Forum Discussion
32 Replies
- JRscoobyExplorer III would thing school buses would be a good fit. Charge overnight, then if needed, some charge in the daytime between runs. Maybe solar on the roof of bus to do a little daytime charge?
Grit dog wrote:
Good chance it will be a nickel saved for the public. Do you have comprehensive information otherwise?LanceRKeys wrote:
......on the taxpayers nickel.time2roll wrote:
Reply of the year.
Best way to gain knowledge is to get out there are do the impossible. Fear of failure and setbacks holds too many people down in life.
More fear factor and FUD.- Grit_dogNavigator II
LanceRKeys wrote:
time2roll wrote:
Best way to gain knowledge is to get out there are do the impossible. Fear of failure and setbacks holds too many people down in life.
Reply of the year.
......on the taxpayers nickel. - Inductive is closer to 80% to 90% efficient depending on how well the target can line up.
Yes conductive can be used. I have read a reverse pantograph has been successful. These would generally be deployed at one or two stops on route where the driver takes a break. Guessing close to 200+ kW for 15-20 minutes. Not to fully charge but to extend the range. - SidecarFlipExplorer IIISimple solution... Turn the heat off.
- ScottGNomadInductive charging, while not 100% efficient, isn't that bad (around 80%) and arguably it makes up for the minor losses it incurs with increased safety. There are conveyances right now that use this method and I suspect you will see more of it in the future.
- JRscoobyExplorer IIWould it have to be inductive charging? Could a buss bar make contact to the bus? If at a stop there was a large battery as large as the battery of the bus, and when fully charged had a voltage say 10% higher than the bus battery, and a pair of large bars made contact. I know good jumper cables can add voltage to a mostly discharged 12V battery pretty fast. The stationary battery could be recharged while the bus is gone.
- thomasmnileExplorerBad Chinese batteries? :B No all electric transit buses around these parts, a mix of diesel, CNG, & CNG hybrids.
- BenKExplorer
pianotuna wrote:
Inductive charging at some stops would work. However, that does take time to install.
Inductive charging is VERY inefficient...worse yet if the distance between primary and secondary coils are far apart
Then the weight and space of the secondary on the vehicle might be a problem, but bus...so might be okay in that app
Frequency management is another issue to be solved for moving vehicle vs stationary vehicle
Then all RFID components (credit cards, ID cards, dog/cat chips, etc) will all power up and broad cast their info..
The losses and system on small devices is acceptable, but not so for EV,BEV level of power requirements - pianotunaNomad IIIInductive charging at some stops would work. However, that does take time to install.
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