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I know know no country where people have diched normal family cars for a construction vehicle.
This is what you posted before, so I responded to it:
Quote:
Originally Posted by John-UK View Post
The rest of the world does not buy a new construction vehicle as a family car. Now that is odd.
I do not assume that all peoples around the world have the same standard of living as the UK, having been around a lot of the world. I clearly know most do not think like me as well. I know many people that do not agree with me.
The point is that EVs will be the norm and quite quickly.
You were referring to "the rest of the world;" with place you are talking about the is not "the rest of the world"? Perhaps in the UK EV technology will happen rapidly, but I don't agree with you about the rest of the world. However, in other for that to happen in the UK, quite a large sum of money must be available in other to replace ICE with EV. Where will that money come from?
A recent report sponsored by the US Energy Department and Federal Rail Administration notes that while powering freight trains with hydrogen is more technically challenging, it would ultimately have “the highest societal value”.
In the same article, which by the way is not about EV's, but hydrogen fuel
Quote:
The train’s hydrogen power system produces sufficient power to take the train 50 to 75 miles.
Quote:
But hydrogen trains come with their own challenges.
“We store about 20kg of hydrogen, and that is enough to run the fuel cell for three hours,” says Stuart Hillmansen, professor at Birmingham University and leader of the Hydroflex project. As such, longer-distance journeys wouldn’t yet be feasible. Engineers at the University of Birmingham’s Centre for Railway Research and Education, Porterbrook’s partner on the Hydroflex, are working on ways to extend these limits.
With our current hydrogen storage technologies, hydrogen takes up significantly more space than equivalent fossil fuels do – Raphael Isaac
And while hydrogen fuel cells can be as energy-efficient as diesel fuel, storing the gas can be a problem. “While hydrogen has a lot of energy per mass, because it is super light, it also takes up a lot of volume,” says Raphael Isaac, a researcher on fuel alternatives in rail at Michigan State University's Center for Railway Research and Education. “With our current hydrogen storage technologies, hydrogen takes up significantly more space than [equivalent] fossil fuels do.” Even though hydrogen is typically compressed, it’s still not as efficient per unit volume as fossil fuels.
In the US, Canada, Russia, Argentina, Brazil - such trains would have to travel thousands of miles, not just 75 miles or for a period of 3 hours. Fine, If you say that such a train (prototype) should work quite well in the UK, I have no choice but to believe you, since the UK is such as small nation.
Something else that I should mention: a tank containing hydrogen fuel in a train loaded with passengers should make a lot of us scared. I am not getting into the details, however.
It is very normal for anybody not living in the USA to see our nation as being confused. It is also very normal for people not living in the UK to perceive you (the UK) as being confused. See...you are assuming that all peoples around the world have the same standard of living as you in the UK, and that all peoples think the way you do. You haven't realized that even in the UK there are people who don't agree with your views.
You aren't considering a myriad of factors that prevent others from not agreeing with your ideas. The US is 40 times larger than the UK. You haven't even considered that most people around the world live within their means in the most economical form possible. Most people aren't rich, and at the moment ICE is more economical than EV.
JohnUK is back after a 8 month hiatus. He basically trolls anything American and thinks he knows more about America than Americans. His comments are the same...we've seen this circus before.
JohnUK is back after a 8 month hiatus. He basically trolls anything American and thinks he knows more about America than Americans. His comments are the same...we've seen this circus before.
Whoever he is, it seems that he enjoys ridiculing the USA.
In the same article, which by the way is not about EV's, but hydrogen fuel
Hydrogen can be produced by over-produced, wasted, electricity and overnight electricity. Hydrogen fuel cells are running at 60% efficiency. Far higher than internal combustion engines.
"Although less efficient than electric batteries, today's fuel cells compare favourably with internal combustion engine technology, which converts fuel into kinetic energy at roughly 25 per cent efficiency. A fuel cell, by contrast, can mix hydrogen with air to produce electricity at up to 60 per cent efficiency."
If you are ridiculing Texas, you are in fact ridiculing the US.
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