Yes.Are we discussing trains, or pickup trucks?
I believe the discussion is revolving around electric only vehicles. On board generators change things dramatically.
Pick up trucks are easy at this point, within reason. Since most guys use them as cars it isn't an issue.
The guy really hauling with it is the hard sell. He is gonna kill batteries in no time.
18 wheelers open a whole different set of issues. Much bigger and heavier vehicles with more wind resistance. More room to haul batteries though too.
I see local delivery trucks coming along fairly quickly. Long haul trucks are a ways out.
I believe their is some new tech coming along related to LiPo but I can't remember the details. Supposed to be similar to LiPo tech but with better capacity and much higher discharge rates.
Hope Musk gets it figured out, all this new battery tech is great for RC toys.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
They already have, kinda, with the Chevy Volt. The gas engine doesn't always have a connection to the wheels, it can fire up and be utilized only to power the generator. A computer controlled clutch can still connect it to the drivetrain if it makes sense to do so (like under hard accel or high speed) but in normal operation it stays out of the loop.Big construction equipment works the same way.
Not really part of this discussion though. I doubt any regular vehicles would go from direct drive to generator/ motor propulsion.
I'm not completely up to date of battery tech, but I do tend to read the articles I stumble across. It sounds like there's a bunch of new concepts that may actually turn into commercially viable improvements coming pretty soon. Apparently one of the best battery guys in the world is right here in Texas at UT-Austin, he's the guy who came up with Li-ion batteries to begin with. His name, no shit, is John GoodenoughProblem with the local trucks is that the battery banks would take up precious cargo space. I'm sure it would work in some areas, but having to buy two trucks instead of one in order to make all the deliveries in one day would be a hard sell.
I believe their is some new tech coming along related to LiPo but I can't remember the details. Supposed to be similar to LiPo tech but with better capacity and much higher discharge rates.
Hope Musk gets it figured out, all this new battery tech is great for RC toys.
Only a monopoly by omission it seems. If nobody is trying to operate in the same space, well he's kinda leading the charge. (I'm so punny).The issue is really that the energy density of the batteries has only been improving very slowly. I think that is part of what Musk has seen to help convince him to build the gigafactory in NV. Even with existing battery technology, that place and the one they are building in Europe will drive the costs down. Can anyone say monopoly?
You said work truck and now you're saying pickup... make up your mind!In case there is any confusion, or even if anyone cares, my questions are specifically about an electric pickup truck.
Same principal... It only takes 30hp or so to maintain 70mph on a flat road. A small diesel generator can supply power for cruising and keeping you comfortable when stationary, while the battery bank is for accelerating and recovering energy in deceleration.Are we discussing trains, or pickup trucks?
If Tesla makes an El Camino, I might just have to get one.
You said work truck and now you're saying pickup... make up your mind!
Same principal... It only takes 30hp or so to maintain 70mph on a flat road. A small diesel generator can supply power for cruising and keeping you comfortable when stationary, while the battery bank is for accelerating and recovering energy in deceleration.
Done. roadandtrack.com : Tesla Model S p100d dyno: 588hp, 920lb. ft. torqueAs far as big trucks go if tesla can produce 500hp electric cat I'll try it till then nope
C'mon man, he said cat, as in Caterpillar. He also mentioned big truck which should have been a clue.
You're not paying attention either plus adding caveats.I don't have the man bun to go with that