News0 min ago
Electric Cars
If someone lives in a house that has no off-road parking (Eg Coronation Street)how can they charge an electric car?
Answers
aelmpvw, yes that is a shortcoming. I think that a much better charging infrastructu re is needed before we can go over to electric vehicles wholesale. They are great round town and going a few dozen miles to work and back. There will also be the problem of charging millions of cars, many new power stations will need to be built, mostly nuclear. Then there is the...
10:31 Sun 31st Jan 2021
mexican, possibly but I was talking about home charging. At a public charger it depends on the charger:
https:/ /www.dr ivingel ectric. com/you r-quest ions-an swered/ 117/wha t-fast- chargin g-what- rapid-c harging
In reality though you'd not need a full charge to get home and it would probably be better to be fully charged before going out. Yes we will have to adjust our habits as far as driving is concerned.
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In reality though you'd not need a full charge to get home and it would probably be better to be fully charged before going out. Yes we will have to adjust our habits as far as driving is concerned.
aelmpvw, yes that is a shortcoming. I think that a much better charging infrastructure is needed before we can go over to electric vehicles wholesale. They are great round town and going a few dozen miles to work and back. There will also be the problem of charging millions of cars, many new power stations will need to be built, mostly nuclear. Then there is the inevitable fuel duty erosion that will need to be replaced so expect some form of road pricing system. Yes, a lot to do.
Regarding charging, the infrastructure needs to be, and is being, built up throughout that part of the world where these are a realistic proposition, some countries being way ahead of others. The cars themselves are becoming more practical as their range increases. I know people who have a Mitsubishi hybrid and it does around 30km on a full charge which means that around town they do more or less everything on the batteries - when moving on electricity their car emits a sort of hum which is recognisably Mitsubishi, others do something similar. Personally, I find electric cars appealing and if I were considering buying a car I would go for a fully electric one, not necessarily but likely a new one. If large scale generation of electricity by nuclear fusion becomes feasible then the present conundrum will solve itself rather neatly - but fusion has been just beyond the horizon for many decades and a breakthrough is somewhere out there still.