hindy111
Post Whore
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Mik's back!!
Yeah his mum kicked him out. Living with his brother back in Western Sydney
Mik's back!!
Mik caused that rabbit to have a prolapsed rectum...?Its from a trusted source ffs.
MIK
I have these two LED bulbs in the ceiling of my stairway. I put them in less than two years ago. However recently when I switch the stairway light on it's been quite dim initially, suddenly brightening to full brightness after a few minutes. Anyway in the last few days they usually stay dim. Is it likely a problem with the bulbs or something else? I don't want to hear about amps and shit, or jokes about my eyesight ffsFrom my reading you use about 14Kw of battery per 100kms.
So most cars have about 40Kw batteries so approx 300kms.
To charge gets tricks. At home a standard plug giving 10Amps at 240V will give you 2.4Kw per hour of charge. So it would take 18hrs to charge a 40Kw. Battery.
But you can get fast chargers rated 7.2Kw. That's 3 x faster.
But still looking at 6hrs. Problem is its pulling 30Amps. That's a lot of strain on the power grid and on peoples homes who have 63Amps you've lost half. Hot water kicks in and another 20A is gone. Most unit blocks couldn't dream of 30A chargers. Most town houses and units have 40Amps.
The next charger you need 415 V which rules out most peoples homes. I assume charging stations will have these style.
Anyhows if ther exists already pressure on our electricity grid they'll need to sort it out before every home is putting these in. Id imagine everyone will atleast need the 7.2Kw which draws 30Amps for 6hrs. Id say it is very rare anyone is pulling 30Amps at their homes for more then maybe a total of 2hrs a day.
I think my average is about 11Kw a day. So a 40Kw battery is 4 days worth of power. For 300kms? That seems ridiculous
I have these two LED bulbs in the ceiling of my stairway. I put them in less than two years ago. However recently when I switch the stairway light on it's been quite dim initially, suddenly brightening to full brightness after a few minutes. Anyway in the last few days they usually stay dim. Is it likely a problem with the bulbs or something else? I don't want to hear about amps and shit, or jokes about my eyesight ffs
From my reading you use about 14Kw of battery per 100kms.
So most cars have about 40Kw batteries so approx 300kms.
To charge gets tricks. At home a standard plug giving 10Amps at 240V will give you 2.4Kw per hour of charge. So it would take 18hrs to charge a 40Kw. Battery.
But you can get fast chargers rated 7.2Kw. That's 3 x faster.
But still looking at 6hrs. Problem is its pulling 30Amps. That's a lot of strain on the power grid and on peoples homes who have 63Amps you've lost half. Hot water kicks in and another 20A is gone. Most unit blocks couldn't dream of 30A chargers. Most town houses and units have 40Amps.
The next charger you need 415 V which rules out most peoples homes. I assume charging stations will have these style.
Anyhows if ther exists already pressure on our electricity grid they'll need to sort it out before every home is putting these in. Id imagine everyone will atleast need the 7.2Kw which draws 30Amps for 6hrs. Id say it is very rare anyone is pulling 30Amps at their homes for more then maybe a total of 2hrs a day.
I think my average is about 11Kw a day. So a 40Kw battery is 4 days worth of power. For 300kms? That seems ridiculous
For most folk though they won't need to charge the battery from empty to full all that much as they're not driving 300k's in a day all that often, so drive maybe 100k's daily and you replenish that overnight on a standard plug in six or seven hours. That's better for the battery life as well not running a full cycle.
But your point is well taken, there's gotta be some serious thinking about how this kind of thing gets integrated into our infrastructure and how shit works. For example we don't want a heap of merkins getting home from work at 6pm in summer, and plugging in their cars right on peak load times, we need to be smarter and ensure that we use these things in a manner that smooths load.
Like say for the above example when old mate gets home and plugs his car in, the grid demand determines whether it gets charged, or it discharges to supply power to the home or grid, and then as load drops it begins to charge. That way every ev acts as a storage battery for general consumption and if done well baseload requirements would be lessened because we'd smooth out the current peaks and troughs in demand.
More likely though we'll get a half arsed effort that's every man for himself and get to a point where the grid just keeps collapsing 'cause it can't handle the peaks.
I read somewhere that the batteries account for roughly 50% of the car cost.
A lot needs to happen for Electric cars to be a viable solution. Especially for large trade companies and delivery services.
What about house and units with no parking?
I reckon most likely charge stations will have charges that will charge in 10mins.
And what happens with petrol cars if bought a new one?
I am wondering if I should sell the VL and my Holden ute while worth money
Apparently it takes 3 days for home solar panels to charge a Tesla
Surely the panels --> to Teslar battery --> EV charger ?Apparently it takes 3 days for home solar panels to charge a Tesla
YesSurely the panels --> to Teslar battery --> EV charger ?
It wouldObviously that'd depend on the size of the system being used, and it's efficiency.
Probably depends on the size of the sun as well no??It would
What if a merkin lives on top of a hill vs the bottom of the hill ?Probably depends on the size of the sun as well no??
No, but it would depend on whether or not there are any clouds covering the sun.Probably depends on the size of the sun as well no??