for many years I have been a strong advocate for the ONLY known-to-be-economical form of fuel cycle "carbon capture" - Namely grow sugar cane for fuel and save petroleum for plastics etc. that keeps the fossil carbon out of the atmosphere.So you believe that cars putting CO2 into the atmosphere is preferable over clean power stations, be it carbon capture (for food) or nuclear or fusion? How far forward are you thinking?...
I also have been a strong advocate of nuclear power (quite possibly starting even before you were born). I have posted many times about it here including suggesting a simple, cheap, way to get rid of high level waste for in excess of 10 million years. (quick summary: it is "glassified" into disks about 30cm in diameter and 3 cm thick and then, via automatic handling, placed on ship to steam over deep ocean trench where more automation hurls the disk off the stern with automatic launchers. There are more details, like only glass in the outer 1 mm layer of the disk to stop the alphas etc. why disk shape of this size, etc but that gives the idea.)
Here is more on why battery swap EVs will never be more than a few percent of the cars:
Let’s look at your typical gas station: It has at least four pumps as four people are often filling up at the same time and taking less than 3 minutes to do it. (60 fill ups per hour) Also note gasoline cars come to the gas station only about 1/3 as often as the EVs will need to, so there will be at “peak swap demand times” about 180 EVs wanting a battery swap per hour.
Now assume, generously, that a full recharge takes only one hour. Thus, the station will need recharge connection for 180 batteries recharging in parallel, if the first battery swapped out of an EV that hour is to be recharged and available at the start of the next hour to install in the EV that just pulled into the station.
Do you have any idea what ADDED peak power demand load on the electric grid 180 batteries recharging in an hour is (at essentially every “gas station” in town)? The EVs users will need to buy an entirely new and much more power capacity electric grid UNLESS, as I suggested in recent post 1349 there is super flywheel energy unit at each recharge station, which in some way must be paid for by the owners of EVs.
The other alternative is that battery swap EVs never get to be more than a few percent of the total cars.
A false idea based on ignorance of where battery energy is stored. (It is in the charged electrodes). Batteries are very different from fuel cells. For example if you replace the sulpheric acid in a lead acid battery with new strong acid that will not recharge it. In fact it will probably make it nearly impossible to recharge. The discharged battery has one plate with a lead sulphide coating - You must pass current thru it to drive that sulpher back into sulpheric acid - that will be hard or impossible to do if battery has been filled with strong acid.What is your take on changing out battery fluids, or is this not feasible with current battery specs? I don't know enough about the batteries they use to power cars.
SUMMARY: Yes I am quite forward thinking, but more importantly I am knowledge about how things work and able to consider the full system implications.
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