• Truck Driver Destroys Entire EV Narrative in Under 2 Minutes

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 1 08:51:38 2023
    XPost: can.politics, sci.energy, alt.energy.automobile
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns

    Truck driver and innovator Chace Barber of Canada's Edison Motors recently reeled off the perfect explanation of why expecting semi-trucks and other
    large vehicles to go all electric is a bad idea, and it's a must-see clip.

    Speaking at an event showing off his Edison Motors hybrid truck model,
    Barber was asked if he ever saw the trucking industry going fully electric instead of gas, diesel, and hybrid.

    His answer about electric vehicles was illuminating.

    When asked if the over-the-road trucking industry could go all EV,
    Barber's initial answer was short and to the point. "No," he said straight away.

    This guy single handedly destroys the whole electric vehicle (EV)
    narrative in under 2 minutes, with an impressive recital of facts and
    common sense. https://t.co/cjE0osTEYc

    � Martyupnorth�- Unacceptable Fact Checker ?? (@Martyupnorth_2) October
    30, 2023

    He went on to explain, "If battery technology gets better, grid
    infrastructure gets better," maybe, he added.

    But it isn't looking good so far.

    "But like this truck," he said pointing to his new hybrid logging truck,
    "like a logging truck uses about two and a half megawatts of power per day
    with extra capacity on the battery means you need a three-megawatt battery pack."

    "The biggest one is like a Tesla semi, which is like a one megawatt. So,
    you need three megawatts to run an electric truck," he continued.
    "That would mean you would have to pack 50,000 -- 40,000, 50,000 -- pounds
    of batteries just to do a full day," he said.

    This amount of weight added to a semi-truck would present all sorts of
    issues. Not only would it make it less safe on the road by increasing
    stopping power in an emergency, that amount of added weight also adds to
    the swift degradation of roads which would cause more potholes to appear
    faster and increase construction budgets for governments that are tasked
    with maintaining the road surfaces.

    On top of that, insurance rates will skyrocket because EVs are not as impervious to accidents as regular vehicles. EVs are more easily damaged -
    - causing insurers to more often rate them as "totaled" -- and that causes
    EVs to have to be fully replaced by an insurer far, far more often than a gas-powered vehicle.

    Then there is the huge problem with the power grid, Barber added.

    "And then let's say we can even get those batteries down to the same
    weight where it's reasonable, the grid infrastructure -- we haven't
    invested in our electrical grid since the 1950s, 1960s, 70s, like you can
    give me an example, the logging truck in BC [British Columbia], that's a
    niche industry. So, there's 5,000 logging trucks that haul logs," he
    explained.

    "At two and a half megawatts of consumption per day, that's twelve and a
    half gigawatts of power," he said. "Site C dam has been under construction
    for the last, oh, I don't know, the last 15 years at a cost of $20
    billion, and that has a 1.1 gigawatt. So, a $20 billion dam that takes 15
    years to build has a 1.1 gigawatt capacity, and logging trucks -- just
    logging trucks alone -- are using 12 and a half gigawatts. You would have
    to flood an area of land the size of Wales to produce that hydropower."

    "Look, we need a lot to make a fully electric feasible on the North
    American grid with batteries and all that," he said of fully electric
    fleets of trucks.

    But he did have a sensible solution.

    "But if you can make it more efficient and you can make it a hybrid, and
    you can reduce your fuel consumption by 50 percent, and you can burn that
    as a generator, where it's one R.P.M., running hot, burning cleaner," he
    said.

    "Well, isn't a 50-60 percent reduction in emissions a lot better than
    investing everything into a fully electric technology that's not really
    going to work for 90 percent of the applications, meaning that the other
    100 percent are still burning 100 percent of the diesel?" Barber
    concluded.

    The facts remain that large vehicles like buses, trucks, semis, or
    vehicles used for hauling and heavy-duty applications are simply not
    suited for electric technology as it stands today. And people just don't
    want them.

    The latter is also something that dealers are starting to realize as they
    are running out of the sort of EV early adopting customers who were
    excited about the technology. Dealers are now finding thousands of brand-
    new EVs sitting on their car lots going unsold to a country that really
    isn't interested in them.

    Sadly, Barber's cautions certainly make too much sense for politicians who
    want to go all-in for EVs and want to force us all into them whether they
    are logical, feasible, or tech-ready or not.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/truck-driver-destroys-entire-ev- narrative-in-under-2-minutes/ar-AA1j6LuY

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  • From Alan@21:1/5 to useapen on Wed Nov 1 10:09:02 2023
    XPost: can.politics, sci.energy, alt.energy.automobile
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns

    On 2023-11-01 01:51, useapen wrote:
    Truck driver and innovator Chace Barber of Canada's Edison Motors recently reeled off the perfect explanation of why expecting semi-trucks and other large vehicles to go all electric is a bad idea, and it's a must-see clip.

    The "must-see" clip where your "expert" says"

    "a logging truck uses about two and a half megawatts of power...

    ...PER DAY".

    Hint for you, Pussey (because you've clearly never studied the basic
    physics).

    "megawatts per day" IS NOT A REAL THING.

    I know you'll hate this, but "watts" is a measure of POWER which is a
    RATE of energy produced or used.

    Specifically, a "watt" is defined as a rate of one "joule" per second.

    A "joule" is defined as the energy used when applying a force of one
    "newton" over a distance of one metre.

    A "newton" is defined as the force required to accelerate a mass of one kilogram at 1 metre per second per second.

    What he meant was "two and a half megawatt-hours" or 9 billion joules.

    So much for your expert.

    And as that very thread describes, EV trucks use regenerative braking,
    so they don't just expend fuel and then turn it into heat when they need
    to use the brakes.

    'Power: 750KW - (1005 HP)

    Output Torque: 102,600 ft.lbs

    Regen Power: 582KW - (780 HP)'

    <https://www.edisonmotors.ca/lseries>

    Note the "Regen Power", Pussey.

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