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The impact of driving EV

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by cyclopathic, Jun 16, 2011.

  1. cyclopathic

    cyclopathic Senior Member

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    have to disagree.. it is as practical as any other sedan/hatchback on market.

    maybe more so due to better fuel economy and bigger luggage capacity
     
  2. tripp

    tripp Which it's a 'ybrid, ain't it?

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    Well, it can't tow anything and it' absolute shite in the snow, esp on hills/mountains. It's low clearance makes it a poor choice for taking the family camping. In these respects our Outback is vastly, vastly superior. That's not the whole picture, but many people see their 2% use case as the driving factor in their car purchases.
     
  3. cyclopathic

    cyclopathic Senior Member

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    sorry don't buy it.
    Prius has the same clearance as Civic, Jetta, .2" more then Camry.. With respect to snow yeah on OEM tires.. true for most cars.

    Outback or Forester is the good choice for mountains, but it is not a mainstream
     
  4. tripp

    tripp Which it's a 'ybrid, ain't it?

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    If you don't buy, come here in the winter and I'll be glad to show you. The prius is rubbish in the snow and it's not the OEM tyres. It's the traction control. The slightest incline and it's quite easy to get stuck. It's terrifying driving in the mountains in bad weather... trust me, I know all too well. The car's underside plastic panels are all torn to shreds from driving on streets with deep wagon ruts (snow/ice). I don't think you're seeing what I'm getting at. When people purchase cars, they often have these 2% use cases in mind (towing boat to lake, camping in the canyons of Utah, etc). They seem to almost ignore the typical uses that will account for most of the operating costs of the car. That's why you have people that drive SUVs even though they hardly need them.
     
  5. cyclopathic

    cyclopathic Senior Member

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    not doubting what you say, but is it GenII specific or it also plagues Gen III? Granted we have nothing on the same scale as you, but I had driven in snow/ice storm last winter on Gen III, and it was as good as any car on the road. Probably better then those 30+ we saw in the ditch.

    Agree on 2%. At the end this is a basis for me labeling EV as "impractical". To my defense it is more then 2%, last week 6 out of 7 days we had driven at the limit or in excess of Nissan Leaf optimistic range.

    With respect to camping we had camped in Utah, Colorado, northern Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, California, Oregon, Wyoming, South Dakota.. being on loaded street bike was not excited about venturing off asphalt. There were a couple camps we passed on for this reason, but the ones we stayed in would be no problem for Prius.
     
  6. tripp

    tripp Which it's a 'ybrid, ain't it?

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    Gen II. The Gen III seems to be a solid improvement on the Gen II in many respects so hopefully it's loads better in this one too.

    We travel on a lot of "roads" in Utah that I'd never take a Prius on... also wouldn't take a Civic on them for that matter. The outback is a decent compromise. We use the prius as much as we can for all of our "aroond toon" driving.
     
  7. rpatterman

    rpatterman Thinking Progressive

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    Tripp, I have a 2004, bought new. Always had a Ford Ranger or my GF's SUV to use for ski days. Last winter I was down to just the Prius and put studded snows on and was amazed at how well it did.
    Didn't miss a powder day!

    Agree with you about the 2%. Know a lot of people who drive a monster truck 52 weeks/year so they can tow a boat a couple weekends a summer. Or a giant SUV for the two snow storms per year. Silly!
     
  8. smorgasbord

    smorgasbord New Member

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    Actually, Tesla put charging/storage @ 90%, with overall on-board efficiency @ 88%. You have it at 64%. If you're going to quote Tesla, you might as well give a reference. Here's one:

    teslamotors.com/goelectric/efficiency

    I can't yet post a reference to the table image, but for Well-to-Station efficiency, Tesla says:
    Crude Oil: 81.7%
    Natural Gas: 52.5%

    For vehicle efficiency, they say:
    Tesla EV: 2.18 km/MJ (kilometers per MegaJoule) @ 110 Wh/km
    Hybrid: 0.68 km/MJ @ 55 mpg
    Commuter Car 0.63 km/MJ @ 51 mpg
    Sport Car: 0.24 km/MJ @ 20 mpg
    Fuel Cell: 0.57 km/MJ @ 64 m/km

    And for Well-To-Wheel Efficiency:
    Tesla EV: 1.14 km/MJ (via natural gas electricity)
    Hybrid: 0.556 km/MJ
    Commuter Car: 0.478 km/MJ
    Sport Car: 0.202 km/MJ
    Fuel Cell: 0.348 km/MJ

    Which puts EVs at about twice the overall efficiency of hybrids, at least according to Tesla (who obviously is not an impartial source). Now, you could argue coal sourced electricity, and I could argue solar/wind (more of the latter in CA than the former), but at the end of the day, fixed, larger powerplants can always be more efficient than smaller mobile ones since they don't have size/weight restrictions.
     
  9. wxman

    wxman Active Member

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    According to Argonne National Laboratory's GREET model (I assume ANL would be as unbiased as anyone could get), the overall efficiency of a Leaf and a 2011 Prius would be roughly the same (see post in http://priuschat.com/forums/environ...ity-does-oil-refinery-use-10.html#post1355735).

    Also based on GREET, the "conventional pollutants" are roughly...

    [FONT=&quot]2011 Toyota Prius[/FONT][FONT=&quot]

    (Grams/Mile)

    Emission....................WTP...............PTW................WTW Total

    HC/VOC...................0.064...............0.013*..................0.077
    CO.............................0.029...............0.04......................0.069
    NOx...........................0.102...............0.003....................0.104
    PM.............................0.017...............0.021....................0.038
    HC+NOx (US06).......0.166..............0.018*...................0.184
    HC+NOx (SC03).......0.166..............0.018*...................0.184
    CO (US06).................0.029..............0.1........................0.129
    CO (SC03).................0.029..............0.1........................0.129
    SOx............................0.054..............0.004 ...................0.058[/FONT]

    * includes evaporative VOC emissions from vehicle


    [FONT=&quot]2011 Leaf[/FONT][FONT=&quot]

    (Grams/Mile)

    Emission....................WTP...............PTW................WTW Total

    HC/VOC...................0.004...............0...........................0.004
    CO.............................0.053...............0...........................0.053
    NOx...........................0.231...............0...........................0.231
    PM.............................0.041...............0.021....................0.062
    HC+NOx (US06).......0.235..............0............................0.235
    HC+NOx (SC03).......0.235..............0............................0.235
    CO (US06).................0.053..............0............................0.053
    CO (SC03).................0.053..............0............................0.053
    SOx............................0.582..............0....... ....................0.582[/FONT]


    (@ WTW emissions per GREET 1.8d.1 (comb. FTP/US06/SC03))
    (Grams/Mile)


    Emission.....................2011 Prius...........................................2011 Leaf

    HC+NOx.........................0.203.................................................0.235
    CO................................0.11...................................................0.05

    PM................................0.040.................................................0.062
    SOx...............................0.064.................................................0.582


    [FONT=&quot]All PM assumed to be PM10[/FONT]

    WTP = "well-to-pump"
    PTW = "pump-to-wheels"
    WTW = "well-to-wheels"

    The PTW values for the Prius were taken from CARB certified emissions; the WTP values are based on GREET adjusted for equivalent fuel mileage relative to the fuel mileage assumed in GREET, and the average electricity mix of the U.S.

    Again, I'm not necessarily endorsing GREET, but based on that model, the main advantage of EVs appears to be less consumption of foreign energy sources. There generally does not appear to be any significant advantage of EVs with respect to either GHG emissions or conventional emissions.
     
  10. jamesDaniel

    jamesDaniel New Member

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    You simply contribute for the environment.