โAug-29-2017 10:57 PM
โSep-11-2017 06:15 AM
valhalla360 wrote:John & Angela wrote:
Good morning. Nope. I'm talking full electric. I think the last two announcements I noticed were San Diego and Edmonton. Can't remember the rest but on one of the EV forums I follow there have been quite a few stories of various cities in the world making the switch.
Large scale installations or a few test units?
I do a little work with transit (not bus purchase but telematics on them) and hybrid is pretty much become the standard as it's a minimal cost difference and produces big results. Outside test cases and some small scale specialty uses haven't seen any large scale pure electrics.
โSep-11-2017 05:13 AM
John & Angela wrote:
Good morning. Nope. I'm talking full electric. I think the last two announcements I noticed were San Diego and Edmonton. Can't remember the rest but on one of the EV forums I follow there have been quite a few stories of various cities in the world making the switch.
โSep-10-2017 08:32 AM
โSep-10-2017 08:25 AM
John & Angela wrote:
There would be no political reason to do it. Bus riders don't care how the bus is powered.
โSep-10-2017 07:21 AM
valhalla360 wrote:John & Angela wrote:
There are a lot of North American cities switching to electric only buses. The bean counters must be making sense of it. There would be no political reason to do it. Bus riders don't care how the bus is powered.
Hybrid is getting a lot of real life use but outside demonstration units and tiny buses used in central areas of European cities, I haven't seen much pure electric.
Hybrid makes a lot of sense. A transit bus is a perfect use of hybrid. They typically operate on congested signalized corridors and with stops, rarely go more than 1/4 mile between stops. Average speeds of 20-30mph are common.
A standard diesel bus needs 250-300hp to get halfway decent acceleration which is a big deal given the use case and that engine is operating in a wide RPM range during acceleration and deceleration resulting in significant time spent outside the engines ideal power output range.
With a hybrid, a 75-100hp engine would be plenty to maintain the average speed and you can set it to run at a constant power output near it's peak efficiency. The only downside is if you need to move the bus to a new city and have to travel 50-100 miles on freeways. With only 75hp, top speed is probably going to be around 45-50mph unless the batteries give it a boost (which means limited range) or you oversize the engine which negates a lot of the benefits of hybrid. I haven't heard of anyone doing this but you could make a transport battery pack that could be loaded in the bus if you need to do a long distance move. It could simply be a modular set of batteries that are placed on the floor of the bus with quick connect wiring and a port to connect to the hybrid battery pack.
โSep-10-2017 07:11 AM
John & Angela wrote:
There are a lot of North American cities switching to electric only buses. The bean counters must be making sense of it. There would be no political reason to do it. Bus riders don't care how the bus is powered.
โSep-10-2017 05:36 AM
โSep-09-2017 06:16 AM
Lessmore wrote:John & Angela wrote:
There are a lot of North American cities switching to electric only busses. The bean counters must be making sense of it. There would be no political reason to do it. Bus riders don't care how the bus is powered.
I disagree. There is a political reason for having electric powered buses. Many politicians love the perception that they are 'green' if they support electric, non ICE buses. Why...because they see it as a factor that will appeal to a segment of society and give the politico an advantage at election time.
Many passengers also support electric buses for the same reason...they perceive it as 'green' and 'good' for their city and...therefore... by extension them, as citizens. A lot of what we do or think we do is about perception...after all, many of us want to be perceived as good citizenry. "Green' is good in the minds of many. Not all may completely understand why or how, but if a good argument...whether accurate or inaccurate... is made, then that's good enough for many. Unfortunately in this world the facility of independent thought...like common sense...is not all that common.
Some history about electric powered buses.
I worked for a city mass transit years ago, while working my way through U.
Up to about the early '60's many cities in North America had fully electric powered buses. In my city in Western Canada we had electric powered buses that got their electric power to drive the electric motors from a series of overhead wire cables, that connected to the bus via long trolley bars.
Occasionally going too fast around a corner would make the trolley bar...jump...the connection to the overhead electric cable. The bus would come to an immediate halt and the driver would have to get out and position the trolley bars to the overhead cable.
These fully electric buses had tremendous acceleration for such a heavy vehicle, that fully loaded would carry a total between 95-100 people..who would either be sitting or standing. Of course as others have stated an electric motor has maximum torque at zero rpm. That's the reason for the punch.
The electric motor passenger capacity number would equal the passenger capacity of a similar sized ICE powered bus. So no difference in carrying capacity.
Disadvantage....the trolley lines were confined to heavily traveled main streets...on all other streets the buses were ICE powered. Reason was cost. The purchase, installation and maintenance of trolley cable overhead lines was quite expensive.
There was also a maintenance cost involved. Specially designed and equipped service trucks with trained personnel used to repair electric overhead lines and the buses. A cost. ICE buses also have their costs. Both are not maintenance free.
As an aside the service trucks were unusual. They were generally medium duty cab overs (IH, GM,Ford) with high cube boxes. Ladders would be attached to the back of the cube box and there was a fenced work area on top of the high cube box, that service personnel would work from. Back then I did't recall any cherry pickers used.
My city used electric trolley buses because in our province it was an advantage as we have the 'fuel' (electricity) in huge and relatively cheap abundance.
We have many powerful rivers that have huge hydro dams that provide relatively cheap electricity. Have had since the very early 1900's.
So much, so that we sell excess electric power to some states and other provinces. In our case it makes sense to harness electricity, as we generate an awful lot of it at good cost.
โSep-08-2017 08:26 PM
John & Angela wrote:
There are a lot of North American cities switching to electric only busses. The bean counters must be making sense of it. There would be no political reason to do it. Bus riders don't care how the bus is powered.
โSep-08-2017 06:53 PM
โSep-08-2017 04:06 PM
โSep-08-2017 03:49 PM
Lessmore wrote:
Interesting article link about electrification of specific heavy duty role, city route garbage trucks. Limited miles per day, regeneration of electric power using a turbine and charge regen through brakes.
โSep-08-2017 03:31 PM
โSep-08-2017 07:21 AM
โSep-08-2017 05:18 AM
hone eagle wrote:
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I Know I was just pointing that out to the warm weather drivers ,heat air condition cost miles ,and if the market is only southern states they will be nich product and expensive.