car. They're known to have even worse range in the cold. But they have plenty of other benefits - they drive great, they're better for the environment, they are more spacious for a given size, cost less to operate & maintain per mile, and are simpler (leaving aside Tesla's decision to reinvent every non-drive train aspect of the car). The manufacturers should lean more into their strengths rather than constantly being defensive of their weaknesses.

Most families that buy new cars have more than 1 car. The 2nd car is for running to the grocery store or dropping the kids off at school or whichever person has a short commute. Range is just immaterial. Rarely are multiple people in the house all off on super long road trips at the same time. In which case, make the equivalent of a Tesla 3 but with half the battery. Leave all that weight, material, and cost behind. I'm certain a lot of people could live with 150 mile range for their second car, especially if it was $25K instead of 35K+.

The idea that EVs are only relevant if they can do the thing they are worst at (driving long distances in the cold) makes no sense. But we're overshooting the markets actual needs by designing for the hardest case and that has a cost for everyone since EV production is constrained by the availability of batteries. Make twice as many EVs with half the battery size and the costs would come down for everyone (gas car owners included).
It is a relevant topic for a Northeast Ski discussion group. I am the only driver in my household so I have a single car. My enjoying driving 6-10 roundtrips from NJ to northern New England to ski every winter prevents any EV from being a viable option for me - at least until they have refillable fuel sells or quickly swappable batteries. None of their benefits outweigh the cost of having a second vehicle.
 

IceEidolon

Active member
Joined
Aug 10, 2017
Messages
556
Points
43
Fuel Cells are the future. The only reason batteries are the current offering is because most people have access to electricity at their homes for charging. Trucks and other fleet vehicles will run on hydrogen fuel cells. They already have their own gas/diesel fueling stations where they refuel when they return to the terminal. H2 can be generated by solar power on warehouse roofs, be compressed, and used to fuel trucks and other fleet vehicles. Fuel cells are lighter than batteries and provide more equivalent MPG. Truck stops will add hydrogen fueling stations so over-the-road trucks can refuel. You don't have to have one on every corner to get started but that will eventually come. There weren't gas stations on every corner when ICE vehicles came into being.
Plug Power in Latham, NY is one of the leading companies in the technology.
Fuel cells still require hydrogen storage and hydrogen production with all the extra infrastructure, expense, and complexity that comes with it. Right now, that's a huge deal breaker. I can't see that displacing BEVs without something really novel happening. Most people won't buy something with an energy cost of $6 per gallon equivalent (currently hydrogen is substantially higher than that, like $15/gal equivalent) when an alternative is available (either legacy ICE or BEVs). As a relatively niche market like biodiesel now, maybe.
 

trackbiker

Active member
Joined
Feb 8, 2005
Messages
357
Points
28
Location
Eastern PA
Fuel cells still require hydrogen storage and hydrogen production with all the extra infrastructure, expense, and complexity that comes with it. Right now, that's a huge deal breaker. I can't see that displacing BEVs without something really novel happening. Most people won't buy something with an energy cost of $6 per gallon equivalent (currently hydrogen is substantially higher than that, like $15/gal equivalent) when an alternative is available (either legacy ICE or BEVs). As a relatively niche market like biodiesel now, maybe.
I work in an industry that is related to hydrogen production and compression. The supply is about to go way up.
 

Not Sure

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 14, 2013
Messages
2,858
Points
63
Location
Lehigh County Pa.
Website
www.youtube.com

ss20

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 13, 2013
Messages
3,926
Points
113
Location
A minute from the Alta exit off the I-15!
Not sure about EV's and their significantly lower maintenance costs really saving someone in the long run. They still need tires, brakes, and a suspension. Modern ICE cars are just ridiculously bulletproof. To get to 150k miles you need a dozen oil changes (full synth), a couple coolant flushes, and a drop/drain on the tranny fluid. That's $1,200-$1,500. Not sure how that recoups the cost of the $15k+ more you'd spend on a comparable EV. I just also hate the concept that the EV needs to be trashed once the battery is no longer efficient. ICE's are running 200k+ miles with a little bit of luck and decent preventative maintenance (no more than what I outlined above).

Also with electricity and gasoline prices alllllll over the place not sure anyone can safely predict that they'd recoup the purchase price of an EV with gasoline savings (over the life of the car). New England residential electricity is up 5 cents/kwh over last year. 20.8 cents to 25.6. 23% increase. AAA has the price of gasoline in New York at $3.81 today and $3.54 a year ago, a 7% increase.
 

Granite1

Active member
Joined
Apr 28, 2021
Messages
248
Points
43
Not sure about EV's and their significantly lower maintenance costs really saving someone in the long run. They still need tires, brakes, and a suspension. Modern ICE cars are just ridiculously bulletproof. To get to 150k miles you need a dozen oil changes (full synth), a couple coolant flushes, and a drop/drain on the tranny fluid. That's $1,200-$1,500. Not sure how that recoups the cost of the $15k+ more you'd spend on a comparable EV. I just also hate the concept that the EV needs to be trashed once the battery is no longer efficient. ICE's are running 200k+ miles with a little bit of luck and decent preventative maintenance (no more than what I outlined above).

Also with electricity and gasoline prices alllllll over the place not sure anyone can safely predict that they'd recoup the purchase price of an EV with gasoline savings (over the life of the car). New England residential electricity is up 5 cents/kwh over last year. 20.8 cents to 25.6. 23% increase. AAA has the price of gasoline in New York at $3.81 today and $3.54 a year ago, a 7% increase.
You have to remember EVs are a big part of fairytale land, where there are no fossil fuels, just wind mills and solar panels.
 

trackbiker

Active member
Joined
Feb 8, 2005
Messages
357
Points
28
Location
Eastern PA
That report is from 2006. There are several solutions to the cold start problem. One is the fuel cell can be programmed to start and generates heat at cold temperatures. The FC can warm the car and/or charge a battery. It would operate like a thermostat in a building.
 

fbrissette

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2012
Messages
1,672
Points
48
Location
Montreal/Jay Peak
...and 2-3 times more electricity that we don't have to keep them all charged. EVs for the masses can only happen in fairytale land.
Electricity generation is indeed a huge issue and is barely discussed. Gouvernements are pushing electrical vehicles way to quickly. Pretty simple to work out the maths. Adding tens of millions of electric vehicle would entail adding hundreds of Gwatts of new generating stations, most of which being thermal plants burning the same fossil fuel not used by cars. To make sense, the transition towards electrical vehicles should follow the energy transition towards renewable energy. Right now it does not compute.
 
Top