h a l f b a k e r yThe word "How?" springs to mind at this point.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
As pointed out many times, a major drawback with electric cars is the time it takes to charge them. This idea solves that problem and also saves gas stations from closure when gas becomes obsolete. Every new electric car should have a standardized battery compartment, which holds a removable battery
about 2'x1'x1' or however big it needs to be. The fueling station then has banks of these batteries constantly being charged. People pay a set rate to get one battery, which will take them a certain number of miles. When the battery is empty they go to a fueling station and swap out the old battery for a fresh one. The empty battery goes in the charging bank, the driver pays $30 or so to rent a new battery, leaves happy.
Eventually batteries wear out and won't hold a charge. At this point the fueling station can send them back to the company and they will be recycled and replaced with a fresh one.
Pros:
-easy refueling of electric cars
-save gas station industry
-technologically feasible (I think)
Cons:
-some stations may run out of batteries while others are overstocked
-flow of money could need tweaking
-massive amounts of electricity required by gas stations.
In the process of being baked in Israel.
http://www.time.com...599,1705518,00.html [Veho, Apr 12 2009]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
I'm afraid this idea isn't exactly original. It's been proposed
many times. It has two significant issues. One is that the
"battery" in an electrical car is/would be a several hundred
pound, several tens cubic feet battery bank. Changing out
would require a fork lift or automated system, not
insoluble, but difficult, especially to make the design
secure in case of an accident.
Second is adoption. A single station wouldn't be enough,
it would have to be adopted over a wide area. Convincing
enough stations to do this will be difficult. This is true of
any new fuel (I believe there are something like 5
hydrogen stations in the US right now). Plug in Hybrid
Electric Vehicles (PHEV) may solve this once they hit the
market, by encouraging phased adoption. |
|
|
I think the big problem is battery life cycle. People could keep swapping out till they got a newer one and then keep it for home recharging, but in any case this is by no means a new idea. (-) |
|
|
Israel is proposing to introduce electric cars supported by a network of service stations that would do just that: remove the empty battery and install a freshly charged one. Note that the batteries would be part of the service, not part of the vehicle. |
|
|
I've been trying to work this out for city transit: buses come in, maintenance workers change the battery packs, the buses go out again... rush hour'd be a bitch. |
|
|
But your local "gas station" could become your local power station, maybe with neighbourhood water-heating as well. |
|
|
Wow, I'm as smart as the Israelis! |
|
|
I think most charge stations will be full esrvice rest stops where you sit and eat for 1/2 hour or so anyways. Since you only go here on a road trip it doesn't bother you much.
During the week when commuting to work it isn't an issue, there are 4~8hr stretches to leave it plugged in.
most corner-store gas stations will perish. |
|
| |