EVs... no one wants them! (Vol. 2)
Discussion
M4cruiser said:
MediumBuild said:
And another - the new Polo - what a bloody mess. No design continuity, no sense of cohesion or integration.

That's just appalling ergonomics.Rows of identical buttons, with no hope of getting the correct one unless you take your eyes off the road for a long time.
Here's how to do it, not perfect, but the tactile feedback is better than most, enabling switching with no looking.
Convex bumps on the end buttons, concave on the middle one. Why would anyone not do it like this?
Edited by M4cruiser on Friday 6th March 20:46
M4cruiser said:
M4cruiser said:
MediumBuild said:
And another - the new Polo - what a bloody mess. No design continuity, no sense of cohesion or integration.

That's just appalling ergonomics.Rows of identical buttons, with no hope of getting the correct one unless you take your eyes off the road for a long time.
Here's how to do it, not perfect, but the tactile feedback is better than most, enabling switching with no looking.
Convex bumps on the end buttons, convex on the middle one. Why would anyone not do it like this?
tamore said:
blink and you miss a leap at the moment. BYD rolling out 1.5MW capable flash charging stations. sites buffered to lower the grid connection needed. mad stuff.
Indeed : 10 to 80% in 6 minutes 
Edge case use but perfect for those petrol diehards who can take a break and be back to their car within a few minutes
SDK said:
tamore said:
blink and you miss a leap at the moment. BYD rolling out 1.5MW capable flash charging stations. sites buffered to lower the grid connection needed. mad stuff.
Indeed : 10 to 80% in 6 minutes 
Edge case use but perfect for those petrol diehards who can take a break and be back to their car within a few minutes
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
SDK said:
tamore said:
blink and you miss a leap at the moment. BYD rolling out 1.5MW capable flash charging stations. sites buffered to lower the grid connection needed. mad stuff.
Indeed : 10 to 80% in 6 minutes 
Edge case use but perfect for those petrol diehards who can take a break and be back to their car within a few minutes
I have a 150 mile one way commute, all dual carriageway or motorwaythat often becomes 180 mile return trip. There's limited charging where I work, it's expensive, the same speed as a home charger and limited to 2 hrs use. I'd therefore need to charge on the way home somewhere. Adding 25 - 35 min currently puts me off of moving to EV, which is a shame as I've liked the ones I've driven. This sort of speed though would make it no different to liquid fuel. Similarly, it would make the difference for the 200 mile trip to the in laws who have no off street parking.
Small pool of 800 employees where I work to make the observation from but I'm aware of at least 10 others with similar or longer commutes than mine. Average mileage in the UK is fine as a metric but most of us travel in, stay over then travel back for our days in the office. I think if this was widely available it would change the view for many.
p1stonhead said:
Is it even remotely possible from a technical standpoint for general use rather than a demonstration?
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
I think these really fast charging solutions are going to rely on big buffers rather than massive input rates. Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
otolith said:
p1stonhead said:
Is it even remotely possible from a technical standpoint for general use rather than a demonstration?
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
I think these really fast charging solutions are going to rely on big buffers rather than massive input rates. Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
tamore said:
otolith said:
p1stonhead said:
Is it even remotely possible from a technical standpoint for general use rather than a demonstration?
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
I think these really fast charging solutions are going to rely on big buffers rather than massive input rates. Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
otolith said:
p1stonhead said:
Is it even remotely possible from a technical standpoint for general use rather than a demonstration?
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
I think these really fast charging solutions are going to rely on big buffers rather than massive input rates. Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
tamore said:
uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
otolith said:
p1stonhead said:
Is it even remotely possible from a technical standpoint for general use rather than a demonstration?
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
I think these really fast charging solutions are going to rely on big buffers rather than massive input rates. Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
otolith said:
p1stonhead said:
Is it even remotely possible from a technical standpoint for general use rather than a demonstration?
Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
I think these really fast charging solutions are going to rely on big buffers rather than massive input rates. Like do we have the capacity to get close to that in the UK without things blowing up?
tamore said:
absolutely, but avoiding digging trenches back up would be a good thing. perhaps just making sure extra cables could be dragged through the conduit if needed in the future?
I think the roll out of this kind of tech will be slow enough not to become a major issue. They are not going to suddenly replace existing ultra-rapid chargers. uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
absolutely, but avoiding digging trenches back up would be a good thing. perhaps just making sure extra cables could be dragged through the conduit if needed in the future?
I think the roll out of this kind of tech will be slow enough not to become a major issue. They are not going to suddenly replace existing ultra-rapid chargers. tamore said:
uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
absolutely, but avoiding digging trenches back up would be a good thing. perhaps just making sure extra cables could be dragged through the conduit if needed in the future?
I think the roll out of this kind of tech will be slow enough not to become a major issue. They are not going to suddenly replace existing ultra-rapid chargers. tamore said:
uktrailmonster said:
tamore said:
absolutely, but avoiding digging trenches back up would be a good thing. perhaps just making sure extra cables could be dragged through the conduit if needed in the future?
I think the roll out of this kind of tech will be slow enough not to become a major issue. They are not going to suddenly replace existing ultra-rapid chargers. loudlashadjuster said:
The way battery prices are going it s going to be a no-brainer option to add some storage to existing sites if the immediate power demands increase as cars can take 300+ kW charging, so I can t see even existing sites needing to be upgraded in terms of grid connection.
when sodium cell production is in full swing it'll be brilliant for this. cheap, big temp range of operation, doesn't mind full cycling, very resistant to thermal runaway. low energy density doesn't really matter as you could dig a big hole and bury a few containers at charging sites.Googlin said:
150kW means around 15 minutes to add 50% to a 77kWh battery (ie 30-80%)
That's around 150 miles range at 4 miles/ kWh, or at an average speed of 60mph (because in real life no one is flat out the whole time at the speed limit, there's stuff called traffic that makes your real world speed slower) that's 2 1/2 hours.
That's more than fast enough for most people in most circumstances.
A 15 minute stop every 150 miles or 2 1/2 hours is pretty sensible.
The Highway Code agrees with you, recommending a break of 15mins every two hours of driving. That's around 150 miles range at 4 miles/ kWh, or at an average speed of 60mph (because in real life no one is flat out the whole time at the speed limit, there's stuff called traffic that makes your real world speed slower) that's 2 1/2 hours.
That's more than fast enough for most people in most circumstances.
A 15 minute stop every 150 miles or 2 1/2 hours is pretty sensible.
Edited by plfrench on Sunday 8th March 15:32
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