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Monday, September 06, 2010

EV mass market: Mobile chargers could keep electric cars juiced up TNR.v, CZX.v, RM.v, LIT, LIT.v, TSLA, HEV, AONE, CLQ.v, WLC.v, ABN.v, HAO.v, FMC, SQM,

 

  We have another interesting solution for the Range Anxiety surrounding Electric Cars. We believe that technology with time will address all the questions related to the launch of EVs: range, cost and reliability. We will get better electric cars in the end than conventional ones in the nearest future. 
  The danger now is that the more we hesitate and waste our time instead of encouraging adoption of electric cars on all levels of our society, the more likely we will be happy to get anything - just to be able to drive at one point. 

"We have time still, but it is running out very fast. After a certain point in the oil price increase the only concern we are going to have about Electric Cars will be their availability on a mass scale to preserve our way of life and freedom."




NewScientist:


ELECTRIC vehicles are expected to stream onto the roads over the next few years, but some drivers may be put off by fears that they could be left stranded if their battery runs out of charge.



Zafer Sahinoglu at the Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and colleagues, think they have found a way to prevent this. They are developing a network of portable charging stations, which can be moved to wherever the demand for recharging is greatest.



To determine where the stations are needed, in-car sensors would monitor the level of charge in the battery and periodically report this to a central operations centre, which would flag areas where most cars run low on juice. The stations can then be deployed wherever the low-charge "hotspots" are at that time. Just five mobile stations would be needed to cover 100 electric cars on a 100-kilometre stretch of highway, the team says.



The roaming stations could be charged up from the mains at night, and then discharge their electricity to cars during the day, they say, reducing the load on the electricity grid at peak times. The team will present their idea at the Vehicular Technology Conference in Ottawa, Canada, next week.


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