Quote from: _MT_ on May 02, 2022, 11:56:11Which current EVs can't have battery replaced?
I guess I was under the impression that some of them couldn't, especially based on how difficult they are to access. Regardless, even if they
can be replaced, it may not be cost-effective to do so, as you pointed out. Granted, it's not quite the same thing, but a hybrid owner I know has had their batteries start failing and was told it's far too expensive to replace them and not worth it. I hope, at least, that things like this are considered when designing EVs, and from what I've seen they have become a lot better in this regard (though this is a massive step backward, as confirmed in a later article here on NBC), but there were many cars built for several years at the start of the EV revolution, namely hybrids, that it clearly wasn't, and it makes me wonder what we'll find in 10-20 years with all the new ones being designed and built.
Quote from: JB Kickback on May 06, 2022, 23:41:53Hmmmm catch fire
I guess you've never owned a BEV
NHTA reported that out of a Billion miles driven last year there were 53 ICE cars (internal combustion) that caught on fire as opposed to 3 BEVs (battery electric cars)
I guess if you think about it -- that figure shouldn't surprise us ---- it's actually in the name internal COMBUSTION!!!!
Owning or not owning one has no bearing on it. Even if I owned one for 50 years and
it never caught fire, that doesn't mean anything, because it would be a single sample size. And even
if* EVs catch fire less often, when they
do it takes a substantially larger volume of water to put them out, and with the fuel source (batteries) built into the frame,
surrounding the occupants, it's reasonable to question whether,
when they do catch fire (and, I'll also point out, a vehicle can catch fire due to other reasons besides the fuel source, e.g. cigarettes), they would pose a greater harm to the occupants.
*Statistics can be manipulated to tell any story one wants. IMO, that NHTA statistic is
not reliable for a multitude of reasons. Also, I'd guess that most ICE vehicle fires involve a collision, i.e. they typically need something to set it off, whereas EV fires, similar to phone and laptop fires, have been known to occur spontaneously which, to me, is a greater risk, considering most people park them inside their homes. Even so, if we're to assume EVs have even a 93% reduced chance of catching fire, there's
still a chance, and assuming that chance is equal regardless of whether the batteries are internalized into the frame, then the original question still remains valid: is doing this an increased safety risk compared to not doing it?