justoffal
Diamond Member
- Jun 29, 2013
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YesI think engineers will get there in time
but probably nowhere near the goals and mandates set by liberals in government
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YesI think engineers will get there in time
but probably nowhere near the goals and mandates set by liberals in government
In this story we find out that the range of the buses is much less than was promised. As I have stated, to sell "green", they must lie about how well it works.
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Albuquerque's Groundbreaking Bus Project Stalled — Streetsblog USA
A problem with the electric bus fleet means a much-hyped example of bus rapid transit will be delayed by up to 18 months.usa.streetsblog.org
But the biggest problem seems to be the battery range. The batteries were only running about 175 miles between charging as opposed to the 275 miles the city had been promised, according to Inside EVs. They were also prone to overheating.
In a decade or so, the bugs will be ironed out and electric busses will become the norm.
New technology? Electric vehicles were built before gas cars, back in the late 1800's.Sounds like new technology.
In a decade or so, the bugs will be ironed out and electric busses will become the norm.
The weak point is the battery, they need to throw away the battery and use overhead wires or rails.How long do you think the bug will be ironed out, that an electric vehicle, such as a bus, needs to spend more time charging than running?
For a vehicle that is expected to be running almost constantly, that's a very big hindrance. A bus that is idle, hooked up to a charger, is a bus that is not carrying paying passengers anywhere. It's an expensive asset, that is not making any money for its owners.
In the mean time, a diesel-powered bus can run almost constantly, with only very brief stops for refueling that take only a few minutes. A cheaper bus, that spends nearly all of its time carrying paying passengers, and making money for its owners.
And I had a relay fail in my big van, stranding me at a stop light. You little story, even if true, proves nothing. Mechanical systems sometimes fail. If the failure rate of EV's were as you state, Tesla would not have the most of this years projected production already sold.My son bought a $60K Tesla. He lives in Atlanta.
After about six weeks of having the car he was coming home in Atlanta rush hour. On a very busy commuter road (400). His vehicle suddenly went dead. No power. Dead like a door knob. Complete failure.
Because of all the heavy commuter traffic it took a tow truck an hour and a half to get his car loaded up and traffic moving again. The Atlanta police were pissed. A lot of commuters were pissed. My son was pissed. I thought it was hilarious because I warned him not to get the damn thing.
We will see a lot of EV failures as more get on the road. Terrible technology.
Germany closed its coal plants and nukes to switch to wind. The greenies promised them they would have enough power. When winter slammed Europe those wind turbines supplied less than 40% of the electricity they were promised. Now Germanys energy costs there are 300 times higher than they would have been, and they are buying their energy from Putin.
Germany: Coal tops wind as primary electricity source
In the first half of 2021, coal shot up as the biggest contributor to Germany's electric grid, while wind power dropped to its lowest level since 2018. Officials say the weather is partly to blame.
Yep, let's regress back to cable cars. Progress, the liberal way!The weak point is the battery, they need to throw away the battery and use overhead wires or rails.
There is nothing wrong with electric busses. The only problem is the infrastructure to support them is expensive and unsightly.Yep, let's regress back to cable cars. Progress, the liberal way!
Yep, let's regress back to cable cars. Progress, the liberal way!
From just the articles provided in this thread there appear to be numerous problems. If it isn't cost effective the market will not allow it for long. That is the problem with using federal government money to get this off the ground. When that money runs out this whole thing fails.There is nothing wrong with electric busses. The only problem is the infrastructure to support them is expensive and unsightly.
I'm facebook friends with a Rochester transit driver and they've grounded (no pun intended) their entire Electric fleet because of the extreme cold right now. These buses cannot handle the constant running AND maintaining the heat on the units without massive drain on the batteries. At least with a Hybrid, your primary power source is still the diesel engine.From just the articles provided in this thread there appear to be numerous problems. If it isn't cost effective the market will not allow it for long. That is the problem with using federal government money to get this off the ground. When that money runs out this whole thing fails.
The problem these days is the eco-nazi cult has turned this to an all or none game. The notion of hybrids is not even in the conversation for them, it's now all zero emissions, full stop. It's crazy, and their path leads to failure. Hybrids are a sensible middle ground, but can you see some of these folks accepting that? I can't.I'm facebook friends with a Rochester transit driver and they've grounded (no pun intended) their entire Electric fleet because of the extreme cold right now. These buses cannot handle the constant running AND maintaining the heat on the units without massive drain on the batteries. At least with a Hybrid, your primary power source is still the diesel engine.
I personally don't like driving the hybrids out of my agency (NFTA) myself because the regenerative braking system is a bitch in the snow. And as to the enviroweenie whackjobs like Old Cocks, they fail to consider things more important than saving some rare species of gnat-and that is reliability, especially in cold weather like we have now. Plus electric buses lose their charge faster when the heat has to be turned on, or the buses have to be equipped with (gasp!) DIESEL GENERATORS :O Oh the horror these so-called "clean" buses have to resort to fossil fuels to maintain the heat!The problem these days is the eco-nazi cult has turned this to an all or none game. The notion of hybrids is not even in the conversation for them, it's now all zero emissions, full stop. It's crazy, and their path leads to failure. Hybrids are a sensible middle ground, but can you see some of these folks accepting that? I can't.
From just the articles provided in this thread there appear to be numerous problems. If it isn't cost effective the market will not allow it for long. That is the problem with using federal government money to get this off the ground. When that money runs out this whole thing fails.
Cable cars work great in San Francisco.Yep, let's regress back to cable cars. Progress, the liberal way!