The fact that an 8 hour roadtrip becomes almost 10 hours solely because you have to charge multiple times is the reason EV adoption is slowing rapidly. pic.twitter.com/yCdfC5d7MU
— Ethan (@EZebroni) June 16, 2024
Is it worth it?
The fact that an 8 hour roadtrip becomes almost 10 hours solely because you have to charge multiple times is the reason EV adoption is slowing rapidly. pic.twitter.com/yCdfC5d7MU
— Ethan (@EZebroni) June 16, 2024
Alice, I think car insurance in general has now skyrocketed to nosebleed levels for all vehicles..You're correct in driving 8 hours for me ain't happening anytime soon, but neither is paying the price for a new EV...China is selling them in Mexico now...I've read Chinese cars account for 10 percent or so of new car sales there, and EV's are growing their percentage of sales nicely..Some of the Chinese EV's start around 10K...That helps greatly... Edit: While power is always a concern in every nation, Mexico isn't quite as regulated as the US in their fuel sources for power generation..They also have a much bigger current issue, that being potable water..Mexico City is in dire straits regarding drinking water...i think we'll be hearing a lot about that very soon..Aliceinbubbleland said:
I've also read that insurance for an EV has been higher and higher every renewal. Driving 8 hours is impossible for old folks like us so I have no problem waiting 30 minutes for a charge. My question would be how difficult is it to find working EV stations and how long do you have to wait in line to charge?
As to your question about the power grid that is another concern. But if EV sales are slowing that may become less of a concern but we all know the grid is iffy regardless.
Good points.Mr. T...I would point out that the last request from ERCOT a month or so ago told of plants being offline for unscheduled maintenance...Happens I guess...sorry to stray off OP's thread on EV's..Just finish by opining that it always seems the plant operators point at suppliers..suppliers point at generation units. everybody points at infrastructure, and nothing gets done...still...and by definition, you get a clusterxxxk.Mr Tulip said:
I don't believe Texas has a power generation problem (as long as the facilities themselves aren't impacted like the non-weatherized gas valves showed during Snowpocalypse). The limiting factor, currently, is the infrastructure. The power lines themselves cannot withstand the amount of energy required.
What happens is, the more energy they're asking to move, the hotter they get. Heat makes them sag. If they sag too much, bad things happen. Part of the power station operator's job is to ensure this doesn't happen - even if they still have power left to put on the line.
The good news is that a fix for this is a simple (!) matter of changing out the 1930's technology cables for newer, more heat tolerant lines (metallurgy and geometry are fun) that could increase capacities by around 90%. That's without building new towers, new runs, or digging trenches.
The bad news is that the owner of the lines doesn't get reimbursed for capital building projects at the same rate that they do for repairs.As long as the grid is technically working, they have no incentive to improve it.
Common sense like the post above just escapes the politicians in charge of our nation.Mr Tulip said:
I don't believe Texas has a power generation problem (as long as the facilities themselves aren't impacted like the non-weatherized gas valves showed during Snowpocalypse). The limiting factor, currently, is the infrastructure. The power lines themselves cannot withstand the amount of energy required.
What happens is, the more energy they're asking to move, the hotter they get. Heat makes them sag. If they sag too much, bad things happen. Part of the power station operator's job is to ensure this doesn't happen - even if they still have power left to put on the line.
The good news is that a fix for this is a simple (!) matter of changing out the 1930's technology cables for newer, more heat tolerant lines (metallurgy and geometry are fun) that could increase capacities by around 90%. That's without building new towers, new runs, or digging trenches.
The bad news is that the owner of the lines doesn't get reimbursed for capital building projects at the same rate that they do for repairs.As long as the grid is technically working, they have no incentive to improve it.