buickanddeere
Super Member
No one gets an ideal Rankine (note spelling) cycle. Lots of time and effort is spent on turbines to improve efficiency. Real world processes are not isentropic.
Tyre tire, plow plough .
No one gets an ideal Rankine (note spelling) cycle. Lots of time and effort is spent on turbines to improve efficiency. Real world processes are not isentropic.
While the power grid is not a remote issue in the USA the EV makers will not be able to build 77 million EV's a year to meet current annual sales of new vehicles today. It will be 2025 before Tesla can be building 8 million cars and trucks per year.Subaru PR department can make whatever marketing claims they want. Besides that I doubt they would turn away all ice loving customers, the simple fact in the way, is that the US electric grid is not strong enough for everyone to charge EVs, and can not be made so, in 10 short years. So for now its just talk.
Subaru PR department can make whatever marketing claims they want. Besides that I doubt they would turn away all ice loving customers, the simple fact in the way, is that the US electric grid is not strong enough for everyone to charge EVs, and can not be made so, in 10 short years. So for now its just talk.
Some utilities may donate power for lights, but they don't around here.The grid is more than capable already. EVs charge at night. Utilities practically give away power at night because they have so much available. Consider street lights? Unmetered. Utilities get a tax credit for "donating" the power. The tax credit is worth more than the power.
The grid is not more than capable now.
Your argument is conveniently oversimplified.
While peakers idle back during nights, they do not have the capacity to charge 278 million US vehicles. On a minor note, many of these are fossil fuel plants, so, so much for having a green plan for EVs
Of probably 100 technical issues, heres a couple:
Forcing 278 million car owners to only charge at night. Think summer vacations, holidays where millions drive long distance and need to day charge. 2nd and 3rd shift workers.
Power plants need maintenance shutdowns. Can稚 do that if there痴 a full load at night and additional load during the day. Millions of step down transformers in every neighborhood will see their efficiency drop as the load increases.
Transformer and fuse failure rates will increase with a 278 million car charge load added.
Crowded neighborhoods and apartments dont have the electric robustness or smart technology yet to charge such a high watt density area.
Ive just scratched the surface of hurdles. Like I said the electric grid is not strong enough, and wont be in 10 short years. You cant add a huge load to an existing old system without adding to it and maintain the existing reliability. Its simple math.
Yes it is just simple math yet you don't seem to grasp it.
Are you going build 278 million EV's overnight or in the next 10 years?
The grid is fine and will continue to be so.
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