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| Nai |
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 Nai World Chat Champion
Joined: 18 Apr 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 19:25 - 07 Oct 2010 Post subject: TTXGP? (zero emissions racing) |
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For those that haven't heard of it : https://www.egrandprix.com/index.php
Just curious... ESPN have the rights unfortunately so wont be able to watch it here. Guessing to a degree it will be the way of the future with the lowering of emissions in road and race vehicles.
Is it all just electric bikes or are there any hydrogen bikes in there yet? |
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| Frost |
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 Frost World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 May 2004 Karma :  
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| hmmmnz |
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 hmmmnz Super Spammer

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| blurredman |
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 blurredman World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Sep 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:19 - 07 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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I just don't like to talk about this sort of stuff.
I will feel sorry when the combustion engine disappears
There is nothing better  ____________________ CBT: 12/06/10, Theory: 22/09/10, Module 1: 09/11/10, Module 2: 19/01/11
Past: 1991 Honda CG125BR-J, 1992 (1980) Honda XL125S, 1996 Kawasaki GPZ500S, 1979 MZ TS150.
Current: 1973 MZ ES250/2 - 18k, 1979 Suzuki TS185ER - 10k, 1981 Honda CX500B - 91k, 1987 MZ ETZ250 (295cc) - 40k, 1989 MZ ETZ251 - 51k. |
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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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| Kal |
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 Kal World Chat Champion

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| Nai |
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 Nai World Chat Champion
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| Frost |
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 Frost World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 May 2004 Karma :  
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| blurredman |
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 blurredman World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Sep 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 13:49 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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[quote="Kal"] | stinkwheel wrote: |
Despite having horrific mileage and high emmissions the simplicity to the VW, Landrovers and Jeeps tends to give them a long life time and relatively low pollution factor when manufactured.
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Indeed, my first car was a SEAT Marbella, and although it's not the best to look at nor fast (top sped 75mph) It was a damn sweet runner for what it was.
Weber Carburetta stadard with mechanical points and overhead valve and no CAT.
Even though it was a bit smokey in the very cold the exhaust emissions were really excellent. It had hardly any H/T and the Carbon monoxide levels could even pass the new emissions regulations of under 0.020% (marbella had 0.010%) compared to that my 205 has 2.99%. So it just goes to show that the oldest of cars are tuned to the best and than modern day. ____________________ CBT: 12/06/10, Theory: 22/09/10, Module 1: 09/11/10, Module 2: 19/01/11
Past: 1991 Honda CG125BR-J, 1992 (1980) Honda XL125S, 1996 Kawasaki GPZ500S, 1979 MZ TS150.
Current: 1973 MZ ES250/2 - 18k, 1979 Suzuki TS185ER - 10k, 1981 Honda CX500B - 91k, 1987 MZ ETZ250 (295cc) - 40k, 1989 MZ ETZ251 - 51k. |
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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 14:04 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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| DaFrostyOne wrote: |
But once they run on electric the power could potentially come from an emissions free source such as solar / wind / wave / nuclear / fusion. Getting cars and bikes electric is only 1 part of the problem, but it's still something that needs to be done in the long term. Also the conversion of fuel to movement can be done more efficiently by converting it to electricity at an efficient power station than by burning it as needed in a combustion engine. |
Could potentially. But not actually.
Unlikely to be happening in the USA where a lot of this racing is taking place any time soon too.
The we'll get onto the tricky problem of where do we find the lithium for all these batteries. There is a small and finite amount of lithum on earth. Getting it takes a lot of energy.
EDIT: I do wonder about the last part of your comment too.
| Quote: | Also the conversion of fuel to movement can be done more efficiently by converting it to electricity at an efficient power station than by burning it as needed in a combustion engine. |
Is it REALLY more efficient to burn the fuel in a power station, boil water with it, convert it into rotational energy in a turbine, make it into electricity, step it up to supergrid voltage, transport it hundreds of miles, step down to local grid voltage, down again to 3-phase. Next it is transformed to D.C. then stepped down again and used to charge a battery. The battery is then used to convert it into rotational energy again.
There is loss at every step in a system. That's a hell of a lot of steps. Chemical -> Heat -> Kinetic -> Electrical -> Chemical -> Kinetic.
Burning fuel in an engine is Chemical -> Kinetic.
So. I'll ask, any figures to back that up? Is it REALLY more energy efficient to burn oil in a power station then use that power to charge batteries on an electric motorbike than it would be to burn an equivalent energy density of fuel directly in an engine of similar performance levels?
To my mind, that makes no sort of sense. Almost seems to defy the laws of physics.
A lot of this electric vehicle stuff seems to me to be misty eyed wishful thinking. Basically it would be emissions free to run on the assumption that it were being charged by a windmill. Which it is not. I certainly can't see how burning the fuel at a remote location, transporting the energy 100s of miles then using it to charge batteries is in any way efficient. I suspect it's the opposite. ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
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| pepperami |
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 pepperami Super Spammer

Joined: 17 Jan 2010 Karma :    
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| Gone |
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 Gone Nearly there...
Joined: 01 Sep 2010 Karma :     
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| Frost |
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 Frost World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 May 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 14:33 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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From what i remember car & bike engines are about 20% efficient, 2 stroke diesel generators are over 50%. Electric motors are over 95% efficient, so he transmission of the power would have to cost a hell of a lot to reduce the efficiency to that or an internal combustion engine in a car / bike.
Edit: I looked it up:
"Transmission and distribution losses in the USA were estimated at 6.6% in 1997[13] and 6.5% in 2007[14]. In general, losses are estimated from the discrepancy between energy produced (as reported by power plants) and energy sold to end customers; the difference between what is produced and what is consumed constitute transmission and distribution losses."
So for every Megawatt of fuel put into a car, you'd get 200 kilowatt's of kinetic energy.
For every Megawatt of fuel burned at a power station you'd get 500 kilowatts, transmitted that would be down to 465kilowatts, assuming complete charging efficiency or a direct mains powered bike with a 95% efficient electric motor you'd get 440 kilowatts of kinetic energy, more than double that of the traditional IC engine. That might be an idealised figure that would drop in the real world, but i still think you'd get twice as many miles per gallon.
Car and bike engines have to change speed and load during their operation rather than running permanently at the optimum speed. They also have to work in various conditions such as when hot / cold, wet / dry but a power generator can be run in more controlled conditions.
The fact of the matter is that fossil fuels are going to get rarer, an increasing global population is going to require more energy and importantly more food making conversion of land to the production of bio fuels difficult. So an electric bike or car is more of a multi fuel vehicle and can run on energy created from whatever is most economically viable. Hydrogen can been seen as being a battery technology too as the hydrogen would be made using electricity, then converted back to water to produce electricity.
As for the lithium thing, it's not the biggest issue as batteries could well be zinc-air or silver-zinc. Rare earth metals like Neodymium are likely to be the big issues for 'green' technologies as they come almost exclusively from china. Piss off the chinese and they cut you off.
https://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iWSMN6kpJ6HV80LQLcJrjzeM18hwD9IKONC00?docId=D9IKONC00
Last edited by Frost on 14:51 - 08 Oct 2010; edited 1 time in total |
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 Kal World Chat Champion

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| Frost |
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 Frost World Chat Champion

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| truslack |
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 truslack World Chat Champion

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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 15:07 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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Hi
Very crude rule of thumb you get about 1/3 efficiency converting from one form of energy to another, so you lose 2/3 from fuel to forward motion, or 2/3 plus another 2/3 from fuel to electricity and then from electricity to motion.
Electric motors themselves are pretty efficient (a lot better then 1/3, but 95%+ is about the best you will get, not what you would expect), but there is about 6~7% loss in distribution, plus you have the losses in charging a battery (another ~25% loss it seems). Add the weight of batteries and the efficiency of the vehicle (as opposed to the motor) drops.
Then we get the nasty problems of making and recycling the short lives batteries.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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| Nai |
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 Nai World Chat Champion
Joined: 18 Apr 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 15:21 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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Ok, I have been reading Wiki... Sorry...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_vehicle
Looking at this the change in infrastructure could take 40 + years for Hydrogen cars / bikes to get anywhere in the market. Seeing as Electric cars / bikes already semi have a infrastructure for refuelling (plug sockets?) is there any argument for electric cars being a filler until Hydrogen cars / bikes take off? Could there be electric / hydrogen hybrids in the meantime? |
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 15:33 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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Hi
You can run a combustion engine on hydrogen, but that doesn't really solve anything. Biggest problem with it is storing it (very difficult to make systems hydrogen proof, so leaks and the resulting leak is explosive).
However the main use for hydrogen would be for fuel cells. But you can use alcohol (or even petrol) as fuel for fuel cells. Advantage here is that it is safe to store and transport, and the infrastructure to store and transport it pretty much already exists. No need for loads of heavy batteries (couple of small ones to take advantage of regenerative braking, etc) and can be easily refued in minutes unlike battery vehicles.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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 Nai World Chat Champion
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| pepperami |
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 pepperami Super Spammer

Joined: 17 Jan 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 17:38 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

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| Frost |
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 Frost World Chat Champion

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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 19:30 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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I'm intrigued on this subject. I thought I'd do some working out using a real-life example. The main crass assumptions are that the moped uses the full charge of the battery to do its claimed maximum distance and that both vehicles are travelling at a constant 30mph on total flat for the duration of a 100 mile journey.
Let's take a Zippe electric moped which uses a 48V, 36Ah Silicone gel battery. Claimed top speed 30mph. Claimed maximum distance travelled on a charge 30 miles.
Let's compare it to a Honda C50. I'm going to use the most efficient fuel consumption in their most recent model (supercub), based on constant speed travel at 30mph on the flat which pans out at an amazing 146km/litre.
Let's travel 100 miles. That's charging the Zippe 3.3 times. Its burning 1.12 litres of unleaded in the C50.
So, assuming the electric moped battery delivered the full 36A at 48V for an hour before going flat and that the motor is 100% efficient (cutting it some slack here, there's no way it would do that in real life any more than the C50 would do 146km/l but lets work with what we've got). That's 1.728Kw/h per charge or 5.76 KW/h for your 100 miles.
Converting that to joules of energy gives you errr. 5.76KJ/second * 3600seconds = 20.74MegaJoules of energy.
Unleaded petrol has 34.8MJ per litre. So the C50 used 38.98MJ to cover the 100 miles. That's an absolute with the C50. That is how much energy it used.
So for the journey. Worked out in raw power consumed. The electric moped is winning Electric moped: 20.74MJ. C50: 38.98MJ
But, lets work back up the chain. A silicone battery has an 85% charging efficiency. That puts us at 24.4MJ to charge it.
The fuel has to get from the power station to the house with a 6.6% loss. We're up to 26MJ.
Ok. Here's the doozy. Assuming a modern, high-tech gas fired power station. You're getting up to 50% fuel conversion efficiency (at best).
So 52MJ or natural gas were burned to allow the electric moped to travel that 100 miles and you should have used the C50.
Conclusion:
1) C50s rule.
2) Electric mopeds can GTFO.
That's before we even consider the comparative ability of each vehicle to pop 12 o'clock wheelies at will. ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
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| Frost |
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 Frost World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 May 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 19:51 - 08 Oct 2010 Post subject: |
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0.68 litre/100km = 415 MPG
Also that was done at 30km/h not mph, also it says it was done over "30 km/h fixed area travelling test value", i dunno what that means but i suspect it's the reason for that epic mpg figure. |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 15 years, 112 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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