Electric doesn't even handle the loads and ranges that gasoline powered vehicles currently fill. I will agree on diesel getting better fuel mileage and having more torque however I believe that gas engines still hold the horsepower advantage. I know that some diesels have BHP that approaches that of gasoline engines however they are only able to do that with very high turbocharger pressures that add complexity and cost.
Not true from what I have seen. I have seen electric vehicles in both print and television media that exceed 250HP and 500KM range.
The carbon fibre epoxy flywheel (not nanotubes) prototype I read of in Discovery Magazine back in the early nineties was around 250 hp and could go up to 500 Km without a charge. And when it did need a charge it only took about 2 minutes to spin the flywheels back up to top speed. The developer just could not get any major manufacturers on board for some reason (see below).
Recently I saw an electrician on TV that customised an old Corvette with a battery powered electic motor that was about 300 hp. He demonstrated it with a burnout and donuts in a parking lot. It was impressive, though I suspect its range was low.
The only real problem with electric vehicles is parts. They don't wear them out. New brushes every 50,000 Km or so, that's about it. The UAW, NAPA and auto manufacturers don't like that.
Who was the manufacturer that recently recalled thousands of perfectly good electric vehicles to have them destroyed, much to the pilot project participant's dismay...? (GM's EV1 I think? I think that was it, they wouldn't sell them, only lease them, then destroyed them all...
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Granted they may not be quite ready to pull 20 tons up a 5 Km 30° hill like a diesel Mac or Kenworth, but they'd be more than adequate for urban delivery trucks and personal vehicles.
I still think that flywheels are the way to go, for charging rate and also for their recovery of braking energy analagous to the technology originally described in this thread.
Hybrids are an improvement, but are just a concession to the parts industry in my view. Fuel cells are absurd.
Sigh, I can't think about it too much. Unnecessary stress that I cannot do anything about. However I will never own another car of any kind, they just aren't necessary, and give others way too much control over your freedom. (Vere are your paperz!
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