LUCKY DAVE wrote:Tom, where do you suppose the electricity that comes out of your socket comes from? Good guesses would be Washington state (hydroelectric - good) Utah (coal - bad), and Arizona (coal - bad). We sure aren't producing enough in California to meet our needs...
HV electric transmission and distribution losses in the USA were estimated at 6.5% in 2007. If you want to talk about "transmission losses," look at your ICE car! Petroleum is one of the most energy-dense and available power sources around, and it is never going to go away, but it is not all that efficient in a car. ICE vehicles run at about 15-35% efficiency, meaning that 65-85% of the energy content of their fuel is wasted, going out the tailpipe in heat, versus EVs which put about 70-85% of their energy into turning the wheels. When you consider the overall "well-to-wheel" efficiency of various vehicular fuel sources, an EV wins hands down. See the Tesla efficiency white paper. A turbo-diesel car would have the next best rating, though, as you suggest.Then there are transmission losses.
Mmagus wrote:EV's are a great concept...but I wonder just what the carbon footprint to manafacture the battery bank is? Mine the materials in China, process it, ship it to somewhere else in the world to be made into a battery, US, or Canada, make the batteries, ship the them to the vehicle maker, then gen the current to give them their first charge. How long do you have to run an EV before you get past the emmisions it took just to make the battery bank? I am unsure how long a bank will continue to take recharges, 5, 10 years before you have to replace it? Please understand I am not being argumentitive. I really am curious if a "0" emisions car (which no car ever really is, unless it has peddles) ever overcomes the hit on the enviroment that just keeping it in batteries causes?
Irksome wrote:So, what was the final answer/story on the Tesla(s)? Will they be at the stadium on Saturday? Are they available for test drives? If so, what must one do to have a shot at it? When should interested non-AX participants show up to drool?
Irksome wrote:I've spent plenty of time with 'the other side of the club', even with 'the other side of the fence' (for those that remember December, 2008). I'm not planning to run the autocross tomorrow, but I guess I'll show up in the morning to drool and say hi to everyone.
Are autocross Tesla runs being raffled to people who are not participating in the autocross?
I am disappointed that they won't be providing simpler test drives around the parking lot.
Tom Meissner
The Tesla roadster has a range of about 250 miles on a full charge. Heavy-footed use may decrease that by 20-30%, so it should be able to drive 25 easy miles to the stadium, run 100+ hard laps on the longest track we have ever thrown there, and still make it home with battery charge to spare.
Chaoscreature wrote:I am at home sick today and just watched Top Gear. They had a Tesla Roadster on their show. While it beat the Elise around their track it only went 55 miles before running out of juice.
The acceleration of the car is absolutely phenomenal. I wish i could have been lucky enough to have won one of the track drives to see how it handled, but just driving it in the parking lot and around the stadium was an eye-opener. Having the full 295 ft.lbs of torque available at any speed without "winding up" the engine to get into the powerband like an ICE engine is a very different feeling. You don't have to wait for it to come on the cams like a Porsche, it just surges ahead hard when you step on it, with just an eerie whining sound like a jet turbine, but much quieter. It is definitely a different kind of driving experience. Thanks to Tesla for bringing the cars out and letting us see, touch and drive them. Before this, I had only seen them behind ropes at car shows.Chaoscreature wrote:The 0-60 in sub 4 seconds isn't any small feat either.
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