12-01-2010, 09:57 AM | #11 | |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
Quote:
The diesel electric system replaced steam in trains for a reason. If you think about it, they were the first hybrids. Personally, I'm waiting for a practical electric car. I don't have to worry about the argument that I'm just burning coal instead of gas, since we live about 40 miles from Seabrook Station, and most of our electricity comes from nuclear power. I think nuclear power is what we're going to have to run on eventually if we are to survive as an affluent society.
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12-01-2010, 01:37 PM | #12 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
Neat. You got to see an actual Steamer up close an personal while it was running. From what I remember the Steamer my neighbor had was a large sedan and quite quiet due to all the bodywork, upholstery and wood interior.
I think the preheating of a modern steamer could be done easily with modern simple technology. Also a sleep mode where the steamer automatically maintains a lower working pressure for those instant starts with no waiting. Sort of a thermostat set on low. The only drawback and it is a big one is the IDIOT FACTOR that our modern society has developed. |
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12-01-2010, 01:43 PM | #13 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
dh,
Lots of electrics at the show. Many for actual sale. I guess time will tell which are practical and which are not. I think the Volt will probably do better than the leaf initially until the fear of running out of juice subsides. I think there are a lot of unknowns still with regard to true relative cost of battery energy vs oil energy. More importantly, if electric proves to be economically (or environmentally) superior, there will have to be a raft of infrastructure, cultural and societal changes before it really goes mainstream. Sometimes these things happen pretty fast, if the technology is compelling (atms's, cd's) and sometimes things either take a lot longer (newton vs iphone) or never. I'd consider a volt if it were 22K. At 40K, I think it's cheaper to buy a camry for 22-24K and buy gas for five years. Clearly, if we actually do run out of oil, electric (nuclear provided) is going to win. Once it gains significant market share, it's costs should drop and other efficiencies will likely emerge.
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12-01-2010, 02:08 PM | #14 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
I just heard on TV that using and recharging an electric car for a month uses the same amount of electricity as four average homes for a month! I can't see paying that amount on top of my home's electric bill, even if I didn't have to pay for gas; it's not economically feasable. The main gist of the story was that the electrical grid is not capable of supporting a large number of electric cars.
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12-01-2010, 03:44 PM | #15 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
There are a lot of aspects to this that really won't sort themselves out until (or if) it progresses. One scenario that has been discussed is the likelihood that a large population of electric cars could actually serve as an energy "reservoir" storing either solar energy collected during the day for night use, or, storing cheaper (nuclear/coal/gas/hydro) energy generated at night for use during the day. One inherently wasteful aspect of the current "dumb" grid is that you have to match the generation with the usage - there is no concept of "storage."
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12-01-2010, 04:26 PM | #16 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
So far I drive my Ranger a bit less than 9,000 kms a year. Not a great deal no matter how you look at it. Switching to any of the hybrids or their cousins would be financial suicide to my personal economy. I would probably need to own a Civic Hybrid 20 years before breaking even on the extra cost of purchase. I doubt that the insurance rates in the GWN would be acceptable either. There are just too many real world factors to justify anything but gasoline in my situation. A gas Civic or Cube would get better mileage overall but then I would be back to square one with a new car price and added taxes. Gas is the most convenient for me. As for society gas is still the most convenient for most but at what cost to the future generations ? What we really need is a world of nuclear powered cars and trucks. A 20 year life span and a proper way to dispose of the spent fuel. Oh yeah, a $15,000 price tag. Until then we can rely on fuel efficient bikes for transportation when the weather permits. Not the ultimate answer by any means but you get to make new friends wherever you go.
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12-01-2010, 04:37 PM | #17 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
In England, one of the recently proven technologies is converting cars to run on gas. By that, I don't mean the American word for petrol, but real Methane / propane gas. Apparently quite a lot of taxis run on it, & it's been proven to be as efficient as petrol. The main gain for the environment is that it comes straight from the seabed, but doesn't need all the refining of petrol, and apparently U.K. petrol stations (some of them) have the means to load up the cars. I must admit that I don't know a lot about it, but apparently it's gaining favour, & works out cheaper per mile than petrol.
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12-01-2010, 07:46 PM | #18 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
Well I have to agree with all of the above pretty much. Buying any kind of a new car costs a lot more than gas to keep your old one going until it wears out, which they all do eventually. I kept a Jeep CJ7 going for 18 years, and owned it for 14 of those years. By the time it got to be completely beyond hope, I had put a new engine core and clutch in it, and a new fiberglass body on it, plus odds and ends. There were still a few original pieces left on it.
Electric cars are not really there yet, but I think the powers that be realize that they are the future. As Alan C. points out, it's going to have to be an evolutionary process. Nuclear power, a better grid, longer range and better, cheaper cars. Right now they are a luxury for the especially green with lots of green. But I am among the believers that it will eventually happen. Our present system of transportation in North America was built on the availability of cheap fossil fuel. We're going to run out of that, and soon; if not the fuel part, then the cheap part. I don't think we're going to be putting nuclear reactors in cars any time in the next hundred years or so, so that leaves cheap electricity and electric cars. We're going to have to build fast trains. To some extent people are going to have to move back into the cities and use public transportation, which will have to be built in most places. In other words, we''re going to have to live more like the rest of the World. There's plenty of oil in the ground for now, but there is also a hugely increased demand from emerging and Third World countries. That's what's going to drive the cost up. The Chinese are controlling more and more of the supply, particularly the refining and distribution. They are going to require more and more of it for themselves. They are also ahead of us now in building both nuclear and renewable energy sources. We are lagging way behind a good part of the World in these areas. We are going to change both the way we live and the way we get around. We can do it before it all comes crashing down around our ears, or afterward. Either way, we are going to do it.
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12-01-2010, 08:50 PM | #19 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
LPG(liquid propane gas)used to be a favorite of taxi owners in Alberta at one time. Probably still is to a certain degree. LPG was cheaper than gas and the engine ran cleaner and lasted a lot longer. This was before FI engines but I don't know if they still use it. Once LPG started to get popular the price went up with the demand. Diesel fuel went the same way. Price and demand go hand in hand. LPG used to be a useless by-product at refineries and it was just burned off most of the time.
Natural gas made a big splash for a while till folks realized how much trouble it is and the range of the vehicle is quite limited. There are very few locations to refuel and the fuel tanks are very heavy and bulky. The City of Edmonton tried it a few years ago and they had mixed results. Converting gas engines to Natural gas was very costly and any work truck lost too much of it's load capacity to haul around the heavy fuel tanks. A typical half ton truck had to be refueled before an 8 hour shift was over even if it was not driven a lot. You could drive across the city but had to stop and refuel to return to your starting point.This from a friend who actually drove a natural gas powered truck on the job. He was not impressed with the new technology of Natural gas powered vehicles. His personal vehicle was a propane powered Ram 4x4 that worked beautifully. |
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12-03-2010, 10:25 PM | #20 |
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Re: Found a practical car for Water Warrior
Got to thinking a bit about concept cars and searched for this Jag. Thank you Alan for pointing the way to a car I could really enjoy. Not only is it electric but it is soooooooooooo fast when in need of a thrill beyond anything remotely sane. No trunk space but who cares.
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