dremd
Veteran Member
- Joined
- May 31, 2007
- Location
- South Louisiana
- TDI
- 06 sprinter. 03 jetta wagon premium with 6 speed ALH swap, 14 JSW
I suppose that means that then we have to count the trillions of gallons of destroyed ground water, miles and miles of destroyed virgin growth forest, thousands of wetland areas, the disappearance of lake penoir and the salt mine below it, and the environmental disasters that surrounds a refinery all within 30 miles of where I'm sitting right now.That's only true if you ignore the environmental impact of making and disposing of the multiple batteries over the life of the vehicle, which is naive, plain and simple. Lithium mining is a filthy process . . . not to mention the disposal of the deceased batteries . . .
Is battery production perfect, God no, but it's way better than oil production.
Lead acid batteries are one of the highest recycled items in modern life, I'm certain that we can do similar with lithium batteries.
But hey, I drive a modified 12 year old diesel that I imported parts from all over the world to get it that way, I'm in no position to be "greener" than most of the world.
Model S can swap batteries quickly, but as far as I know Elon has no plans to build that out and is sticking to superchargers.Couple that with negligible range, and for me, it's a total 'not practical and zero interest' immature technology. I just did 1350 miles cross country . . . 800 one day, 550 the next. Not counting an overnight to sleep, total stops were *one*, duration 35 minutes. Legs of 475, 325, and 550 . . .
- Tim
I also regularly drive legs in the 400 mile range, I'd miss it, but I'd trade it for insane power delivery/ torque in a heartbeat.
Remember these cars are only 20 years in to development in the modern age and the P85 D already outright embarrasses anything street legal with that much space in it(like actually street legal not "its to old for emissions/ safety") with out breaking a sweat. If you haven't driven one I highly recommend it, even if you hate batteries I find it hard to believe that it wouldn't put a massive grin on the face of any car guy on power delivery alone.
And as far as safety, yes several caught on fire, but it's a lower % than gasoline cars and they broke the roof crush machine when testing, arguably the safest car available today.