Ol Dirty Noodle
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I’ll never give up my gas, turbochargers or 3rd pedal [emoji58]
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#1 is largely subjective. The "planning" that goes into charging is the same as people plan to stop for gas and food. Still, NOBODY ever mention the "inconvenience" of having to stop for food! Yet it's a HUGE DEAL to plan to stop to charge the battery!!!
#2 and 5 is related. One may even say they are one and the same.
While the "gas up time" is shorter than charging time, that's not counting going to the bathroom and worse, stopping for food and drink. In reality, just about most people found the total trip time is longer than what google map indicates.
#1 is largely subjective. The "planning" that goes into charging is the same as people plan to stop for gas and food. Still, NOBODY ever mention the "inconvenience" of having to stop for food! Yet it's a HUGE DEAL to plan to stop to charge the battery!!!
Electric vehicle has one and only one real big issue, limited range. That limit is slowly increasing. Still, every mitigating measures are viewed as huge and insurmountable "inconvenience" or worse.
I've been a foot soldier since the early days of internet commerce. I've observed the exact same reaction back then. I can't help but laugh at the repeat in this new cycle.
Thinking about some of the car-rental threads I've seen, this also raises an interesting question about car rentals: will one-way rentals (and their absurd fees) be a thing of the past? Just add six/eight/whatever hours for the car to drive itself back to the point of origin, and you can fly into Jackson, drive to Big Sky and on to Bozeman, and not pay the one-way fee.
So how long does it take to recharge fully?
It can plug itself back in when needed.Would a battery last the 6-8 hours of driving you mention or can it plug itself back in?
Wrong!The same cannot be said of charging an electric vehicle. Unless you're in California, where the government has spent a ton of taxpayer money on charging stations, you're gonna' be in a world of hurt charging across Nebraska having no idea where the closest charging station is.
They will have redundant systems like GPS, cameras, LIDAR, etc., but there will be situations where they don't know what to do. They will probably deal with this by telling the driver, "I can't function here, you need to take over". And if the driver doesn't respond, then the car would try to pull over and stop in a safe place. The part that scares me are the cases where the car doesn't know there's a problem and just plows into something without even slowing down. I think this has happened to cars that rely on a single sensor system, such as only using a camera to save money. I'd want a car that used multiple sensors and redundant computers.
This kinda gave me a chuckle. So by this reasoning, you don't ride ski lifts because it gives away control of your personal safety. I know that earning your turns is an increasingly popular thing, but this is a bit extreme :beer:
OK, so no buses. But what about all the other driver around you?I don't let anyone drive when I go anywhere unless I know them very well .
OK, so no buses. But what about all the other driver around you?
And how about airplanes? I mean, "pilot error" is not unheard of.
And if you were the passenger on that plane that landed in the Hudson river, your life is in the hand of someone you don't "know very well". Or do you prefer yourself at the control?
When I was in Colorado for 3 weeks this past Christmas, I happily rode in the car of my host. She used to be a professional driver, a couple decades of driving vans and buses in the snow of Summit county. On stormy days, I trust her driving more than myself!
Thing is, driving is largely an experience thing. The more you drive in snow, the better you know how to handle it. Computers can absorb "experience" extremely fast. "Experience" encountered by other computers just like "him"! That makes computer pretty decent drivers in very short time.
225 miles, better send it with a full tank of gas.
Another interesting thought on rentals would be what about younger people who currently pay the higher rate. Would be no reason for that anymore.
Hmm? How often does my computer freeze up and I have to reboot it? I deal with it because when it does it won't kill me...
Or how many times has a engine light come on and the mechanic tells me "oh it was only a bad sensor"? What if it was a sensor reading the edge of the road or another vehicle?
YOU may have “no idea” where the next charge station is. But the car knows!!!
Another interesting approach would be to use a supercapacitor to grab a lot of energy from a charging station very fast, and then transfer it to the batteries while you're driving.