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The electric car killer?

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by vtie, Jul 3, 2007.

  1. tripp

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

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(apriusfan @ Jul 4 2007, 04:08 PM) [snapback]473143[/snapback]</div>
    I agree completely, mate. I really don't see global oil production supporting that many additional ICEs. That includes non-conventional sources.
     
  2. darelldd

    darelldd Prius is our Gas Guzzler

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vtie @ Jul 3 2007, 01:00 AM) [snapback]472127[/snapback]</div>
    Interesting way to put it. We're comparing a product that does not exist with a product that existed many years ago (I infer from "classic" you mean the production EVs from the mid 1990's?). Folks use the same argument with fuel cell vehicles. At some point in the future, prices will magically come down, durability will be increased by an order of magnitude, and storage problems will be solved. In the meantime, EVs that we've had on the road for millions of miles... well, they basically suck because they're mired in reality. We can today make a battery car that has way better range than what is proposed here - assuming no liquid fuel input. Add liquid fuel input, and gosh, the range limitation of BEVs goes away just as fast. And cost? We can "propose" any cost we like. Until they are built, we have no idea. We know exactly how much BEVs cost to build... because we've built them. Again - BEVs are mired in reality while the future is nothin but bright for the product that does not exist.

    This thing is so cheap and so simple... that it has taken 14 years to get where we are... and we still don't have a real production vehicle. In the early 90's the big car companies had to put some sort of ZEV on the road in short order or face huge fines. In just a few short years, these companies had awesome, viable, full-featured BEVs rolling into customer's garages. The ZEV mandate could have been satisfied with an air car certainly. And if they were cheaper and easier to build - and had the range and reliability required - I'm pretty sure that an air car would have been a better choice to build. But everybody chose to build BEVs. And I guess they are now "classics."

    The idea of NOT being able to fuel at home is a deal-killer for me. As is running a loud compressor for many hours/day.

    Actually, not quite good *enough* to be true. As others have said, these guys have been around for many years, and have made some pretty wild claims. Many deadlines have come and gone, and there has still been zero product on the road that can match an EV's capabilities. It is an interesting thing. and may have a place - but rendering BEVs useless is not likely to be one of them.

    Nowhere here am I saying that BEVs are perfect. Nor do I think they are the end-game. I simply don't believe that an air car - as I understand them - will be a better solution to our transportation problems than BEVs.
     
  3. vtie

    vtie New Member

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    Hello Darell, I knew you would jump in at some time... In fact, I have to admit that the choice of the title itself was to challenge you :D
    Seriously, "The electric car killer" was a hyperbole indeed. But I do believe that pneumatic cars can help address some problems in the near future that BEV's can't, mainly because of the cost.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    Well, that's the whole point of technical advancement, isn't it? It would be a primitive world if nobody would ever make such comparisons.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    From what I learned, that pneumatic car is ready to go into production with known specs and price, has been licensed (tot TATA amongst others) and will be produced as early as next year. Of course, it this may all be a big lie, but as far as I know it has not been debunked until now. So, what is your problem?

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    Any estimate of the price? Any idea how much people in Beijing are ready to pay that premium over a 8 years old Subaru or a Dacia Logan?

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    Actually, not just as fast. One of the nice things about the pneumatic car is that the fuel contribution blends in so nicely, making it a 140mpg car with a 1000 mile range. With a BEV, you would end up with a prius-like system.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    Yes, we know how much they cost, and it's way too much except for the happy few. And, from your words here, I smell an amount of blind conservativeness that I never expected in a person like you. I can only attribute it to the fact that you defend BEV's any any cost, against any possible alternative.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    Perhaps we should call it the "electric car conspiracy" against other ZEV alternatives? :D Your arguments keep on revolving around the theme "it hasn't be build yet, so it can't be better"... Can't you see that in 2009 something may be available that wasn't in 1990?

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    I wouldn't like that neighter. Fortunately, the CityCAT has a build-in compressor. As for the noise levels, I don't know. Maybe good, maybe bad. You and I care, but perhaps many people in Mumbai care a little less, as long as they can afford it?

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    So, you think (hope!?) that this is a scam? But I do admit that I don't believe that pneumatic vehicles will render BEV's irrelevant. The title was only chosen to get people like you on your horse :rolleyes: In a sense, a BEV could be considered the Rolls Royce of ZEV if you compare it against such alternatives. But it may very will be possible that, in the coming years, pneumatic vehicles will help more in reducing worldwide pollution than BEV's will.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 07:52 AM) [snapback]473352[/snapback]</div>
    Definitely not the transportation problems in the U.S. After all, this is the country where people think it is perfectly normal to use a Ford Expedition to drive a single person to work! But, if the claims about the CityCAT are true and it will be produced soon, I do believe that it is a better solution for the transportation problems of billions of people.
     
  4. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Alan D @ Jul 3 2007, 01:12 PM) [snapback]472462[/snapback]</div>
    Didn't they address this on mythbusters, the whole "jaws shooting a scuba tank with a gun myth"? A gun made a hole in it, didn't do squat, finally when the FBI guys put some C4 on it to blow it up, what happened is that it cracked open and put a big dent in the side of the metal cargo container they were using as a "shield"... that doesn't sound like much of a force to lift a fire engine 60 feet in the air.
     
  5. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    This is a very old story. Asserting that someone is going to produce it "as early as next year," is really rather amusing, considering how long they've been saying that, and that they've never had an actual prototype tested by an independent shop. As for "solving" the range issue of EVs, it looks as though actual range on this car will be very significantly less than the range on an EV. As far as fast-charging, forget it, unless there is an infrastructure of super-mega-colossal-massively-high-pressure charging stations. Otherwise figure on plugging the thing in overnight in your garage, just like an EV, but instead of a silent electric charger, you'll have a noisy compressor running all night.

    The compressed-air car will probably have performance similar to my Xebra, and nowhere near Darell's Rav4EV. The air tank might indeed be cheaper than batteries, but the range will be a fraction of what you can get with lithium, and maybe not even as good as the lead-acid batteries in my Xebra.

    I say the air car is all smoke and mirrors. Come back when there's a car on the lot, ready to buy and drive away, and then tell me what the real-life range, speed, acceleration, and charging time are.
     
  6. darelldd

    darelldd Prius is our Gas Guzzler

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vtie @ Jul 5 2007, 01:10 AM) [snapback]473373[/snapback]</div>
    Would it not make more sense to compare the *potential* of the air car with the *potential* of a battery car? Comparing a battery car that was produced and put on the road in the 90's with something that has yet to be in customers hands tells us very little. Let's compare the *potential* of all technologies to make it relevant. As I keep saying - BEVs are mired in reality while the sky is the limit for any transportation technology that is not in production.

    It appears that you have just recently learned of this technology? It has been ready to go "next year" for about seven years now.

    I have many, but not the time to list them here. :D My problem with the whole "we're ready to go" thing is the same we've heard from the fuel cell crowd for WAY the hell too long. Just a few years back GM promised to sell 1 million fuel cell cars by 2010. Oh, and they already had a really great target price. And all kinds of patents and licenses. Just no product.

    Bullshit. The expectation that you'd go here is the whole reason I tacked the last paragraph to my initial post. I work very hard to bring a transportation solution into reality that will leave the smallest footprint. That solution must be viable, proven and cost effective. The solution must exist. Today, the only vehicle technology that meets my criteria is the BEV. Tomorrow that answer may be different. I don't defend BEVs, I defend the best transportation technology available.... and at this point, the name of that technology is BEV.

    Of course. And that is MY point! In 2009 we could have BEVs that make the 1990 BEVs look like crap. Yet you are not comparing the air car to what BEVs could be today - you are comparing them to what they were 10+ years ago. What's the point in that? Here's a project for you: compare a BEV of the 1990's to an air car of the 1990's. Oops, doesn't work because BEVs are mired in reality. Now add ten years of R&D to both technologies. Where do you put your money?

    Please refrain from the assumptions. Sucks the fun right out of this for me. I don't think this is a scam, and I most certainly don't HOPE it is a scam. Do you somehow think that I do NOT want the best technology? I believe that they're honestly trying to create something new and innovative with the air car. And from the discussions I've had, it is obvious that the folks behind the air car truly believe in it. Yet the "on sale next year" promises have been broken year after year after year. I'm all for hoping that they come out with something great. If they come out with something that makes BEVs look pathetic, polluting, limiting or insanely priced for the performance they offer, I'll be all over this - and you'll see me out promoting this technology to the masses. It really is as simple as that. If this tech can be brought to market, and is clean, convenient and viable - who wouldn't love it? Yet again - my goal is to have vehicles available to the market that are viable and proven. At this time BEV wins.

    Few things I enjoy more than being baited. <_< You asked for opinion, yet don't seem to want to hear mine - or you assume that I am blind to technological advancement, and anti-everything that is not BEV. Seems that my opinion is then tainted and not valid. And yet you wanted to hear from me. I'm a bit confused.

    Hear this: If the air car can live up to its promises, it would be FANTASTIC, and be a huge part of the transportation solution. It has not yet lived up to ANY of its promises however, so I'm not out pushing its merits. I know exactly what BEVs are capable of, and that they have far surpassed many of their promises, and have proved to be a viable transportation alternative TODAY, as well as way back in the 1990's. I have first-hand knowledge of BEVs. I know their limitations and benefits. At this time I'm pushing the merits of BEVs because I try to only bet on the winning horse.
     
  7. vtie

    vtie New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    Actually, I knew the concept of pneumatic vehicles already for a while, and it's limitations. But I do admit that this is the first time I learn of a solution that has been (will be?) implemented to overcome the problem of adiabatic cooling. If their claims are correct, it makes for a 140mpg vehicle with a range of 1000 miles. If that is true, this fact alone already makes it an extremely interesting vehicle.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    And this is where your narrow point of view comes into scope. You don't seem to understand that what fits you as a solution doesn't necessarily fit the rest of the world. Very few people in the world are willing to spend some 40.000 USD for a car with a range of perhaps 200 miles that can't be refilled down the road. Heck, very few people are even willing to spend a 3.000 USD premium for a more eco-friendly car! I do agree with you that BEV's are thrilling: they are very efficient, extremely silent, can be performant, extraordinary smooth in operation. But, right now, as a solution to the world's environmental problems, they are irrelevant. They are for a rich, pseudo-green elite that buy them to ease their conscience about their huge footprint.

    Right now, there is a big movement going on amongst car manufacturers to produce cheap, basic cars (<10.000 USD). Renault started this early with the Dacia Logan, and others are following. Why do you think this is? Because there is a tremendous market waking up. What we need now is a more eco-friendly car that can compete at this price point. That could make a difference in the world the next couple of years. That's why I am more excited about the fact that this CityCAT has been licensed to TATA in India, than about the whole Tesla thing. Look a bit around you, especially beyond the borders of the US, and you will find a changing world. The barycenter isn't anymore in the States or Europe.


    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    MY money would definitely go to a BEV. If there was one in a showroom that I can buy today, I would rush now, as soon as it is <60K €, has a range of at least 250km, and can carry four people plus some luggage. I don't think I will ever buy a CityCAT because it is noisy, has poor performance and primitive compared to a BEV. But then again, I am one of those rich green elitists. But, concerning the >1 billion people in the world dreaming about their first car right now, I'm afraid their money won't go to a BEV anytime soon.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    I apologize for that unfair remark. Every now and then, I am carried away by my bad temper and I enjoy upsetting people. Sorry again...

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    But I would like to invite to consider the idea that the best technology for YOU is not necessarily what the world needs today. Technology by itself is nothing. Economy is where it all comes down to. The phrase "It's the economy,..." comes to my mind, but I won't write it because it would certainly offend you again... :D

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    See, this is where it all comes down to: there isn't a single market. The one you are shopping is quite different from the one in Shanghai.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    I understand. But all I heard from you is that this car can't compare to a BEV *from your perspective*. But that's just one (small) part of the picture. At the beginning of the discussion, I explicitly brought this forward as a potential alternative for the emerging markets. I haven't heard any comment about this from you.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 6 2007, 08:20 AM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    I won't challenge your knowledge of BEV's over mine. My only personal experience is an electric scooter which I love but is really heavy because of the lead acid batteries. And, of course, the Prius if that counts. But I remain convinced that, for the moment, a BEV is only appealing to a small group of rich green elitists. And I haven't seen any sign of change (apart perhaps from initiatives like Renault's Elect'Road). I would really love it if you could give me some indications.
     
  8. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(darelldd @ Jul 5 2007, 11:20 PM) [snapback]473875[/snapback]</div>
    Well, I disagree with Darell just on this one point. I, for one, think this is a scam. Here's how it works: You select a market category in which everyone is dissatisfied with the present offerings, and in which everyone is thinking about alternatives. You claim to have a product that would fulfill everyone's deepest wishes. If the claims are far-fetched, that's okay, as long as the level of people's desire is intense enough. In science there is a principle that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence; but in marketing there is a principle that if a claim is extravagant enough, some large number of people will fall for it, because they so deeply want for it to be true. You can't fool all the people all of the time but you most definitely can fool a lot of the people most of the time if you offer something they want desperately enough. That's why people buy lottery tickets.

    So, to continue: People are deeply dissatisfied over the price of gasoline cars. You make up a product which is just plausible enough that you can build a prototype. Gas costs too much. Today, batteries are expensive and heavy. What's cheap and light? Air!!! Most people cannot conceptualize the basic math (how much air can you actually fit into a tank you can actually build?) so the idea is plausible. You can build an actual prototype. Never mind that it will go 1/5 as far as a battery EV, because people will not understand that the technological obstacles to storing more air are greater than the obstacles to storing more electricity in an EV.

    So now you have a fraudulent prototype that people will believe (fraudulent because it cannot do what you are claiming your production model will do, and you are decades away from solving the technological problems) and you announce that your car is ready to manufacture "next year" and all you need is capital.

    There will be dreamers who will invest, and you get rich, not on the cars, because you cannot build them, but on the investments. You pay yourself a huge salary out of the investments, and later blame somebody else for problems that prevented production, and you have not even broken any laws.

    Bingo. The perfect scam.

    I do not hope this is a scam. But I believe it is a scam. I hope I am wrong. But I'm willing to bet $100 that this car, at the promised specs, will not exist a year after they have promised it. Definition: "Exist" means that it's on car lots and you can buy it for less than 150% of the promised price, and some independent outfit has tested it and determined that it has at least 80% of the promised range and not more than 20% over the promised zero-to-sixty time, and not more than 20% over the promised charging time.

    Zap is doing something like this with unrealistic promises about a car that does not exist: the Zap-X, but in their case the technology is on the way, and realistic, but the promised price and time line are not.
     
  9. koa

    koa Active Member

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    The website says you can fill the air tank at one of their stations in 3 mins. How are they going to fill 90 cf cylinder to over 4000 psi in so little time? Where is the heat going to go? How many cars could a station fill from its banks of stored air until they ran out? Maybe the tank won't explode when in an accident but wouldn't the release of 4000psi through a fracture still be dangerous? In the event of an accident what would stop fittings connected to the high psi from becoming launched through the car and anything else? Just curious.
     
  10. darelldd

    darelldd Prius is our Gas Guzzler

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    Wait... I'll post after I think some more. :) And that often takes a L O N G time... I haven't seen my family in a week. Time to get reaquainted.
     
  11. darelldd

    darelldd Prius is our Gas Guzzler

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    After long and careful deliberation (I'd already spent WAY too long typing a reply that was posted for a short while) I've decided to just sit this one out. My reality has no chance of competing with future fantasy, and I don't have the energy to argue about it, I'm afraid.

    I think you have some wonderful points, and that your concern is in the right place. I only wish there could be some actual, supporting product that could do what BEVs can already do - for much less money. And therein lies the rub for me.

    Sorry to come back and say nothing. But I don't like to leave things dangling. Now I have closure. :)
     
  12. Rangerdavid

    Rangerdavid Senior Member

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    I like the idea. Actually, I just like the idea that someone is thinking about alternatives. The successful product will have started with the idea, and this certainly stirs debate and thought, which can never be a bad thing. B)
     
  13. justifyd

    justifyd New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(koa @ Jul 6 2007, 01:04 PM) [snapback]474139[/snapback]</div>
    They'll do it with hose diameter and differential pressure. Theoretically speaking, as long as the source maintains a sufficiently higher PSI than the vehicle's cylinder and the hose can handle the flow volume demands, they can do it.

    Unless I'm wrong, the transfer of air from the source tank to the vehicle's cylinder shouldn't generate an excessive amount of heat.

    The source tank would be fed by its own compressor, no doubt properly sized to deliver the required load and equipped with ventilation equipment to dissipate the heat it generates. The heat, or at least most of it, goes into the atmosphere...perhaps serving some useful purpose (such as hot water heating) in route, if they build such a function into their design.

    As long as that tank is fed by a compressor of sufficient size, it won't ever run out. Even if peak demand were to deplete the tank's air supply, it would only be a temporary condition. The compressor will simply replenish the dispensed air. The tank is merely a buffer to normalize the demands on the compressor and supplement its delivery capacity when peak demand exceeds that rate.

    - Justifyd