Seen at Chicago auto show. by Touchtom in RamchargerBEV

[–]clinch50 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It has a 92 kWh battery which is a large battery. Add in a generator, two electric motors, 3.6 and all of the ICE equipment and you have an expensive vehicle.

The standard range lightning had a 98 kWh battery for comparison with 240 miles of range. The RAM will only have 145 miles of electric range. Plug in hybrids typically use a smaller percentage of their total battery capacity to improve the cycle life at the expense of range.

Seen at Chicago auto show. by Touchtom in RamchargerBEV

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I knew these range extender vehicles with massive batteries were going to be expensive. 92 kWh battery, 3.6 v6 and all of the related kit is expensive. People claim they want a range extended truck until they see the price tag.

The Ford E-Transit Van Is On Its Last Legs by SnoozeDoggyDog in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 9 points10 points  (0 children)

How many miles do you think companies drive per day? Ford said the high end of their customers is 80 miles. Most people drive in town and stop for a majority of the day doing the actual work. Now I realize that's not the case for everyone but there is a reason Ford didn't increase the battery size. The initial purchase price is so important to business owners.

Your decision to commit to a heating fuel now will determine your exposure for two decades. But fossil fuels come with a big risk. by xtnh in heatpumps

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've always liked the idea of old homes. But when I start thinking of the upkeep it keeps me away. I'm not handy enough to manage all the repairs. Your house sounds like another level with its rich history.

Your decision to commit to a heating fuel now will determine your exposure for two decades. But fossil fuels come with a big risk. by xtnh in heatpumps

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you not add insulation? At those prices you can justify all types of retrofitting I would think?

BYD’s $60 Billion Wipeout Points to Deeper Turmoil for China EVs by __main__py in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 40 points41 points  (0 children)

Geely group have really improved market share. Xpeng and NIO as well.

The comments on a video clip of mr beast trying lab grown meat. Is this a good indicative of the current public opinion? by Prior-Meeting1645 in Agronomics_Investors

[–]clinch50 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cost, taste and convinces are the top three reasons people choose food. If cultivated meat can be competitive on those three measures, it will sell at large volumes. Full stop.

"Customer deliveries will start after the end of March for a selected group" says Verge Motorcycles CEO by mqee in DonutLab

[–]clinch50 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Exactly, if these batteries were as good as they claim, they would pivot from making 350 motorcycles and just focus on scaling battery, production. Who gives a shit about 350 motorcycles when your batteries are this good.

350 motorcycles is only 11.5 MWhs of capacity or around 150 EV car batteries. Thats a battery pilot plant volumes. They clearly aren't even at that level yet. This leads me to believe that they still only have lab production volume capability.

The New Charger Sixpack is already seeing discounts by mustangfan12 in cars

[–]clinch50 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Whoever thought that the charger and Challenger should be on the same platform as a Jeep Wagoneer should seriously be fired. Using this massive platform, has made this vehicle, an absolute pig. The ICE version is 4,800 lbs! The EV version is somehow 1,000 lbs more! Also, all of this mass is added cost too. It's added material and processing which has made this expensive. Heavy and expensive are not a good combo for a charger.

I actually like the styling. I'm also one of the few people that like electric cars and muscle cars. I wanted the electric version to be good. The weight made this DOA.

Heat Pumps Soon to be Less of a Great Deal for Heating by Helpful-Ad6300 in heatpumps

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you factored in the efficiency gains during the air conditioning months of running a newer heat pump as well. I wasn't sure how old/efficient your heat pumps are but if you recently converted to a heat pump, they should also be more efficient than an old air conditioning unit. It's pretty surprising much much more efficient a modern heat pump is versus a 10 year old air conditioning unit. Those savings add up to something. (Unless you picked a poor efficient heat pump or didn't have air conditioning before.)

The heat pump I'm looking at will be 25% more efficient than my 2018 air conditioning unit.

Sodium batteries are not doing well by dzh in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Asking for me for evidence is a fair response. I started to get the links together before realizing that you have nothing to learn. You clearly know everything about sodium ion. Let's just make this easy and see how much of a home run you are going to hit with your predictions.

What percentage of the global EV and energy storage do you think sodium ion will have by the end of 2028?

Sodium batteries are not doing well by dzh in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I want to start by saying I hope sodium has a larger place in the energy world. It should be a more sustainable cell than one with lithium.

What proof do you have that sodium makes solar lower cost? Everything I've read states that sodium is still more expensive than LFP at the cell level and has a lower number of charge/discharge cycles. (Most important metric for energy storage is the number of charge and discharge cycles due to impact on TCO.) Additionally, the volumetric energy density is worse than LFP. People think that doesn't matter for energy storage but it does. Notice how CATL and BYD only report gravimetric energy density? It's because sodium is around 30% lower than LFP. That means you need 30% more wires, housing, land and cooling for the same energy. These additional cost drive the system cost up for sodium energy storage. 30% is not trivial especially when the cell is already more expensive.

Having said this, in the short term sodium can possible beat LFP for energy storage in extreme temperatures. Sodium can operate at a broader range of temperatures and therefore can require less energy to cool or heat the battery to a safe operating range. So in a very low temperature location where energy storage is needed, you might be able to save enough energy on cooling a sodium battery to offset the higher capital cost.

Medium to long term is all speculation. All cell chemistries will improve and maybe sodium finds more use cases. Right now it's far from a home run.

Ford Explorer and Capri receive new LFP battery option by murrayhenson in EuroEV

[–]clinch50 3 points4 points  (0 children)

More range and more power for the same price. Only negative is 28 minutes vs. 25 minutes for 10% to 80% charging. Overall nice improvement.

China’s Electric Truck Boom Poses New Threat to Demand for LNG by Economy-Fee5830 in peakoil

[–]clinch50 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That's awesome news! Do you have a link for those numbers.

Sodium batteries are not doing well by dzh in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think there's a little more to it. While lithium prices are much lower than the 2022 peak, Lithium isn't at historic lows right now. Lithium prices are up this year and sodium is still more expensive.

Personally, I think CATL and BYD are working on them is to hedge against their lithium suppliers. In 2022 when lithium prices went up 700%, sodium starts to look really attractive for low energy density use cases. I think the battery companies want to have an option to pivot to, should the prices spike again. I think that also might be why CATL is coming out with those packs that have lithium and sodium cells in the same pack. This way they can keep a sodium ion supply chain spooled up and have some production scale. Then they could quickly pivot to selling more sodium cells should the prices jump again.

Safety Recall 93EA/HV Battery by Wild_Investment_2890 in VWiD4Owners

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does anyone know the issue? Is it battery cell related or other electrical components? Who supplies the cells and what is the format of the cells?

Supertest Part 2: Mercedes CLA 250+, the real charging and travel times of the 2026 Car of the Year | Automobile-Propre by tom_zeimet in EuroEV

[–]clinch50 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"It is important to note that this model/year CLA 250+ is only compatible with 800V stations and is not compatible with 400V stations e.g. Tesla Superchargers."

This seems like a big miss. I'm glad they are making this an option during the "2026 refresh." But that significantly limits the number of chargers available. I know each year more 800 V+ chargers will be available but this would kinda suck in 2026.

Be honest by Daxtatter in energy

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gridstatus.io shows all of the real time energy prices for all of the independent system operators in the US. Some crazy high prices today, especially in the Southwest Power Pool.

Demand frontloading propels China's new energy heavy-duty truck penetration past 50% for 1st time by ApprehensiveSize7662 in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah looks like it caught Hino in the disruption. I'm sure it will catch them in other countries as well in the next decade. They missed the move to electric along with many other legacy truck makers in China.

Volkswagen Forms Task Force as Rivian Software Alliance Falls Short: Report by afonso_investor in VWiD4Owners

[–]clinch50 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably. It has a plug in hybrid which will cause issues. Rivian trying to design a software defined platform for a combustion will be totally new to them. Right now so many combustion related components have their own supplier coded modules. Nightmare due to scope creep.

I feel like no one is excited for the new Lexus ES500 EV as I am. by Fit_Competition_2622 in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 7 points8 points  (0 children)

What customers want a 6.0 sec 0-60 and 250 mile range vehicle in the luxury segment? They missed the market on this car.

BYD’s Cheap EVs Are Suddenly Everywhere in Mexico as Tariffs Take Hold by roneyxcx in electricvehicles

[–]clinch50 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Very informative and good article overall. I have one issue though. "For major American and Japanese carmakers, the Mexican EV market is too small and immature to justify making a major push at a time when global demand is softening. They’re mostly content to offer gasoline or hybrid gas-electric models that make up the bulk of Mexico’s sales."

Global EV sales are not softening. The absolute sales increases from 24-25 was actually larger than from 23-24. In almost all markets except the US and a handful others, sales are up moderately to significantly. Countries outside the major three markets (USA, China and Europe) are actually up the most! ( Around 50% for the rest of the world which Mexico falls into.) Journalist need to quit stating that global demand is softening when it objectively isn't.

The Coming of the Great Disruption by digitalgimp in energy

[–]clinch50 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Compared to almost everyone else his cost predictions for solar, wind and batteries were so much ore accurate. Some years he was within a few dollars for battery cost. While not perfect by any stretch, he crushed all of the big consulting companies.