I don't regret the passing of Windows ME, but I'm glad it existed. If MS hadn't produced that awful OS, then I might have not gotten so fed up with it that I figured out how to get Linux working on our craptastic PackardBell, which eventually resulted in me being able to switch careers in my mid fifties resulting in a significant increase in salary - something almost unheard of for career changes in your fifties.Many people don't want convinced--rather they just want affirmation that they way things always was--has to be better than this New Fangled Stuff. Rose colored glasses for days that never were--no one laments the passing of WindowsME, yet, and hopefully never does.
How would that help exactly?We should stop subsidizing car drivers. We should tax fossil fuels and push people to use electric cars, not subsidize driving.
I guess what I'd like to see is some kind of requirement for businesses to provide EV charging for on-site employees or face fines. Or some other combination that encourages businesses to both allow more people to work from home and properly support employees that need to be on-site. Don't want to foot the bill for EV charging? Don't make so many people come into the office. Fewer people driving to work is even better than driving EVs to work.How would that help exactly?
You can't punish people who can't afford things into solutions.
I forgot that your non-IEC system is so complicated with its 80% and 100% rated breakers and its 80% breakers that can run at 100% for 3 hours before tripping.US circuits are rated differently: the amperage rating is the point where the breaker trips, long term loads are required to be under 80% the rating. So a 30 amp circuit == 24 amp charging. 12 hours is around 70 kWhr, less losses in the wiring and charger which is typical of entry level EVs in the US.
And yet it seems to be the American Way (TM).How would that help exactly?
You can't punish people who can't afford things into solutions.
The usable capacity of my EV is 88kWh. It's big, but it's nowhere near the biggest.Our 240/30A box charges a 50kWh battery in around 8 hours, 12 hours would imply 84kWh which is surely a lot more than even the US average?
The charge rate drops off quite suddenly when the car is reading 99%.
Supplying 7kW does not of course imply 7kW charging due to charge losses, but the difference is not more than 10%.
I forgot that your non-IEC system is so complicated with its 80% and 100% rated breakers and its 80% breakers that can run at 100% for 3 hours before tripping.
IEC 60898-1 rates the breaker continuously for its stated current, and that's what I am used to,
So, apologies and I recuse myself.
It seems like we’re going to get a new oil crisis. It will be interesting to see if that leads people to switch to EVs. In the 1970s, there was no choice other than waiting in lines.How would that help exactly?
You can't punish people who can't afford things into solutions.
Swapping a plug is no big deal. A trip to the hardware store and 5 minutes with a screwdriver should do it.Yeah, I glossed over the bit about plug in EVSEs. The issue with the plug-in type is that an electrician will (or should) refuse to put a 50 amp outlet on a 30 amp circuit. So if you have a plug-in EVSE with a 50 amp plug you have a few options. You can install a 50 amp circuit + outlet. You can replace the plug on the EVSE (some have modular plug options that automatically set the current limit). Or you can just get an EVSE that comes with the right plug.
Are you someone's nephew Thomas, who is very handy?Swapping a plug is no big deal. A trip to the hardware store and 5 minutes with a screwdriver should do it.
I mean... "Small" EVs still exist... Hyundai Kona, Kia Niro, and the limited run Chevy Bolt are all under 175" long and got liquid cooled/heatpump heated/cooled batteries... I got a 2023 Hyundai Kona before the refresh and no issues for around town or day trips at all and also at 168" long so it even qualifies for the small vehicles "discount" on the ferries around WA lol.
Or I guess if you don't need 200+ mile range, Fiat 500e and electric Mini Cooper is always a option for something even smaller. And the Kona/Niro were available back in 2017 with liquid cooled batteries...
I don't think it's a warranty issue since all the warranties are always 8 years/100k miles to be within 80% original battery capacity... Recent research has shown that it's not nearly as bad for high cycle degradation or aging degradation, and 20% degradation with so few miles/years is pretty much from either manufacturing flaw or extreme environmental temperatures...
I guess what I'd like to see is some kind of requirement for businesses to provide EV charging for on-site employees or face fines. Or some other combination that encourages businesses to both allow more people to work from home and properly support employees that need to be on-site. Don't want to foot the bill for EV charging? Don't make so many people come into the office. Fewer people driving to work is even better than driving EVs to work.
"Only"? Where I live, that would power four or five recently built houses (needless to say, EVs aren't terribly popular around here)My old house only has 100 amp service and the breaker panel is full. Also don't have a garage big enough to house an EV. How can I cost effectively charge such a vehicle?
200A service has been the norm for houses here for decades. That's single phase though."Only"? Where I live, that would power four or five recently built houses (needless to say, EVs aren't terribly popular around here)
The FIat500 hasn't been sold in the USA for years. Stellantis effectively yanked the entire Fiat brand from the USA. And Mini has refused to sell their 2025 MY Cooper EV in the USA because of the Dumb trade war.
"Only"? Where I live, that would power four or five recently built houses (needless to say, EVs aren't terribly popular around here)
We should stop subsidizing car drivers. We should tax fossil fuels and push people to use electric cars, not subsidize driving.
Having to spend time huffing gasoline fumes is bueno?Personal testimony: losing just over 2% of range per year is exactly what happened in my model 3 tesla that I traded in after 7+ years of ownership. My stated range (on the display) with 100% charge was 20% less than when I bought it. Having range go from 310 to 250 is no bueno. After owning a tesla in Pennsylvania you realize you'll only get 66% of your stated range in the winter (with the cabin temp at 68F). I just bought a Camry. It is a lazy dog, but gets 40mpg in the real world and has 400+ mile range with 7 minute refuel.
Southern Europe. 3kW is the standard. Gas or central heating, of course.Where is that? Because that doesn't sound right. It would be odd to even bother electrifying a house with so little power which would be about 5 kW. I suspects it's a difference in labelling. In the US residential locations have single phase power, and the service rating is the breaker size which as I mentioned above is labeled differently in the US than Europe. So an EU "25 amp three phase " service would be equivalent power to about 90 amps in the US.
200 amps is the standard now for single family housing but 100 and 150 both used to be very common and multi family dwellings might have less. I lived in a duplex with 60 amp service. It depends on when it was built and what gas vs electric appliances are common in the region.
We don't have 80% and 100% rated breakers. We just have breakers of ratings, and you have to know that you need to leave 20% headroom if you're running a continuous load.I forgot that your non-IEC system is so complicated with its 80% and 100% rated breakers and its 80% breakers that can run at 100% for 3 hours before tripping.
IEC 60898-1 rates the breaker continuously for its stated current.
So, apologies and I recuse myself.
You would not be able to use electric appliances like stoves and ovens on a service like that. Its only 12.5 A on a single phase of 240V service.Southern Europe. 3kW is the standard. Gas or central heating, of course.
My own home begs to differ. Different perspectives, I guess.You would not be able to use electric appliances like stoves and ovens on a service like that. Its only 12.5 A on a single phase of 240V service.
Please don't talk down to me. I know. I worked in the industry for years and had to understand both US and IEC approaches. I was a BSi subject expert, I was on the relevant IEC committee.We don't have 80% and 100% rated breakers. We just have breakers of ratings, and you have to know that you need to leave 20% headroom if you're running a continuous load.
Your breakers don't just magically trip instantly the second you hit 101% current. There are current vs time curves for all breakers and fuses that indicate how long it will take them to open at a given current. You can alter these curves somewhat, but there will always be a curve.
Electrical codes simplify how these things work and provide standard margins in the systems. That way you don't need an engineer for every electrical installation. The actual allowable currents are far more complicated than the circuit breaker value on either of our systems.
You’d trip the main breaker by making toast and tea in the morning if the fridge happens to start the compressor.My own home begs to differ. Different perspectives, I guess.
If I had a 2.5kW TV, that would be exactly the case. Luckily, I don't. I understand it can sound baffling if you are used to 20kW or so but standard domestic powers in Portugal, Italy, Spain etc. are a google search away. Different world, I know.You’d trip the main breaker by making toast and tea in the morning if the fridge happens to start the compressor.
Alternately: You couldn’t reheat a TV dinner while playing call of duty
For Portugal I got 6.9kVA for a single family home, 4.6kVA for an apartment, and 3.45kVA for a studio. That's with machine translation because I don't know a lick of Portuguese. Looks like according to this, you get the same rate for 6.9kVA and below.If I had a 2.5kW TV, that would be exactly the case. Luckily, I don't. I understand it can sound baffling if you are used to 20kW or so but standard domestic powers in Portugal, Italy, Spain etc. are a google search away. Different world, I know.
That's what happens when you live in countries which do not get too cold in winter, work out how to deal with summer without massive A/C, and where people live in moderate sized houses.If I had a 2.5kW TV, that would be exactly the case. Luckily, I don't. I understand it can sound baffling if you are used to 20kW or so but standard domestic powers in Portugal, Italy, Spain etc. are a google search away. Different world, I know.
That is not dead which can eternal lie.I didn't know there were still people here that didn't understand climate change. Who wakes up the lurkers for this kind of shit?
I guess they proved the article wrong. Turns out some people don’t know the planet is warming.I didn't know there were still people here that didn't understand climate change. Who wakes up the lurkers for this kind of shit?