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It's official Toyota is full speed fuel cells for compliance after 2014

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by austingreen, May 13, 2014.

  1. Troy Heagy

    Troy Heagy Member

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    You're no better than the Lexus professional liars (correction: "marketers" -ed.). Fuel cell cars have been impacted in multiple test crashes & they never blowup (or leak). Please don't spread inaccurate FUD. :)
     
  2. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    With the FCEVs coming out soon, there are only 9 existing public stations in california. There are supposed to be 40 new 10,000 psi stations bringing total number to 49 by the end of 2016. If 3 of them are 5000psi or lower, I doubt it will make much of a difference. California's CARB claims that 53,000 fcv will be on the road in california by the end of 2017. If they are right, then there should be long lines at some of the stations during peak times, I doubt they will have that problem though. Let's check back at the end of next year and see if they are on track. If you suppose sales triple every year for fuel cells they need to sell 4100 in 2015, 12,300 in 2016, 36,600 in 2017, and there should be a law that allows the hydrogen stations to charge cash, which has been in the works for 9 years, and in practice in germany for most of them, by the end of next year.

    I did not know about the impala
    2015 Chevy Impala Bi-fuel burns CNG, starts at $37,385*
    IMHO this needs cheap home refueling to actually sell in volume, but the bi-fuel solves one of the problems of the civic cng, and the larger size solves anouther. Unfortunately in a normally aspirated ice you can't tune it well for 87 octane e10 and 130 octane cng, so I expect they will not get nearly the efficiency that they could in a dedicated natural gas ice. A solution for more efficiency would be to use the 2L turbo with a larger turbo, active waste gate, with agressive egr. That could run on E10 gasoline in a miller cycle but get more power and efficiency with cng. The problem with dual fuel impalla is its cost of course, but perhaps gm could bring that down with volume. Cost to fuel with natural gas should be around the same as a toyota avalon hybrid, but.....that avalon is a nicer car and much less expensive to run on e10.
     
  3. Scorpion

    Scorpion Active Member

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    You and I are in agreement that a CNG PHEV would make no sense.....way too much sacrifice of cargo and/or passenger space.

    But that's not a vehicle I was talking about.
    I was saying a (non-plug) CNG hybrid would compare favorably with a gasoline PHEV, in terms of sacrificed space and price premium.

    The way I see it, we essentially have 4 generations of cars:

    Gen I - standard gasoline and diesel cars
    Gen II - hybrid gasoline and clean diesel cars
    Gen III- use of alternative fuel (CNG or electricity) only for short daily driving; switches to gasoline, methanol, or diesel for longer trips
    Gen IV - ditches reliance on gasoline/diesel infrastructure altogether: FCV, straight CNG, or BEV

    We are currently moving from Gen II to Gen III. A dual-fuel vehicle -hybrid or not- with a small, CNG "saddle" tank is something we are starting to see in pickups, the Impala and hopefully soon others.

    Do you have a breakdown of what the price premium consists of, which makes CNG vehicles more expensive? I have always thought it was the tanks, but I'm assuming the engine is also slightly more expensive (especially if it is optimized for 130 octane, which is a great idea). How much more expensive the engine is vs. a standard gasoline one.....I don't know.......but I'm assuming it is less than clean diesel since you don't need particulate traps or exhaust after-treatment.
    Well, if one could avoid larger and/or carbon-fiber tanks, obviously costs should drop. I proposed a sphere (or oblate spheroid) of volume 4 gallons........because a sphere or oblate spheroid is the strongest shape, and so would require the cheapest materials.
    Any idea what this could cost?
    I'm starting to think most of the "CNG premium" cost is BS. Read this:
    Natural-gas vehicles haven’t caught on yet. Could that ever change?

    -- The cars could get much cheaper. "It's a lot cheaper to buy a natural gas vehicle in Europe," Levi writes. "[T]he natural gas version of the Volkswagon Passat, which can run on both natural gas and normal gasoline, costs only $3,700 more than the pure gasoline version. Researchers aren't sure what explains the disparity, but it makes a stunning difference: If natural gas vehicles in the United States were to cost as little as they do in Europe... a sensible U.S. consumer could expect to break even after only five years."

    Can someone please explain why Europe, of all places, is able to produce these cars cheaper? I am not a conspiracy theorist, per se, but this makes me think something nefarious is afoot here

    The Civic is not the best example. If you look at my post, that's why I compared the Accord PHEV and HEV. I was actually more conservative in my estimates. I assumed the larger batteries in the PHEV came entirely at the expense of the fuel tank (3.6 gallons), but actually the trunk loses 7 cubic feet also. See:
    Compare Side-by-Side

    There are .134 cubic feet in 1 gallon.......so 7 cubic feet would give us 52 gallons. Of course that is preposterous, but in my example, it just goes to show that there is PLENTY of room there.......and a CNG Hybrid Accord doesn't have to lose any trunk space (honestly, 9 cubic feet is ridiculous)



    I think SUVs and pickup trucks are ideal for packaging spherical CNG tanks. Again, my intention is SMALL is BETTER........only need 'saddle tank' of maybe 4-8 gallons volume (1-2 gallons GGE) for daily driving needs

    See:
    Gas 2 | Bridging the gap between green heads and gear heads.

    I posted that you could have either 16 gallon carbon-fiber or 4 gallon 'saddle-tank' plus 12 gallon gasoline tank. They take up the same amount of volume and give the same range.
     
  4. Troy Heagy

    Troy Heagy Member

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    I don't see the need for CNG at all. Just skip direct to Volt-style EVs and fuel cells.

    In gen II you forgot about diesel hybrids (at least two models exist).

    And if you think CNG==home fueling, that isn't really true. Most cars cannot be fueled at home for the same reason diesel cars cannot be run off home diesel (heating oil). Too dirty.
     
  5. Troy Heagy

    Troy Heagy Member

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    P.S. I looked at buying a Civic CNG, and then canceled the idea about an hour later. There are no fueling stations east of Vegas or north if Sacramento. I would basically be trapped on California.

    It's even worse in the east where I would be okay driving round Pittsburgh and Baltimore, but could never travel between the two (no stations). That's why I called the CNG car a "city car". It's even more constrained than an electric.
     
  6. Troy Heagy

    Troy Heagy Member

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    More random thoughts:
    -Why keep blaming Koch brothers for lack of CNG stations? My understanding is they could make a lot if money off natural gas (and would not oppose it). Sometimes I think liberals use the Kochs like parents use the boogeyman: "Beware son of the boogeyman coming to get you."

    - Civic CNG rates are less clean _ than a Prius or Civic or Fusion or Jetta hybrid (greenercars.org). In fact the CNG is barely any cleaner than a Jetta TDI or Cruze TDI.

    - Which brings me to my next point: Formerly dirty diesel freight trucks. I say "formerly" because all the new models have urea catalysts to neutralize the NOx & traps to capture soot. They are as clean as their CNG counterparts (as the Jetta TDI is almost as clean as the Civic CNG).

    - Why spend a lot of money/energy switching freight trucks from diesel to CNG when the gain is only 0.001 fewer grams NOx per mile? (Or 1% cleaner using greenercars.org's score.)
     
  7. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Even with annual inspections, all these high pressure tanks will have to be eventually retired and replaced. That length of time for a CNG tank is 10 to 25 years from date of manufacture. It depends on the construction and materials used, and the tank cost increases with service life.

    NG to methanol is the best way to use the NG as a fuel in the fleet. Existing cars can likely tolerate a M10, and the resulting costs to cars and infrastructure for M85 or even M100 is lower than that for CNG. Then the infrastructure is in place for when methanol fuel cells become available.
     
  8. Scorpion

    Scorpion Active Member

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    Certainly, you are entitled to your opinion, but, as they say 'facts are stubborn things".
    Look, I'm all for the Volt and other PHEVs.....but to say we should skip CNG for the Volt takes quite a bit of chutzpah! I mean, here, I'll repeat my post:
    A thought experiment:
    - Take the battery out of the Chevy Volt.......it has a volume of about 17 gallons
    - Leave behind only enough batteries for regen braking and idle stop
    - Replace said battery with a 17 gallon, 10,000 psi carbon-fiber tank full of NG
    This is roughly equal to 13 gallons gasoline, good for 390-520 miles @ 30-40mpg
    Such a 'CNG Volt' would:
    - Weigh less than the current Volt
    - Cost less than the current Volt
    - Re-fuel faster than the current Volt (CNG vs electricity)
    - Have greater driving range than the current Volt, gasoline included
    - Have lower emissions than grid-charged Volts in MOST parts of the country
    - Not use foreign oil......EVER

    As far as FCVs, you'd have to violate several laws of physics and economics to make the whole process more efficient than direct burn of NG.

    Yes, that's true, thanks for pointing that out. I would call a diesel-hybrid a "Gen 2.5" or "Gen 2.75" technology.
    There are others, as well. For example a flex-fuel E85-capable Gen I could be considered a "Gen 1.5"
    i would make the distinction between a car that can merely run on on an alternative fuel, vs one that is optimized for it. Here is another example of a "Gen 2.5" technology:
    New Fuel Economy Standards May Benefit Ethanol | Domestic Fuel

    Not sure about that.....heating oil is chemically distinct from diesel, is not meant for transport fuel, so it is regulated to different standards. But, you CAN make your WVO or B100 out of soybeans, rapeseed, animal fat, or whatever feedstock!
    I think the home CNG stations are able to dry & clean up line NG into fuel-quality.

    We might be looking at different maps. See:


    CNG Stations | Refueling | Prices | Map


    I just ordered a F150 CNG today. My main concern is driving range, mainly since there are so few public stations, and a home station is not yet available. I don't want to go out of my way to fill up, so I'm configuring it for 650 miles or so of CNG range (plus it has gasoline).

    What amount of range would you feel comfortable with? I suggested a hybrid Accord with 16 gallon carbon fiber tanks, holding 12 gasoline gallon equivalents. That's 600 miles. No CNG between Reno and Salt Lake City, a distance of 520 miles.....bit of a nail biter. But that car -or any midsize hybrid- could easily hold a 20 gallon tank good for 15 gasoline gallons equivalent, or a whopping 750 miles, or twice as long as the FCX Clarity.

    It just feels funny to me to call a Civic CNG a "city car" when it has a 160 mile range (again, greater than any non-Tesla EV) and fills up in 5 minutes. If this is a "city car", then that would make the LEAF a "neighborhood car". It's only "more constrained" than Tesla-spec EVs.

    See:
    Gas 2 | Bridging the gap between green heads and gear heads.
     
  9. 70AARCUDA

    70AARCUDA Active Member

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    Which is it? FOOL Cells or FUEL Cells...or are the words interchangeable?
     
  10. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    have you enquired about MPG loss? Back in the day, our Ford econoline van dropped ~ 20% efficiency if configured to run both LP & gasoline, according to the equipment manufactures (plus I couldn't get smog check exempt certs). That was motive evough to dump the dual fuel notion. Maybe losses are less, modernly?
    .
     
  11. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    The hardware is called a fuel cell, and they are great on space craft, and fork lifts, and busses.

    When the US taxpayer is asked to pay to commercialize them for light vehicles, because batteries are too expensive, but the fcv cost more than plug-ins for similar performance, they become fool cells.
    Hydrogen Fuel Cell Cars are too Expensive : KQED Education | KQED Public Media for Northern CA


    Not that the fuel cell lobby wants to wait until cars are desirable though, they want lots of doe funds and $20M/year to set up hydrogen fueling.
    QUEST TV: Highway to Hydrogen | QUEST

     
  12. Scorpion

    Scorpion Active Member

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    Or, in other words, about the expected life of an EV battery, or a standard car or engine by itself. On a volumetric basis, CF tanks are cheaper than Li-ion batteries, even after accounting for servicing

    I like M85 because of its energy density compared to CNG (it's more comparable to LNG, but without need for cryogenic storage) and ability to run in older cars.

    But....who will pay for all those methanol production facilities? Can you really say that it'll be cheaper than the home $500 CNG pump being built by Ford & Eaton? At least with CNG, the individual consumer pays for it, just like EV drivers do for an EVSE, whereas with methanol facilities, these companies are likely to turn to the taxpayer for assistance.

    I'm glad you asked this. I put in the order for a F150 XL CNG yesterday that comes with the "CNG prep package". It rolls off the assembly line inKS City, and will be shipped to my local dealer here in Lincoln, who is in process of putting me in touch with the local people who will do the conversion. My main concerns are:
    (1) range on CNG only, since I won't have a home pump. I need at least 450+ miles, just on CNG, plus gasoline backup
    (2) This truck does a lot of highway driving, and is usually not used for towing or hauling. But, I have also heard of CNG power losses under load. The solution is concurrent use of the fuels in the combustion chamber, as opposed to consecutive use. There are a whole lot of dual-fuel technologies coming that can do this:
    - diesel + gasoline
    - ethanol + gasoline
    - methanol + gasoline
    - diesel + ethanol
    - diesel + methanol
    - CNG + diesel
    - CNG + gasoline
    etc., etc.

    The basic concept is this:
    You have your 'main fuel' and your 'main tank', and this can be gasoline or diesel, allowing you to travel anywhere.
    This gasoline or diesel is then 'boosted' by small additions of an alternative fuel (CNG, methanol, ethanol) that is carried in a small 'saddle tank'. Under normal loads, the ratio of fuels burned is 10:1, i.e. you'll use 10 gallons of gasoline or diesel for every 1 gallon of alternative fuel. Under heavy load, that ratio could go to 50:50 for short periods. The 'boosting' allows extremely clean emissions and much more mpg in gasoline or diesel engines.

    In practice, it could work like this: A dual-fuel hybrid Accord could carry 10 gallons gasoline and 10 gallons alternate fuel.
    For every 5,000 miles travelled on gasoline, 500 miles was provided by the alternate fuel. Thus, when one is due for an oil change, the alternate fuel can be re-filled at the dealer at the same time, eliminating the need for fueling infrastructure.
    A CNG diesel would work like this: A dual fuel hybrid Accord would again carry 10 gallons of diesel and 10 gallons of CNG. The CNG tank thus carries 2.5 gasoline gallon-equivalents. It is refueled daily at home. 90% of the fuel burned comes from CNG, the rest from diesel, which is necessary for combustion ignition. Daily driving on CNG, long trips on diesel. You would only need to visit a diesel station to re-fill it after 5,000 miles or so.
    here are some interesting articles:
    Swiss Researchers Make an 80-mpg Hybrid | MIT Technology Review
    Reinventing the Gasoline Engine | MIT Technology Review
    Ultra-Efficient Gas Engine Passes Test | MIT Technology Review
    Natural Gas Could Partly Power Long-Haul Trucks and Trains | MIT Technology Review

    I call these and all dual-fuel engine technologies "Gen x.25" or "Gen x.50" or "Gen x.75" since they just make the ICE more efficient and don't have much to do with the drivetrain. Of course, all of these engine technologies can be used in regular ICE, hybrid, or as range-extender for EREV.

    As you can see, there are plenty of technologies & options for us to explore instead of the FCV distraction.
    The question of "why spend money/energy" switching our trucks to LNG from diesel is obvious to me, and should be to most Americans.
    It's not about .001 grams..........it's about the fact that the the diesel comes in large part from a source controlled by our 'friends' in OPEC and Putin's Russia. LNG, meanwhile comes from our friends in Pennsylvania and Texas.
    There is more than 1 dimension to diversifying our energy needs........
     
  13. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    It was me that brought up the koch brothers, and it was in relation to lng trucks. I hardly think of Picken's as a liberal, or that he did not stand to make money, but it is a historic fact that the Koch brothers were able to defeat the picken's plan in 2012, and thwart obama and the doe from doing a partial plan in 2013. For your reading pleasure, real stories not made up reasoning.

    T. Boone Pickens-Koch brothers feud tests Republican principles - Kenneth P. Vogel - POLITICO.com

    It is billionaire versus billionaire, but IMHO one plan makes sense for america, and the other plan makes sense for OPEC and the Koch's. I think picken's group has pretty much given up on getting things through congress directly, as the Koch's just have a lot more power to stop the plans. Don't fear. lng light and medium trucks appear like they will make it through a few states, and then the truckers themselves will demand refueling in the other states. This is a much less expensive proposition for refueling infrastructure then fuel cells per unit oil displaced. With medium and heavy duty vehicles consuming 15% of the oil this nation uses, getting 4 million of these vehicles on lng would drop oil consumption by 7.5%. Hybrids have dropped oil consumption by less than 1%, corn ethanol around 5%.



    I think you must have dumbed down the meaning of clean here to only mean ghg emissions, not harmful ones. One could make a case that all are clean, but if you design clean as less OPEC oil, its a lng or cng car. Typically clean meanst NMOG, NOx, CO, SO2, particulates. Here a cng car is much less poluting in these catagories, but perhaps for cars they are clean enough.

    Do me a favor, and go to an even with a line of 10 diesel busses and tell me how clean the air is behind them. One reason is much lower NOx than even the cleanest diesel trucks and busses. The regulations will get harder on medium and heavy vehicles. Can you pull up a diesel city bus versus CNG? I don't feel like looking, but we know cummins sells them because they have less unhealthy pollution, and they make both.
    Does greencars care about oil? Or health? Or is it mainly ghg? If you are a billionaire focused soley on ghg, then you try to make trucking as expensive as possible. You might make some stupid argument like that. Hell why not have costs go up with every oil price spike. I mean that will serve those stupid truckers right. If you want to reduce ghg emissions you clean up the grid, something we will have more money to do if we stop paying OPEC so much.

    At least locally this study says local cng busses produce less NOx, and less expensive to operate (with and without subsidies) than diesel or diesel hybrid busses. Luckily cng and fuel cell busses don't need national infrastructure.
    http://publicsolutionsgroup.com/Websites/publicsolutionsgroup/files/Content/1417809/Transit_Hybrid-Diesel_vs._CNG.pdf

    So why not spend a small amount of money compared to this fuel cell boon doggle, and the ethanol money give away. The amount of money needed to prime the pump for lng trucks is about $6.5B one time charge, which might displace 10% of oil (that would drop inports from 40% today to 33%, and almost all the drop would be at a cost to opec). Fuel cells so far have cost the us government and ford and gm $10B. Ethanol subsidies cost over $100B over the years. How about this? Kill the oil subsidies ($4B/year) drop the ethanol mandate to 7% of oil, and fund picken's plan, not only would less money go to OPEC each year, but the federal subsidies would drop.
     
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  14. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Except a car with an aging engine or battery isn't legally required to have the part replaced. Perhaps the worn engine shouldn't be trusted on a trip away from home, but it is fine for day to day commuting. The battery no longer has full capacity, but the BEV still has enough range to meet regular use. Odds are that if they fail, it won't be in some dramatic fashion, and the person will just get stuck on the side of the road until help arrives.

    High pressure gas tanks on the other hand have to be removed from service. This because, barring expensive testing that requires removing them from the vehicle, there is no way of inspecting them completelye inside for oxidation and microscopic cracks. They are likely engineered to not fail dramatically, but it is a bigger likely hood than with a battery or engine. Concerning the last two, a tire blowout has a bigger chance of ending in a crash.

    A battery or engine finally gives up the ghost, and the car coasts to a stop. A CNG or hydrogen tank fails, and the best case is a leak of highly flammable gas. Worst is the high pressure cylinder exploding. So there is a difference between them. An owner can choose to push his luck with a battery or engine that should be repaired or replaced. The parts may even be perfectly fine despite their age. The fuel tanks have to be taken out of service once they hit their expiration date. Even if they are perfectly fine, saw little use, or even sat on a warehouse shelf for that time. It's a matter of public safety.

    To bring this back to fuel cells. I haven't seen any published estimates on the tank lifespan, but they contain higher pressures and hydrogen is more corrosive than NG. So their lifespans will be shorter than a CNG tank.

    Who's paying for all the ethanol plants right now? While there are government incentives, it is mostly companies investing in the hopes of making more money. Eliminate the corn ethanol mandate and install the open fuel standard, and there will be the same incentive for companies to make methanol plants. Perhaps even a larger one than for ethanol since those plants need to buy feedstock, and many gas and oil wells do flare off excess gas.



    This will face the same issue that an EREV faces: fuel age. With gasoline, the concern is dropping octane and varnish build up. With diesel it's having summer blend in winter arrives and bacteria growth to clog things up. A solvable issue, but one that needs addressing.
     
  15. Scorpion

    Scorpion Active Member

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    With an old car engine, there is nothing that can prevent the owner from thrashing it, and thus causing it's failure.
    I'm thinking that with BEVs and CNG cars, perhaps they could have a control system with software that restricts usage as the car ages? For example, I've heard that EV rapid DC charging done often enough (or done when the battery is still half full) can degrade pack life........also, deep-discharging or over-charging (e.g., driving and charging in "range-mode" in a Tesla) can also degrade life.
    Well, what if the software restricted such practices as the car ages, to extend pack life? Or perhaps it could allow then, but pro-rate the warranty accordingly?
    Similarly, with CNG vehicles perhaps the control software could limit PSI as the tank ages. Thus, after 5 years, it only allows 9,000 psi, after 10 years, only 8,000 psi and so on. The loss of range would be comparable to a BEV, and like BEVs, should be offset by greater # of public charging/fueling stations in coming years.
    Yet another reason to back CNG and not H2!
    Couldn't agree more. This should have been done years ago. Koch brothers can go to hell.
    pressurized tanks? I think that's what the Volt does
    What about a CNG car that switches to premium when it runs out? Wouldn't such an engine have an easier time running 130 octane? I don't think most people would mind premium gasoline if they only used it once in a blue moon like Volt owners.
    IIRC, Ford's Ecoboost engines are ideally suited for running alt fuels/higher compression ratios. I think only thing holding us back is passage of OFS
     
  16. 70AARCUDA

    70AARCUDA Active Member

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    You translated my double entendre' perfectly!
     
  17. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    certainly you can put electronic leak checks in, but once it's leaking you need to dump the tank and replace it. Its either broken or it isn't. Since you would likely be stranded until you get a new part with a cng tank, it makes sense to force you to replace it early.

    I don't know where the idea of 10,000 psi cng tanks came from, but they don't make any economic sense. Why Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) | REVLNG You would need to spend the same energy to compress it as to liquify. Hydrogen gets 10,000 psi because it is so much less energy dense and so much more expensive in dollars and energy to liquify. So lets go back to either lng or 3600 psi. The tanks will be much cheaper (less than $2500 for a class 3 or $1000 for a class 1 suitable to run a car) versus I don't know somewhere over $5000 for a smaller 10,000 psi hydrogen tank. Maybe you can compromise and go to 5000 psi, but most places only use 3600 psi. If they do managed to get the cf and plastic technology much cheaper for hydrogen, class 3 and 4, 3600 psi tank prices will drop proportionally.


    Yes I agree that the OFS would help a great deal, but people are being short sighted in the government. What else is new? We spend tens of billions on the military, for a low oil scenario, but have domestic policies to cause maximum consumer pain if a low oil future happens.

    Flex fuel if we don't have a cheap home refueling product, there is talk of $500 device but none are for sale, seems to favor methanol over cng. If such a device is offered for sale there is a good case for cng, especially in air polluted cities like LA and Houston where state incentives already exist.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/24/opinion/methanol-as-an-alternative-to-gasoline.html

    Absent this home refueling breakthrough, methanol makes a lot of sense, as it would only cost $100-$200 per car to make them compatible for straight gasoline to a mix of ethanol or methanol of up to 85%. That way when oil prices spike, drivers can switch to the least expensive of ethanol or methanol.
     
  18. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    They decided? Put it this way -
    Guns don't kill - it's the one behind the trigger. Similarly, it isn't the lobbyist greasing politicians' re-election war chest so that FC credits get jacked up high. It's the FC builder BEHIND the lobbyists. So in a way .... our purchasing dollars (which enable hair brained manufacturers) are acting to shoot ourselves in the foot.
    :mad:
    .
     
  19. Prius Team

    Prius Team Toyota Marketing USA

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    austingreen:

    Nathan is on the road right now, so let me start by sharing the latest interview with Jim Lentz that officially comments on the Tesla partnership.

    Toyota moving away from EVs in favor of hydrogen fuel cells

    We'll get back to you on the rest of your questions and determine what we're allowed to share. As you know, it's always tough to comment on future product plans and strategies but we try to keep PC informed as much as we can.

    Best,
    Erica Gartsbeyn
    Prius Marketing & Communications Manager
    Toyota USA
     
    Chazz8 likes this.
  20. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Traction batteries are considered dead for BEV use at 80% capacity. They can still have a long life in other uses. Likewise, the BEV owner can elect to just leave such a pack in the car if the reduced performance is acceptable. If a failure were to occur, the most likely bad outcome would getting stranded. More likely is that battery will be unable to charge after getting home. Power loss on the road could end in a crash, but such an occurance would be more controllable than a tire blow out.

    A pressurized gas tank is like that tire. My wife's car needed new tires. We only put 5000 miles on it a year at most. So it had plenty of tread left. But lack of driving on them doesn't stop the effects of oxygen and UV light over time on them. The rubber was visibly cracking. The same is happening to these tanks.

    The batteries have electronic monitoring of their condition, and there is communication between the protection circuitry and the charger. This controls the current to protect the battery and prevent overcharging. AFAIK, there is no such communication between a CNG tank and pump. It just works on the principle of high pressure gas flowing to low until the pressure equalizes, or the compressor senses a certain amount of back pressure. A damaged or overpressurized tire can cause some serious damage or even kill someone when it blows. These tanks are holding a magnitude more pressure than a tire.

    A person pushing the limits of their BEVs battery life, or even an old beaters engine, are a tiny risk to the people around them. Using an old CNG tank puts everyone around them at risk. A leak is easy to handle, but a rupture is serious. SCUBA tanks hold 3000psi and can blow through a car door if they rupture. It's basic risk management for the expiration dates on CNG tanks.

    We could put in systems like you suggest, but it isn't worth cost. I believe the average lifespan of a tank is 15 years, which is plenty for the life of most cars. By that time, other components could be expected to need replacement. The cost of a new tank should easily be covered by the fuel savings over those 10+ years. Most would probably opt for cheaper, shorter lifespan tanks on a personal vehicle also.

    FCEVs likely won't have the cheaper fuel advantage to offset replacement tank cost. Or any lower cost advantage will be negated by the higher cost of the tank. then there is the possibly fuel cell replacement. Which is why I think they will be disposable cars.

    The problems of old fuel aren't big, but they have to addressed. The Volt has shown it really isn't such a big deal with gasoline, but you mentioned diesel earlier. Bacteria growth can be countered by additives or larger, easy to change filters. Having summer blend in the tank when the first freeze hits could mean gelled fuel in the lines. The system will have to be heated for those areas with a winter. An easy way to drain out excess summer fuel in the fall would be cheaper, but not popular.