Chargeride
Well-Known Member
Alpha motors make the coolest EVs on the planet, the trucks are just custom retro heaven
www.alphamotorinc.com

apparently they were not sure of the cause in a couple of cases( ins anyone? scapegoat time,just saying) the only definite thing was the EV battery packs contributed to the severity of the fire I could see a couple of ways to mitigate the risk,stow EVs on the perimeter were they can be easily scuttled( a metal fire is hellishly hot and temp monitors on the areas that contain said vehicles and or batteries,the only battery packs I ever had that got hot were worn out nicad cells.(B29s and VWs again,the old lightweight chainsaws would burn merrily too)Matson have suspended EV shipping.
A story worthy of the news, but supressed around most of the world.
They need vastly increased fire protection and probably hoping for government help, three ships lost to EVs turning normal fires into boat melting furnaces.
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Matson halts EV shipments due to fire safety concerns
Matson has suspended shipments of EVs and lithium iron phosphate (LEP) batteries, citing growing safety concerns and the risk of battery fires during maritime transit.www.automotivelogistics.media
I've never heard of these, or ot the Morton you mention below. My question is always "who services something that is too heavy to return to sender." Boring, I know, but something that really matters if we aren't mechanics with parts available off the rack.Alpha motors make the coolest EVs on the planet, the trucks are just custom retro heaven
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Alpha Motor — JAX Electric CUV
www.alphamotorinc.com
I would bring back zeppelins in the air before I brought back cranks on the ground. Jes sayin'.Chargeride, I know where the electricity can come from! Remember those old cars that you had to manually crank the motor from the front to start? I had a friend who had a Model T, that crank was a thing of nightmares! Anyways, bring that crank back. Use it to charge the motor!
Translating corporate speak...
EVs sales are facing challenging conditions.
Sales are not expected to reach predicted targets.
Various factors are influencing sales trajectories
growth has moderated.
consumer demand for new EVs has softened in some markets.
I would say more like 2035 before we can stop making ICE cars.
No freakin idea where the electricity will come from.
What you say is possible and rational, but it doesn't count the money ... petroleum is very profitable, renewables usually not. Period. Sorry about that, Chief...it will come from the grid, from a mix of nuclear, hydro, solar, wind, and gas. same as it does today but a different mix plus lots of storage - both battery and gravity. these are easy problems to solve and electric cars are inherently cheaper and more reliable once they reach scale and maturity.
people will charge their cars mostly at night, off peak, and the total capacity of the grid will hardly have to change.
What you say is possible and rational, but it doesn't count the money ... petroleum is very profitable, renewables usually not. Period. Sorry about that, Chief...
Although if you look at the rate of return on power plant development nothing pays for itself faster and brings in more money than solar.What you say is possible and rational, but it doesn't count the money ... petroleum is very profitable, renewables usually not. Period. Sorry about that, Chief...
The real issue is with solar or wind you don't have the recurring revenue that you do with natural gas or coal. You can't really charge for sunlight.I should have said "profitable this quarter " . My mistake.
And an example from the real world...The real issue is with solar or wind you don't have the recurring revenue that you do with natural gas or coal. You can't really charge for sunlight.
In about 2011 a friend who works in finance explained the "facts of life" to me on this topic. Basically you have to borrow money to build any kind of electrical power generation. And the time to pay the loan back is approximately:
Note that all of these have to sell electricity at approximately the same price.
- Nuclear: 25 years
- Coal: 10-15 years
- Natural Gas: 2-5 years
- Solar or Wind: 12 to 18 months
Now if you can pay a loan back faster, there is less risk (e.g. a change in interest rates) so you typically get a lower rate for that loan. That makes the cost of renewals even lower still.
What those numbers mean is that any attempt to keep legacy power is doomed. No one is going to finance building new nuclear power plants or new coal plants if they are facing that kind of competition. You can make arguments about using natural gas as "peaking" generation and that probably will make sense for some time, but that won't be the majority of power generation.
I'll also point out that batteries are on a similar Wright's Law cost curve to solar. Both solar panels and batteries are very amenable to automation and mass production at absolutely ludicrous scales. Yes, our current tech depends on some fairly exotic and expensive rare earth minerals, but even then in only trace amounts. Chances are that in the future the rare earths will be replaced with complex organic molecules with exotic trace elements (consider how OLEDs have improved over time compared to LEDs or Plasma displays).
Pretty much all power generation except solar requires that you have machines that make a "clanking" sound. The only moving parts in a solar panel are electrons (or, technically, "holes" sometimes).
when these assholes are choking for breath perhaps (not likely)maybe a light will come in their small craniums,this thing about the orange baboon rolling back the emission requirements will kill off a bunch of asthma suffers and make American cities stink againI wonder if charging stations are being systematically sabotaged by a coal roller contingent.
the answer is to change the chemistry,had one genius tell me ions wont burn(I guess he couldn't grok where the ions came from) there have been many promising types of cells that are difficult if not impossible to get to ignite( ever see 300 gals of diesel cooking a semi?) all charging stations should be realtime monitored or at least reviewed on a hourly or some reasonable time basis really wouldn't be surprised if some of the big energy corps having a stake in promoting an inferior dangerous tech( don't think so? back in the day when nukes were coming on line the oil companies actually promoted solar.I believe China already has super cheap EVs?