(25-11-2017, 04:20 PM)BlueKelah Wrote: Only if u forgot to recharge or going long distance driving. For most urban user and weekend warrior, full charge at home overnight would be the norm and sufficient.
Also it is recommended to have a rest every few hours constant driving. A half an hour toilet stop, including makan and check your facebook whatsapp and even nap would be a perfect fit for the recharging.
And of course backup and maybe hot swappable battery packs will be easily developed. A hot swap battery pack will only take a couple mins to swap. Lets not forget EV has extra big empty space in the front which is perfect for more battery.
Just look at how we tackle the smartphone low battery problem. Similar solution for ev.
So the only remaining obstacle really is the cost of ownership.
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That's on paper really. Since we have a Nobel Prize winner in Economics, Richard Thaler, who won based on his work on behaviors - let's maybe investigate abit more about human behaviors.
For a start - human behavior and biases are hard to change. That's a bit like the "First Law of Thaler human behavior".
- You would think that you want to charge at home. Well, i hope all electric cars come with portable chargers as part of the package when one buys an electric car in future...and it would occupy much household space until someone complains (well, maybe it can be retrofitted to fit the empty space in front?). And now, all of us lucky car drivers (in sg context) have to remember that we need to turn on the charging switch in the garage before we go to sleep. We may already have some practice if one already has the habit of charging our hp before we go to sleep at night?
- When i hit a charging station, it is easy to go for a toilet break. But i can't imagine my angst if i am in a hurry or late for my appointment. So now periodically without fail, i have to add another 30mins of my life, which is slightly more than 2% of a day, imprisoned at a place, with little choice. A car is supposed to liberate, not imprison me!
- I let you know on a little secret - I hate to have to learn how to change batteries myself. Maybe if i had learnt that in driving school, then i would think i should be doing so. Heck, i even prefer to drive to the gas station that has attendants helping me to pump petrol.
- The smartphone is more superior than the dumbphone and the value-add it brings, fall outweigh its nuisance. Besides saving the earth and lower maint costs, an electric car doesn't bring more superior user experience than a gasoline car. Then again, if we had mature driverless car tech + convenient car on demand services, then i wouldn't need to care about all the nuisances of electric car charging issues.
- Any related to technology, its CoO will always reduce - that's the ingenuity of Man and the benefits of capitalism+frictionless flow of ideas system. So electric car's CoO is not a matter of how, but when. I suspect the key to electric car's mass adoption is not solely dependent on CoO, but the adaptation/changes of the consumer's behavior/habits is also very critical.
That said, humans can be nudged to abandon their biases and inertia in practice. That would be the "2nd Law of Thaler human behavior".