Electric car technology is about 15 years behind where it
should be.
There’s something that’s always been troubling about hybrid
cars. Is it the frugal fuel use? Is it the blind spots? Is it the way they
look? Unfortunately it’s none of these things, least of all the awesome gas
mileage. Hybrid cars are holding back the automobile industry from developing
truly new and innovative technology. It sounds harsh, but let’s take a look at
what makes a hybrid a hybrid. Take a mid-sized sedan and power it with a fully
electric motor. It'll work fine, but only for a short while. So how is it
supposed to last longer?
Just slap on an electric generator. What does that use?
Gasoline. Oh wait, now they have diesel engines combined with the electric
motors, so that’s even more efficient on fuel. What’s impressive about a car
company like Tesla is you can’t take an electric generator from your dad’s
garage or construction site, glue it to an electric motor from your own home
and achieve the same result. Okay, so the electric motor found in a hybrid is a
bit more complex than that, what with its rare Earthly materials. So why not
develop that? The problem with hybrids is they are nothing new. A hybrid is
taking old technology and combining it, and people buy into it because they
believe it’s helping the environment.
Truly, if everyone drove hybrids the Earth would be a lot
cleaner. However, that will never happen and when the hybrid came out people
had two choices: They could either wait for electric vehicle technology to
evolve to where it is now, or choose the quick, short-term solution.
Unfortunately people picked the latter, dumbing down the market. Now, instead
of car companies investing money into something like all-electric vehicles, or
making solar power affordable, or even something radical like nuclear power,
they are concentrating efforts on a gimmick. In fact, another reason the
electric vehicle has been slower to develop is that Tesla is essentially all on
its own. Only recently have other big carmakers decided to get on the EV
train.bt
We hate to crap specifically on the Toyota Prius, but
remember the "Top Gear" controversy of how toxic it is to build a
battery for a Prius? Of course the show has a reputation for bending the facts,
but it has been proven that making just one battery for a Prius is
extraordinarily taxing on the environment, between shipping it to various
factories and the mining involved. It would have been pretty great to see how
far electric vehicles could have come by now. Auto manufacturers had to know
that electric vehicles were the future. There’s no way around it, but it’s not
a short-term solution. It is long-term and therefore scary and expensive.
There’s no immediate payoff. That’s what the hybrid represents: a lack of
faith.
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