I hate to be pedantic, but electric cars predated the Wright brothers by about a decade.
You have misunderstood my post. I don't think people aren't on top of the technology, I just think people of a certain age are stuck in their comfort zone, and refuse to come out. I look at it this way. When the horseless carriage came about, people used to walk in front of them with flags. EV's are at the flag stage, but the momentum is building. As for forcing people to take up a new tech, I agree it is far too expensive at the moment, but as with the horseless carriage, how many people drive a surry with a fringe on top nowadays? I will buy an EV when the price is right, but will persevere with my old D2 until then.
There are many questions to be answered, like tradie utes, and tow vehicles for caravans [ a whole industry needs the answers] Trucks etc. But you are not giving the people who are the moving force behind this EV revolution the credit they deserve. But that's ok, no one thought the Wright brothers would get off the ground either. Cheers.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
I hate to be pedantic, but electric cars predated the Wright brothers by about a decade.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
I don’t give some the credit because I understand the tech, and what’s involved to make it work - my whole career has been power - and a lot of it now with the supply authorities so I know power distribution, how much power is needed to do what these people want, etc - you’re missing the point, not me. Comparing it to the Wright brothers is BS too - that line is peddled by anyone who believes others aren’t getting on board an idea they have - particularly Electric Jesus Zealots.
It’s the same old rhetoric - ‘You have questions I can’t answer about EV’s so you’re an EV hater’ - kind of like ‘All wood burns states Sir Bedivere, therefore he concludes all that burns is wood’ - in the immortal lines on Monty Python “This is of course pure bull****”
If you need to contact me please email homestarrunnerau@gmail.com - thanks - Gav.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
That’s just trolling - tut tut - you should know better.
Also confirms my theory about people not being able to answer my genuine questions on the subject but would rather divert the attention so they don’t have to.
Poor attempt, F- You can do better, see the Headmaster after School.
If you need to contact me please email homestarrunnerau@gmail.com - thanks - Gav.
I'm 59 next birthday and the "plan" that SWMBO and I have is to retire in the next 2 years or so, buy a D250 or D300 Defender, a 2.5t ish a semi off road van and hit the road, see the sites, take some pics. I'd like to think I could carry on doing this into my mid 70s, finances and health (Back, knees, eyes, brain) permitting.
but.............
The Defender will need to be replaced in my mid to late 60s, say 2028?
My guess of our motoring future will be a small EV for day to day. Maybe a Kona or ID.3. Charged at home from a battery charged from roof top solar. For highways and byways a PHEV Defender or alike. Big battery, small petrol engine to charge the batteries. Maybe a hydrogen or synthetic fuelled engine.
Porsche to become synthetic fuel-maker from 2022 - carsales.com.au
I don't see any real issues with any of this. Change? Yes of course but my grandfather passed at 99 and had not had a horse for a very long time. He adapted and so will I. It's not like I have a choice............so
The other thing to think about is assuming we will have a choice. Climate change denier or no, techno-phobe or ostrich (think left leaning politician), this is where we are going. The US is back on board with the Europeans re EVs and pollution; little old Australia will just get dragged along with it whether we want or like the change or not.
Bring it on I say.
I doubt that will happen as quickly as they say - as per my last post countries are already struggling with the infrastructure - car manufacturers can’t make cars people can’t use.
That’s my whole point and I’ve heard nothing from any proponent answering this fundamental question - where’s the power coming from? Happy to hear opinions on this but as someone who works in this field I’ve not heard anything that is actually possible in the timeframe you’re talking about.
Change my mind - I’m all ears - just answer than one question please.
Also, if you’re right then that’s just new cars - given the average age of a car here is around 10 years then that to consider too. I think ICE vehicle will hold their value better if all OEM’s drop the tech - I’ll still have a 97 Camry going then anyway.![]()
If you need to contact me please email homestarrunnerau@gmail.com - thanks - Gav.
Its not just the power, its the infrastructure to get the power to hundreds of thousands of charging points all over the countryside, and thats just in Aus.
For those that do a few Km a week,solar and a battery may workout, for those that do hundreds of Km a week, plus run a work or second vehicle that does up to around 800 to 1000km a week, its not going to happen.
Not with the tech we have today, or any tech that is suddenly going to appear in the next few years.
Oh I think they will if there is the market - for sure manufacturers will make the EVs for the EU but also make good old ICEs for the rest of the world like South America, Africa, Australia and most of Asia (all of it from the Med east).
As the discussion on here has moved back and forth, EVs are great for metropolitan areas of first world countries but not for a long long time will they be suitable remote and the poorer areas of the world where the EV infrastructure is just not going to happen.
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! |
Search All the Web! |
|---|
|
|
|
Bookmarks