Guys,  many of us have two ( or more ) cars in our households.  So, you
can buy a electric car for short trips for wifey and a gasoline or
hybrid for
longer distances.

Better yet,  just buy the hybrid and charge it overnight, saving the
engine for those long trips to the relatives. 

-----Original Message-----
From: Robin van Spaandonk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 03, 2006 7:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: "Fully Charged in About 8 Minutes"

In reply to  Michel Jullian's message of Wed, 3 May 2006 10:18:49
+0200:
Hi,
[snip]
>My argument holds in town too Robin. It's OK not to be able to fast 
>recharge an electric bicycle because you can switch to another source 
>of power (your
>muscles) if your battery is empty on the street, not so for a purely 
>electric car, this is why the best we can have is ICE-electric hybrids 
>until we have fast recharge.
>
>We won't have "The Really Good Battery" as Chris calls it until we have

>fast recharge plus other characteristics such as acceptable lifetime, 
>cost, weight and volume for the required kWh value.
[snip]
But the new Lithium batteries *do* have fast recharge capability, so a
quick stopover at a roadside charging station shouldn't be a problem.
Such charging stations *do* need to have heavy duty power supplies,
which isn't a problem, because they are dedicated, and there are
proportionally not a lot of them. Private homes don't need such heavy
duty facilities because one can afford to take longer to do the
recharge.

Furthermore, with the price of energy from a roadside station likely to
be at a premium, most people will likely opt for home charging over
night, and save.

The problem you describe also existed when gasoline vehicles were first
introduced, and before gas stations became ubiquitous.

In fact the introduction of electric vehicles would probably be a lot
less stressful than early gasoline was, because people would have the
capability to recharge at home.

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://users.bigpond.net.au/rvanspaa/

Competition provides the motivation,
Cooperation provides the means.

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