Japanese firm believes it could make a solid-state battery with a range of 745 miles that charges in 10 minutes

  • admiralteal@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    It’d notably only make a tiny percent of EV trips more practical because nearly all current trips happen within a couple of miles of a home where you can charge at your leisure. More interesting will be how this tech compares to other renewable techs for powering shipping.

    The real revolution will come from getting more and more of those car trips replaced with transit & bikeped. Save taxpayer money, prevent thousands and thousands of deaths, improve livestyles, and create more environmental cities.

    • Harlan_Cloverseed@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      As a first gen Leaf owner with 50 miles range who has bought 1/3 tank gas twice this year, I second this. BTW, charging on a regular outlet with no fast charger and haven’t seen our electric go up any noticeable amount since before the switch.

    • NearSightedGiraffe@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Definitely agree that for many people this will be the case, but for people who live in apartments or units without access to convenient charging facilities this new tech, if it scales, would still be quite useful. We do a 300km round trip drive a few times a month, and 150km round trip every day. Once per week we have a 200km round trip drive. Until 2 months ago we did not live in a place that had an external powerpoint anywhere near our allocated carpark and our workplace does not have any charging facilities. 10min charge every couple of days would still have been very doable. In our current place we could go for a current gen ev, if we had the cash, because we actually have a garage- but plenty of people do not.

      Totally agree that expanding out public transport and making it affordable would absolutely be the best option and doesn’t rely on technology we don’t already have though. In our last place we technically could have replaced that daily 150km round trip with a 1hr train + 30mins walking each way, but even ignoring the fact that it was a much slower option, it was also more expensive even accounting for fuel, maintenance, insurance and rego on our car. If politicians wanted an easy environmental win they would subsidise public transport and make it more accessible.