Tesla semi

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   / Tesla semi #162  
While I appreciate the article I wish the author had done a bit more research, a lot of these are straightforward questions that can be answered with just a little digging.

[Range anxiety, the fear of getting stranded, which happened to me with the very first electric car I ever reviewed. This is a real fear for some people, especially if an electric car is all you own. Today, most can go 60-100 miles before needing to be charged, with a couple of vehicles getting between 200-300 miles.]

I'm pretty sure we're going to see 250mi+ as the standard moving forward with the Bolt, Model 3.

[What effect does weather have on my range? Hot and cold weather can have a very adverse affect on battery life.]

~10% give or take actual air density. This is in sub-freezing temperatures at highways speeds. Yes you have to plan for it a bit but not a problem with the answer to the next question.

[Chargers. Other than home, how many chargers are going to be available? Will they be the quick chargers, or the ones that take many hours? What will it cost me to charge my car when it is at home?]

If you have a Tesla, tons. Specifically 18,000 by the end of 2018. This is one area where I think Tesla dominates other companies and I agree that without this you don't have nearly as compelling of a vehicle.

[How will we ever dispose of all the batteries once they start going bad? How much can be recycled from a battery pack, if any, and will they just end up filling landfills?]

Easily, recycle or reuse them in stationary power. Tesla has been doing this profitably since '11 Tesla's Closed Loop Battery Recycling Program | Tesla .

[What happens to our already poor roads and highways? All these electric cars will cut down on gas consumption. Today, 18.4 cents per gallon of gas, and 24.4 cents per gallon of diesel go straight to the Federal Highway Trust Fund. There is also on average 30 more cents per gallon of gas and diesel that goes to state and local roads.]

This is already getting addressed. Here in WA we have a $150 EV tax on title registration. That was actually more than I used to pay in gas tax with my previous vehicle. This isn't a hard problem to solve, EVs should be paying their fair share(or more) of the road tax.
 
   / Tesla semi #163  
I can think of few things that are subsidized by the Federal Govt that make sense.

Then we have the TAX secret, YEA, electric cars don't pay any taxes vs 18 cents per gal on diesel and 24 cents per gal on gasoline. Anyone who think the FEDS don't know this is living in a dream world, Fuel taxes make up over 90 percent of total highway tax revenue @ $38 Billion per year >

The FEDS are gonna get their pound of flesh sooner or later and that is a SAFE BET!
 
   / Tesla semi #164  
I am not buying that claim.

It is claims like this that cause the wall between ecar proponents and the status quo to get larger and stronger.

Mining all those precious metals for batteries and windings produces a lot of carbon emissions.

Are you saying that producing an ICE car is a clean process?
 
   / Tesla semi #167  
Paris Says Au Revoir to Gas and Diesel Cars by 23 | Automobile Magazine

the French never were very sensible. Well, one will have to buy their Chiron in another city I suppose

I think they are going to blame degradation of the Mona Lisa on air pollution...and maybe they are right.

I bet the gas station owners in Paris are thrilled about this. Talk about reinventing your business, though there will always be
repair work.

It seems radical now, but who knows, might be academic by then.
 
   / Tesla semi #168  
While I appreciate the article I wish the author had done a bit more research, a lot of these are straightforward questions that can be answered with just a little digging.

[Range anxiety, the fear of getting stranded, which happened to me with the very first electric car I ever reviewed. This is a real fear for some people, especially if an electric car is all you own. Today, most can go 60-100 miles before needing to be charged, with a couple of vehicles getting between 200-300 miles.]

I'm pretty sure we're going to see 250mi+ as the standard moving forward with the Bolt, Model 3.

[What effect does weather have on my range? Hot and cold weather can have a very adverse affect on battery life.]

~10% give or take actual air density. This is in sub-freezing temperatures at highways speeds. Yes you have to plan for it a bit but not a problem with the answer to the next question.

[Chargers. Other than home, how many chargers are going to be available? Will they be the quick chargers, or the ones that take many hours? What will it cost me to charge my car when it is at home?]

If you have a Tesla, tons. Specifically 18,000 by the end of 2018. This is one area where I think Tesla dominates other companies and I agree that without this you don't have nearly as compelling of a vehicle.

[How will we ever dispose of all the batteries once they start going bad? How much can be recycled from a battery pack, if any, and will they just end up filling landfills?]

Easily, recycle or reuse them in stationary power. Tesla has been doing this profitably since '11 Tesla's Closed Loop Battery Recycling Program | Tesla .

[What happens to our already poor roads and highways? All these electric cars will cut down on gas consumption. Today, 18.4 cents per gallon of gas, and 24.4 cents per gallon of diesel go straight to the Federal Highway Trust Fund. There is also on average 30 more cents per gallon of gas and diesel that goes to state and local roads.]

This is already getting addressed. Here in WA we have a $150 EV tax on title registration. That was actually more than I used to pay in gas tax with my previous vehicle. This isn't a hard problem to solve, EVs should be paying their fair share(or more) of the road tax.

That doesn’t address the need for taxpayer funded subsidies, the extra weight wearing road surfaces, the danger in accidents, and nobody has yet answered the carbon footprint, cradle to grave question.
 
   / Tesla semi #170  
That doesn稚 address the need for taxpayer funded subsidies, the extra weight wearing road surfaces, the danger in accidents, and nobody has yet answered the carbon footprint, cradle to grave question.

No one's screaming about the oil subsidies that exist either if we want to start talking about those. Just gas production alone was on the order of 10B(yes billion with a B) in 2010 and 5B in 2013. U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

Got a citation for danger in accidents? Tesla has the highest safety rating of any passenger vehicle.

Road wear is no different than a half-ton pickup, unless you're telling me modern infrastructure can't handle more trucks on the road(our 1500 Eco Diesel and Tesla weight near the same).

Carbon footprint isn't too hard to figure out. The only substantial difference between a traditional car and EV is the battery pack/motor. Here's a study that finds battery impact is less than 5% of total impact of vehicle and EVs outstrip ICE by a pretty wide margin: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/es903729a

To put it in other words, if you get 100k mi from the lifetime of a car the difference in battery production is going to have to be the same as burning 3,300+ gallons of gas at 30mpg. I just don't see how that gets anywhere close to battery production as lithium mining is pretty low impact(mostly salt pools) and aluminum/copper production is pretty well understood.
 
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