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You will soon be able to get in a car and go to sleep, whilst the car does a steady 150mph to Scotland,
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 09/02/2022 13:02:15You will soon be able to get in a car and go to sleep, whilst the car does a steady 150mph to Scotland,That's 30 mph faster (and 20 minutes shorter) than steam trains 90 years ago, assuming that there are no roadworks on the M6 (never in living memory).
Construction of the 815-kilometer, $13.5 billion Zhengzhou East-Wangzhou line was completed in less than five years.
Quote from: alancalverd on 09/02/2022 04:37:36I pointed out that, like a plane and unlike a car, most of the energy expended by a high speed train is lost in friction and drag during the long cruise phase and is therefore unrecoverable.Why cars are different?
I pointed out that, like a plane and unlike a car, most of the energy expended by a high speed train is lost in friction and drag during the long cruise phase and is therefore unrecoverable.
QuoteIt's quite a lot of storage, but it is as nothing compared to the amount of storage nuclear power would need.UK baseload is currently 20 GW and will probably double with the advent of electric road transport. At present we only have about 5 GW of nuclear availability, so it would make sense, at least in power terms, to build a lot more nukes. Indeed if we could settle on a single, known effective design, it might even make economic sense.
It's quite a lot of storage, but it is as nothing compared to the amount of storage nuclear power would need.
Electric vehicles have enormous flexibility about when they charge and discharge.
You do know that base load is supposed to be cheap?
Yep but they will be able to travel faster through any problems
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 09/02/2022 17:08:19Yep but they will be able to travel faster through any problems Including the 50 mph stretches of roadworks, 30 mph sections of "smart" motorways, and the 20-mile tailbacks caused by accidents and breakdowns? If you don't use theM1, M4, M6, M8 or M25 regularly, just listen to Radio 2 from time to time and ask yourself how a driverless car will magically tunnel through all the stationary traffic at 150 mph.
Until one breaks down or needs to change lanes when the others aren't expecting it.
the point of a hive mind controller is that they do expect it.
No amount of software can make a car travelling at 150 mph pass though a truck doing 50 as it overtakes another doing 49 mph on a 2-lane road. Nor can it repair potholes,
It's just after midnight on a clear winter night, and the M6 reports 10 points of congestion and broken-down vehicles, and 30 speed restrictions due to roadworks. Just right for a trip to Scotland at a constant 150 mph, eh?
Read thishttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarm_intelligence
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 11/02/2022 00:40:49Read thishttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarm_intelligenceThe defining quality of a swarm is that all its members are sufficiently similar to be able to conform to swarm behavior. So do we all drive 45 ton trucks, or should we transport cranes and tanks by motorbike?
How do you define sufficiently similar? Ants come in different shapes and sizes in a colony. Some of them can even fly.
Porsche Explodes The “EVs Aren’t Good For Long Distance Traveling” MythA Porsche Taycan recently completed a coast to coast journey, during which it spent a mere 2 hours, 26 minutes, and 48 seconds plugged in to a charger. By doing so, it exploded the myth that electric cars are no good for long distance driving.
https://cleantechnica.com/2022/02/11/porsche-explodes-the-evs-arent-good-for-long-distance-traveling-myth/QuotePorsche Explodes The “EVs Aren’t Good For Long Distance Traveling” MythA Porsche Taycan recently completed a coast to coast journey, during which it spent a mere 2 hours, 26 minutes, and 48 seconds plugged in to a charger. By doing so, it exploded the myth that electric cars are no good for long distance driving.