I am not condemning electric vehicle and would welcome links to other information
nd who ruined my boris thread it's been locked
Hydrogen cars cost a fortune to buy and to run. At the moment the best analogy you can give them is they are the Betamax to battery cars VHS.It's all about the batteries in e cars the horrific impact mining lithium... they need to find a better product. Until then my money is on hydrogen powered cars.
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017...lectric-cars-carbon-sustainable-power-energy/
And who ruined my boris thread it's been locked
Test drove an hyundai ioniq hybrid today but couldn't get the deal we wanted so left asking them to ring us if they have a change of mind. Seems these things sell themselves as they dont want budge on price.
Hydrogen cars cost a fortune to buy and to run.
I may be dragging the average age of the site down but I wasn't alive in 1905 nor did I get my license for quite a while.what did it cost to buy and run a petrol car in 1905?
Was there a petrol station near your home and near your place of work?
Was there a repair garage?
True that, especially the last bit.since 1905, the cost to buy and run a petrol car has come down so much that it is within the reach of almost every working person in the developed world.
This did not come about because petrol cars in 1905 were intrinsically cheap, but as a result of mass production, design, development, supply chains, and infrastructure.
Nobody knows what will happen in the next 100 years, nor in the next 100 months, nor even the next 100 weeks.
In the UK, nobody even knows what will happen in the next 100 days.
True that, especially the last bit.
Apparently the model T cost the equivalent of $21,000 in today's money. You can get an electric car for about £30k now, hydrogen cars cost £50,000+.
The general expectation is battery cars will be about the same price as petrol by about 2025. Hydrogen is far behind, far far behind.
In terms of explosion risk, about as good as petrol.How safe are Hydrogen cars in a crash?