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oscar[_2_] oscar[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Feb 2012
Posts: 79
Default What Will GE Force Its People To Drive Now

On Mon, 5 Mar 2012 08:37:06 -0500, iBoaterer wrote:
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 4 Mar 2012 13:35:14 -0500, BAR wrote:

The jury is in on electric cars. They are the future. The

problem is
that there hasn't been enough R&D to make them feasible yet.

The hybrid, gas-electric, is just a diesel-electric locomotive

downsized
with the added benefit of pulling the electricity generated from
breaking and coasting to charge the batteries. The all electric

needs
needs work with storing enough power to be useful over a longer

period
of time and distance.


===

I think we both agree on most of those points. Where we seem to
disagree is whether or not it makes sense to roll out half a

loaf.

Knowing full well the limitations of half a loaf, I still say yes.
The reason being that getting some electric cars on the road

starts to
get people thinking about the infrastucture issues (like charging
stations and better batteries). Same thing with alternative

energy
like wind and solar. If you don't start rolling some of this out

to
the public you end up with a perpetual chicken and egg syndrome

where
you can't have the chicken because you don't yet have an egg and

vice
versa. There are also a lot of people whose transportation needs
would be well served right now by a car like the Volt. The

problem
is price of course, and prices will not come down until there is
economy of scale, with the engineering and tooling costs amortized
across a wider base. I could use a Volt right now if the price

was
right. It would be great for running short errands and the like,
running on gas for the occasional longer trip.



You are 100% correct, but it just gives the far right wing the

ability
to say SEE, new technology is BAD....



Got your Cheby Volt yet? Didn't think so. Me, being moderate and
slightly right leaning, prefers to wait till the elec car matures and
shakes out most of the bugs. Buyers who must be on the bleeding edge
will pay dearly for the privilage of owning a product that ain't
quite there yet.

By the way, you are far too polarîzed. A common trait among democrats.