I have wondered how many valleys, gorges, rivers and hills we have in the UK that would be viable Hydro electric sites. it's not like we're short of rain in sizable chunks of this country.
Admittedly some of the suitable sites have towns all over them so there could be some controversy
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Reply to: More Hyundai woes
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Previously on "More Hyundai woes"
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostThe same drawback applies to hydrogen, since it's not a primary energy source and has to be created by some means, or extracted from fossil fuels. Hydrogen has big problems with storage too though so I don't think that's looking like it's on the cards. We may [speculation mode] be entering an electricity age though, where we use less fossil fuels and more electrical energy sources, e.g. nuclear [/speculation mode].
I don't know where else in the world this might work with current technology. Apart from Wales.
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Originally posted by TonyEnglish View PostNaahh coal is what you want. We are sitting on tons of the stuff all because Maggie decided to save it for us by stopping those blokes in Wales and the like from digging it up.
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Originally posted by Bob Dalek View PostPedal-power, like Fred Flintstone, that's the answer.
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Naahh coal is what you want. We are sitting on tons of the stuff all because Maggie decided to save it for us by stopping those blokes in Wales and the like from digging it up.
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Originally posted by TykeMerc View Post
Batteries take hours to charge where as a tank of liquid fuel takes minutes. Plus of course what fuel do you use to generate the electricity in the first place?
Or for liquid batteries, drain the spent electrolyte and refill with charged electrolyte (much like filling with petrol)?
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Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostI doubt that electric cars will become truly practical until fuel cells become viable and hydrogen available at fueling stations.
Batteries take hours to charge where as a tank of liquid fuel takes minutes. Plus of course what fuel do you use to generate the electricity in the first place?
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Originally posted by Moscow Mule View PostI was quite tempted by that electric moped that was launched recently, but you need to charge it under cover so it was impractical for us.
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I doubt that electric cars will become truly practical until fuel cells become viable and hydrogen available at fueling stations.
Batteries take hours to charge where as a tank of liquid fuel takes minutes. Plus of course what fuel do you use to generate the electricity in the first place?
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostYeah, petrol is hard to beat on energy density. About 10 times what the best batteries currently manage. But petrol engines deliver around 3/4 kW power per kg and an electric motor delivers around 8 times that power by weight, so a slight weight saving there. Electric cars may be practical for shorter distances where the batteries could be quite small and light and charged overnight, or perhaps in a more distant future, for ultra high performance at more modest prices than having a monster engine.
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Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostElectric motors are light, batteries however aren't. Hydrocarbon fuels are much lighter than batteries for an equivalent amount of energy and a lot easier to transport and install in a vehicle for refueling purposes.
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostRoll on electric cars which will presumably be a lot simpler and easier to fix than the infernal combustion engine and the increasing complexity used to get diminishing returns on fuel economy. Electric motors are circa 90% efficient, compared to petrol engines that probably won't beat 30% or so even if they are packed full with electronic gizmos. Electric motors are lighter too, which means a lighter body which means a smaller and lighter motor...and you get to die in a head-on collision and squished by a juggernaut. The last is not such a good selling point.
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostRoll on electric cars which will presumably be a lot simpler and easier to fix than the infernal combustion engine and the increasing complexity used to get diminishing returns on fuel economy. Electric motors are circa 90% efficient, compared to petrol engines that probably won't beat 30% or so even if they are packed full with electronic gizmos. Electric motors are lighter too, which means a lighter body which means a smaller and lighter motor...and you get to die in a head-on collision and squished by a juggernaut. The last is not such a good selling point.
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