lastofthepatriots
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2015
- Messages
- 11,900
- Reaction score
- -13
- Country
- Location
Toyota fan here
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I am hoping for renewable environmental friendly feuls espacially hydrogen to succeed somehow.... EV's are just shit! They are not cars just computers!
nonsenseThe days of Toyota are numbered. They are now like Nokia on the eve of iphone.
Hydrogen is superior to electric. Hydrogen cars can run 2,000 km without refuel. Can any electric car do that? None. The biggest problem with hydrogen however is how to make hydrogen fuel cheaper.The engineering community has made the decision that hydrogen is the loser and battery the winner. I dont think hydrogen will make it next 100 years. There are lots of problems --- cant solve.
So what people said about NOKIA. Lolnonsense
Toyota is best in class when coming to price, longevity and quality. They will exist in hundred years.
there are other renewable options some companies are trying to make that work such as biofeul that will be cheaper and effective!The engineering community has made the decision that hydrogen is the loser and battery the winner. I dont think hydrogen will make it next 100 years. There are lots of problems --- cant solve.
At least where I live, it is the market that makes the decision, not 'engineering community' - whatever that may be. That said, I am not convinced hydrogen is ready for production yet. But I also see hurdles in pure EV.The engineering community has made the decision that hydrogen is the loser and battery the winner. I dont think hydrogen will make it next 100 years. There are lots of problems --- cant solve.
At least where I live, it is the market that makes the decision, not 'engineering community' - whatever that may be. That said, I am not convinced hydrogen is ready for production yet. But I also see hurdles in pure EV.
1. At present cost is much higher than gas cars.
2. Cost of replacing battery is too high. So, used car market, which is very active in gas cars that with good build quality and maintenance can easily last 20 years, is hard to develop. I see dramatic loss (read - almost zero) in value for cars after 8 - 10 years. That is a major depreciation if one has paid $40,000.
3. Yet to see good recycling technology and infrastructure for used batteries develop.
4. I am seeing a very disconcerting aspect of Evs: in a collision, they catch fire and are difficult to extinguish. Leads to total loss for both vehicles and sometimes to adjacent properties. This will be an issue with liability insurance in due course.
5. People are getting caught with dead cars in a blizzard as outdoor chargers don't work below -20 Celsius.
Just some issues I remember by reading/watching. By no means an expert.
I think Hydrogen is not yet fully ready. But you have this nevertheless:If "market" is so clever, ask "market" implement a hydrogen vehicle and "market" can go and buy.
You have NO idea of how difficult and inefficient a hydrogen car is. The engineers see that. Engineers see battery EV has issues at present but they can be surmount in future.
I think Hydrogen is not yet fully ready. But you have this nevertheless:
No, Hydrogen is dead Toyota along with other few trying to sell it for last 20 yrs.I have a feeling Toyota is waiting to make the quantum leap directly to Hydrogen fuel cell technology and will keep selling hybrids till then
No, Hydrogen is dead Toyota along with other few trying to sell it for last 20 yrs.
Full electric can grow to a certain extent (limited) till we get an revolution in battery tech.
I am an engineer, just different kind. In your energetics diagram, I don't see factors like battery weight/size vs. hydrogen tank weight/size. If the battery weight/size, for same distance of travel, is much larger than hydrogen tank weight/size, that will be a factor too. Another factor is expected life of battery vs. hydrogen-fuel cell system. Hydrogen tank probably has long life. I don't know life of fuel cell. Another thing the demo mentioned was fueling time is 5 minutes for H2. That might matter to the impatient crowd. Hopefully, H2 car will not freeze during a blizzard as fuel cell is slightly exothermic, I think.Look at the efficiency -- electricity to kinetics. There is no way you can bring up hydrogen efficiency other than a few percentage points.
And besides, you have lots of problem in material engineering that is very difficult to solve.
Which is why engineers decided....
I bet you are not engineers