I didn't mean it to sound "mocking".mzso wrote: ↑11 Apr 2024, 08:00You really don't have basis for the mocking tone.wuzak wrote: ↑11 Apr 2024, 04:33Curious that you consider fuel cells to be a "range extender".mzso wrote: ↑10 Apr 2024, 20:21
Yes, but that concept is stillborn.
Because of hydrogen and because it's not a range extended EV, based on battery to fuel range.
More practical would be an LPG or alcohol based fuel cell.
But anyway, I'm not suggesting it's the way to go. More like an alternative for a small niche. (probably very small, and shrinking) When you must have a long range, and there's no charging available.
The fuel cell vehicles from Toyota and Hyundai run on hydrogen, but they also have batteries. The batteries can provide extra power when required, and are used to store energy from brake regeneration.
LPG or alcohol fuel cells would still produce CO2.
Maybe ammonia is a better solution.
For one I said it is not a range extended EV. Because it has a teeny battery.
And using hydrogen fundamentally kills the technology. It wastes lots of energy, better used charging batteries.
So it would make sense to use fuel cells (not based on troublesome hydrogen) for rage extension, if it's really needed. Though to be fair it seems to be a quickly shrinking niche.
FWIW, the second generation Toyota Mirai achieved a range of 1,360 km (845 mi) on 5.65kg of Hydrogen.
Of course, 5.65kg of hydrogen takes up a lot of space.
The Toyota Mirai is quite heavy, at just under 2t.
And the fuel cell system takes up a lot of space.
The fuel cell can produce 114kW, while the motor is only 113kW.
For a range extender, what sort of power would you need from the fuel cell?
I take it that you are suggesting sustainable, net-zero fuels?
Aren't most fuels?