Forum Discussion
- Bird_FreakExplorer IILots of politicians have made millions with this global warming stuff and to me thats all it is. Is the earth changing? Sure it is and has since the beginning. Must have been camp fires cave men used during the ice ages that started it.:S
Dale.Traveling wrote:
azrving wrote:
But but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
Even better is the statement from the article - "But is it green? It’s better than putting diesel in a car, says Edwards, because the constant running rate of the gennie uses the fuel more efficiently than idling and accelerating in a car."
You know how many stop signs, red lights and traffic jams there are on the Eyre Highway crossing South and Western Australia, which is where this articles starts? ZERO, and if you do stop you best be well clear of the road otherwise the next road train will run you and your EV over.
Regarding the Tesla RV concept, if they use the semi as a model with even half the 1-megawatt battery pack the semi is likely to have you are in for some long recharge times even if you can achieve a 1C constant rate. Pull in with 1/4 charge remaining and you might as well take a nap since the 50kW diesel charging station is going could take 7+ hours if the generator can give you all 50kW of its capacity and you don't use any power during the charge time. If you somehow make it to a superstation with a 150kW recharge rate your wait is better at around 2 1/2 hour as long as no one is using the other side of supercharge to power up their EV with will drop the rate to 75kW. Make camp at a current US 12kW (50 amp site) RV campsite? 31+ hours. More if you start siphoning off power for habitability. A 30 amp site, you might be there a week.
BTW peak power rates for Western Australia average 36.41 cents (USD) per kWh so fully charge your 1/4 full 500kW Tesla RV battery will be $136.53. That is before whoever you are getting power from adds in any surcharges that will probably consume the $63.72 savings over filling up a 3/4 empty 70-gallon gas tank in 5 or so minutes based on the current gasoline cost for Western Australia.
Ummm. The article is about an interim measure to provide power for EV’s. Not semis that don’t exist yet.- Dale_TravelingExplorer II
azrving wrote:
But but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
Even better is the statement from the article - "But is it green? It’s better than putting diesel in a car, says Edwards, because the constant running rate of the gennie uses the fuel more efficiently than idling and accelerating in a car."
You know how many stop signs, red lights and traffic jams there are on the Eyre Highway crossing South and Western Australia, which is where this articles starts? ZERO, and if you do stop you best be well clear of the road otherwise the next road train will run you and your EV over.
Regarding the Tesla RV concept, if they use the semi as a model with even half the 1-megawatt battery pack the semi is likely to have you are in for some long recharge times even if you can achieve a 1C constant rate. Pull in with 1/4 charge remaining and you might as well take a nap since the 50kW diesel charging station is going could take 7+ hours if the generator can give you all 50kW of its capacity and you don't use any power during the charge time. If you somehow make it to a superstation with a 150kW recharge rate your wait is better at around 2 1/2 hour as long as no one is using the other side of supercharge to power up their EV with will drop the rate to 75kW. Make camp at a current US 12kW (50 amp site) RV campsite? 31+ hours. More if you start siphoning off power for habitability. A 30 amp site, you might be there a week.
BTW peak power rates for Western Australia average 36.41 cents (USD) per kWh so fully charge your 1/4 full 500kW Tesla RV battery will be $136.53. That is before whoever you are getting power from adds in any surcharges that will probably consume the $63.72 savings over filling up a 3/4 empty 70-gallon gas tank in 5 or so minutes based on the current gasoline cost for Western Australia. - Interesting article. Thanks for posting.
Reisender wrote:
wildmanbaker wrote:
Reisender wrote:
Actually, that goes on a trailer that you tow behind you so you do not run out of power. There is no free lunch.... If you want to save the planet, sell you RVs, buy a tent, stove and ice chest, and don't forget the 5 gallon bucket and roll of plastic bags for your waste to take home with you. If you really want to save the earth, figure a was to reduce the population by 1/2. After that you have only delayed it for a few thousand years, or whenever our Sun turns into a red star.azrving wrote:
But but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
That’s kinda cool. Looks mostly portable. Could be setup fairly quick almost anywhere. Can’t see the manufacturer name. Would be handy in an evacuation scenario etc. Can’t tell the connecter either although it maybe a CCS
LOL. Definetly not meant to be towed on a trailer. Looks like it’s on a forkliftable pallet though. Kinda hard to see but maybe a bowser fuel trailer parked behind it. I’m kinda guessing it is shot in Germany or maybe Australia (Nullarbor) as the connecter on the right looks more like a nennekes type 2. Hard to tell. Maybe a mobile unit for when there are power outages etc. Great idea though and would be handy for national emergency evacuations etc. Kinda cool.
Read the full story herewildmanbaker wrote:
Reisender wrote:
Actually, that goes on a trailer that you tow behind you so you do not run out of power. There is no free lunch.... If you want to save the planet, sell you RVs, buy a tent, stove and ice chest, and don't forget the 5 gallon bucket and roll of plastic bags for your waste to take home with you. If you really want to save the earth, figure a was to reduce the population by 1/2. After that you have only delayed it for a few thousand years, or whenever our Sun turns into a red star.azrving wrote:
But but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
That’s kinda cool. Looks mostly portable. Could be setup fairly quick almost anywhere. Can’t see the manufacturer name. Would be handy in an evacuation scenario etc. Can’t tell the connecter either although it maybe a CCS
LOL. Definetly not meant to be towed on a trailer. Looks like it’s on a forkliftable pallet though. Kinda hard to see but maybe a bowser fuel trailer parked behind it. I’m kinda guessing it is shot in Germany or maybe Australia (Nullarbor) as the connecter on the right looks more like a nennekes type 2. Hard to tell. Maybe a mobile unit for when there are power outages etc. Great idea though and would be handy for national emergency evacuations etc. Kinda cool.- wildmanbakerExplorer
Reisender wrote:
Actually, that goes on a trailer that you tow behind you so you do not run out of power. There is no free lunch.... If you want to save the planet, sell you RVs, buy a tent, stove and ice chest, and don't forget the 5 gallon bucket and roll of plastic bags for your waste to take home with you. If you really want to save the earth, figure a was to reduce the population by 1/2. After that you have only delayed it for a few thousand years, or whenever our Sun turns into a red star.azrving wrote:
But but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
That’s kinda cool. Looks mostly portable. Could be setup fairly quick almost anywhere. Can’t see the manufacturer name. Would be handy in an evacuation scenario etc. Can’t tell the connecter either although it maybe a CCS azrving wrote:
But but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
That’s kinda cool. Looks mostly portable. Could be setup fairly quick almost anywhere. Can’t see the manufacturer name. Would be handy in an evacuation scenario etc. Can’t tell the connecter either although it maybe a CCS- What will the diesel idlers do when they can't make noise from 5 am to 6 am as they pack up to roll?
- azrvingExplorerBut but there are no tailpipe emissions lol
About Motorhome Group
38,707 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 20, 2025