Are Electric Cars the biggest con on the planet?

Are Electric Cars the biggest con on the planet?

Author
Discussion

Fusion777

2,228 posts

48 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
No, they're not a con. There are technical/economic challenges to overcome (range, charge speed, cost, weight to a lesser extent, charging provision)- these largely will be addressed in time because that's what engineers do. The profit incentive is there, which means technological innovation will happen.

We're not at a bad point at all considering they've only been under serious development for a decade or so, and even then only by certain manufacturers.

page3

4,920 posts

251 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
Personally, I don’t think you should be on Pistonheads unless you’ve owned a TVR. Extra points for an electric one. cool

JonnyVTEC

3,005 posts

175 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
Biggest observation now is the awareness and bring these issues to the table, that’s a good thing. child mining etc. guys that stuff was happening anyway! Yet everyone pretends to be woke when the way we have been taking sulphur out of fuel for years has been ignored, we now have a bigger desire to know where stuff comes from and the sustainability of the full systems.

Problem is you have to try to look at both sides of the coin before deciding it’s already heads. Which is fundamentally what most people are doing.

delta0

2,350 posts

106 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
page3 said:
Personally, I don’t think you should be on Pistonheads unless you’ve owned a TVR. Extra points for an electric one. cool
Somewhat on topic, TVR is going electric from 2024

GT9

6,559 posts

172 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
raspy said:
Yep. BMW have managed to make electric motors in the iX models WITHOUT rare earth metals. They claim it also has the benefit of improving how the motors perform too.

There was a review of the 50 model on youtube where he tested 0-60 even with battery down to 8% and was still getting 0-60 around 4 seconds.
BMW are using a brushed design, which in isolation sounds archaic, but in practice greatly improves the ability to control the energisation of the rotating field. The actual design of the brush arrangement looks to have a very low wear rate, and may even last the life of the motor. If not, the brushes (or carbon shoes more accurately) are easily accessible at the non-drive end of the motor.

This mean you can alter the field strength to deal with various speed and load conditions, as well as fully de-energise the motor, even whilst it is rotating. This can be useful for fault scenarios, as well as allow allowing one axle to be de-activated on demand, for example to reduce unnecessary energy consumption during cruise.

SWoll

18,373 posts

258 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
delta0 said:
page3 said:
Personally, I don’t think you should be on Pistonheads unless you’ve owned a TVR. Extra points for an electric one. cool
Somewhat on topic, TVR is going electric from 2024
Yes, of course they are..

tamore

6,960 posts

284 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
JonnyVTEC said:
Biggest observation now is the awareness and bring these issues to the table, that’s a good thing. child mining etc. guys that stuff was happening anyway! Yet everyone pretends to be woke when the way we have been taking sulphur out of fuel for years has been ignored, we now have a bigger desire to know where stuff comes from and the sustainability of the full systems.

Problem is you have to try to look at both sides of the coin before deciding it’s already heads. Which is fundamentally what most people are doing.
disagree. if crazy elon hadn't catapulted EVs into the mainstream, nobody would give a toss where and how the cobalt mined to process their fossil fuel came from. it's used as a stick to beat the EV market advances with, but it's got st on both ends.

Evanivitch

20,075 posts

122 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
GT9 said:
and may even last the life of the motor. If not, the brushes (or carbon shoes more accurately) are easily accessible at the non-drive end of the motor.
It's BMW, I don't believe this for a second!

page3

4,920 posts

251 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
SWoll said:
delta0 said:
page3 said:
Personally, I don’t think you should be on Pistonheads unless you’ve owned a TVR. Extra points for an electric one. cool
Somewhat on topic, TVR is going electric from 2024
Yes, of course they are..
hehe

Mind you, a Sagaris with Tesla battery/motor would be high on my list.

delta0

2,350 posts

106 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
SWoll said:
delta0 said:
page3 said:
Personally, I don’t think you should be on Pistonheads unless you’ve owned a TVR. Extra points for an electric one. cool
Somewhat on topic, TVR is going electric from 2024
Yes, of course they are..
laugh if they ever revive from the dead

OutInTheShed

7,597 posts

26 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
Evanivitch said:
GT9 said:
and may even last the life of the motor. If not, the brushes (or carbon shoes more accurately) are easily accessible at the non-drive end of the motor.
It's BMW, I don't believe this for a second!
'Lasts the life of the motor', like BMW camchains last the life of the engine, because its life is over when the camchain fails?

I've known motors where brush failure causes local overheating and it's all downhill from there.
Better to change the brushes at X,000 hrs maybe?

Evanivitch

20,075 posts

122 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
Evanivitch said:
GT9 said:
and may even last the life of the motor. If not, the brushes (or carbon shoes more accurately) are easily accessible at the non-drive end of the motor.
It's BMW, I don't believe this for a second!
'Lasts the life of the motor', like BMW camchains last the life of the engine, because its life is over when the camchain fails?

I've known motors where brush failure causes local overheating and it's all downhill from there.
Better to change the brushes at X,000 hrs maybe?
And "easily accessible". Yeah right. Just like the oil dip stick...

delta0

2,350 posts

106 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
Gary C said:
98elise said:
explanation of how a motor with one moving part powered by electromagnetism (a fundamanta force) is trumped by fire smile
Simple

it just sounds and feels more FUN wink
Not so simple with the new 68dB noise regs coming in 2026 and noise cameras just being introduced it won’t be possible to have fun in an ICE.

98elise

26,578 posts

161 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
GT9 said:
raspy said:
Yep. BMW have managed to make electric motors in the iX models WITHOUT rare earth metals. They claim it also has the benefit of improving how the motors perform too.

There was a review of the 50 model on youtube where he tested 0-60 even with battery down to 8% and was still getting 0-60 around 4 seconds.
BMW are using a brushed design, which in isolation sounds archaic, but in practice greatly improves the ability to control the energisation of the rotating field. The actual design of the brush arrangement looks to have a very low wear rate, and may even last the life of the motor. If not, the brushes (or carbon shoes more accurately) are easily accessible at the non-drive end of the motor.

This mean you can alter the field strength to deal with various speed and load conditions, as well as fully de-energise the motor, even whilst it is rotating. This can be useful for fault scenarios, as well as allow allowing one axle to be de-activated on demand, for example to reduce unnecessary energy consumption during cruise.
I believe tesla use 3 phase induction. Simple and pretty much maintenance free but obviously need inverters to run from DC and provide variable frequency.

The benefit of permanent magnet (ie using rare earths) is cost, and efficiency.



Europa Jon

555 posts

123 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
All these naysayers! If this was 1900 on 'Equineheads', imagine the uproar if loads of the flat-earth public refused to accept noisy, smelly, expensive and unreliable horseless carriages. Relax, the whole EV thing will work out fine over the next couple of decades.

tamore

6,960 posts

284 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
Europa Jon said:
All these naysayers! If this was 1900 on 'Equineheads', imagine the uproar if loads of the flat-earth public refused to accept noisy, smelly, expensive and unreliable horseless carriages. Relax, the whole EV thing will work out fine over the next couple of decades.
we have a winner! people still keep and ride horses. expensive gig though.

SWoll

18,373 posts

258 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
page3 said:
SWoll said:
delta0 said:
page3 said:
Personally, I don’t think you should be on Pistonheads unless you’ve owned a TVR. Extra points for an electric one. cool
Somewhat on topic, TVR is going electric from 2024
Yes, of course they are..
hehe

Mind you, a Sagaris with Tesla battery/motor would be high on my list.
I really sturggle to see the appeal, and that's from somone who evengelises about EV's as daily transport.

For an impractical and silly weekend car i want the noise, the smells, the vibrations and the chellnge of driving it. smile

survivalist

5,663 posts

190 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
delta0 said:
Gary C said:
98elise said:
explanation of how a motor with one moving part powered by electromagnetism (a fundamanta force) is trumped by fire smile
Simple

it just sounds and feels more FUN wink
Not so simple with the new 68dB noise regs coming in 2026 and noise cameras just being introduced it won’t be possible to have fun in an ICE.
Only new cars, the old ones can continue to be loud.

whirlybird

Original Poster:

650 posts

187 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
Having had a fantastic Eco day out , paddle boarding on the River Bur, Norfolk.
I return to my thread ,to find that 'Free Speech" is not encouraged, my original post being Not Obeying PH Rules !!!!!!
As the OP, I still think EV cars are a con, and there existence does not help the planet anymore than killing cows would to stop methane, there I've said it again.

tamore

6,960 posts

284 months

Sunday 7th August 2022
quotequote all
whirlybird said:
Having had a fantastic Eco day out , paddle boarding on the River Bur, Norfolk.
I return to my thread ,to find that 'Free Speech" is not encouraged, my original post being Not Obeying PH Rules !!!!!!
As the OP, I still think EV cars are a con, and there existence does not help the planet anymore than killing cows would to stop methane, there I've said it again.
you're correct in that EVs alone won't solve a great deal. they have to proliferate in connection with renewables/ nuclear/ whatever power generation doesn't involve burning stuff.

i think they are miles better to drive day to day. anyone who has actually driven one for a bit will agree.