Oh, I forgot to add this: 

 

Paul Shorb wrote:  > To put this in perspective, remember that there is some 
risk associated with any form of stored energy, including a car's fuel tank 
full of gasoline. We are all familiar from TV and movies of cars being burned 
up by their own gasoline

 

Ah, for the avoidance of doubt:  while, of course, gasoline cars do catch fire 
and burn across the world every single day, those are almost always either the 
result of a fairly bad accident that causes major damage to the fuel tank or 
fuel system, or else a major mechanical problem with the engine.  

 

I just want folks to understand that the fun world of fictional movies and TV 
shows is ***FAR*** from reality.  It is SUPER HARD to get a car to burn or 
explode.  Shooting it full of bullets won’t do it, no matter what you see on 
TV.  I’m especially amused when the hero causes the villain’s car to careen off 
the road, and the vehicles explodes in a fireball in mid-air as it falls to the 
valley below.  https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ShootTheFuelTank

 

Vty,

 

--Dennis

 

 

From: Lincoln <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Paul Shorb
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2022 8:55 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: [LincolnTalk] Safety of electric vehicle batteries

 

Richard -

You asked whether the GEC has any thoughts on the specific dangers of lithium 
batteries catching fire in EV. You noted among other things that in recent 
weeks two manufacturers released bulletins telling customers not to park their 
vehicles in a garage. 

 

I'm not a technical expert, and of course EVs are not part of what will be put 
before this Town Meeting, but I can offer the following. I understand from an 
EV owner in town that the bulletin is part of the 

federal car-safety system working as it should. If the manufacturer detects a 
possible problem, it sends out an alert called a "recall notice", which may 
tell you to bring your car in to have something fixed at manufacturer expense, 
and meanwhile take care in certain ways. Maybe some other LT reader who has 
received one of these EV notices can fill in here.

 

To put this in perspective, remember that there is some risk associated with 
any form of stored energy, including a car's fuel tank full of gasoline. We are 
all familiar from TV and movies of cars being burned up by their own gasoline, 
and that has actually happened to our family's van. (We all got out in time, no 
one was hurt.) I think I'll feel very safe in an EV.

 

- Paul Shorb

 

 

 

-- 
The LincolnTalk mailing list.
To post, send mail to [email protected].
Search the archives at http://lincoln.2330058.n4.nabble.com/.
Browse the archives at https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/private/lincoln/.
Change your subscription settings at 
https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/lincoln.

Reply via email to