Or lubricants, or any one of a thousand other materials derived from petro-chemicals...Well, unless we want plastic for the interiors. Or tires . . .
Or lubricants, or any one of a thousand other materials derived from petro-chemicals...Well, unless we want plastic for the interiors. Or tires . . .
Either it is a "bit" or someone doesn't currently reside in the real world...OK, this is a bit, right?
DUDE! We can't "replicate" rare earth metals - or anything else for that matter. Not by 3D printing or by any other means using our current technology. WTH are you talking about?!?
"Replication" - i.e. CREATING something from nothing, that's a Star Trek sci-fi fantasy!
We may be able to PROCESS rare earth metals into a usable form (as in manufacturing a battery) using a 3D printing process - maybe.
BUT you can't CREATE rare earth metals that way, or any other way, using current technology. Rare earth metals like lithium and cobalt have to be MINED (dug) out of the earth. They can't be synthesized out of thin air by some kind of "replicator".
What kind of fantasy world do you live in?
True, BUT when you throw technologies like regenerative braking into the mix, you can reduce those inefficiencies.McLaren P1 and Audi R28 were better implementations.
The Prius just shows us how much Toyota want's it to just go away.
Its not a universal solution. The strong point of Hybrid is it's ability to deal with variable speed driving environments, be it racing where you slow in the corners and hammer it in the straights, or urban stop and go.
Rural and freeway environments where speeds are maintained, it comes up as a loss as some energy is dissipated as heat in the conversion from the engines kinetic energy to electricity.
Standard guess has been an 11% conversion loss.
It's called 3D Polymer Bonding, to replicate Rare Earth Metals…
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It's called 3D Polymer Bonding, to replicate Rare Earth Metals…
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Or lubricants, or any one of a thousand other materials derived from petro-chemicals...
while your at it ... let's just convert carbon to gold with this process.It's called 3D Polymer Bonding, to replicate Rare Earth Metals…
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OK, please provide a link to more information about this groundbreaking "replication" technology. Instead of just throwing out a semi-plausible-sounding word-salad.
FWIW, when I do a Google search using your phrase "3D Polymer Bonding, to replicate Rare Earth Metals" all I'm coming up with are articles about new ways to PROCESS rare earth metals. NOT anything about CREATING rare earth metals from something else, or "replicating" them from thin air.
PROCESSING rare earth metals, no matter how sophisticated the process may be, still requires that you have the rare earth metals to begin with.
It doesn't create them from thin air. One of us is missing something here, and I don't think it's me.
It's called 3D Polymer Bonding, to replicate Rare Earth Metals…
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True, BUT when you throw technologies like regenerative braking into the mix, you can reduce those inefficiencies.
It still isn't a loss-less system, there's no free lunch, but you can recapture a fair amount of energy that way.
The Electric Vehicle mandate for the US Military doesn't go into effect until 2027, and the rest of the country until 2037! It doesn't mean that all combustion engine vehicles will be outlawed by then, only that combustion engined vehicles will be being phased out of service by their respective dates! If you can still find 100 octane gasoline for your 1967 Firebird or 1985+ ear car after 2037, you'll be the exception and not the rule…
Agreed. Like I said, it increases efficiency but still has losses, there is no free lunch. Obviously regenerative braking provides its biggest benefit in areas where you're braking more. Of course that is when it is needed the most too.Regenerative braking cannot help you on a country road where you are maintaining a speed while traveling mostly non stop. More so of interstate driving. Here, they operate at a loss over straight ICE. Audi dominated LeMans with the R28 where regenerative braking could make a major contribution to the cause.
This is to say, I see value in the general concept though most of it's more pedestrian implementations are lacking. Still, it is not a universal solution even in the best of iterations
LOL, we have plenty for our ALL needs right right now - and for the next couple of hundred years - if we would just go back to drilling for it and producing it.Sigh. We have plenty ourselves for such ancillary needs.
Agreed. Like I said, it increases efficiency but still has losses, there is no free lunch. Obviously regenerative braking provides its biggest benefit in areas where you're braking more. Of course that is when it is needed the most too.
Like any other vehicle, EV's are at their most efficient and therefore get their maximum range in the steady-speed conditions of highway driving.
They're never going to achieve the kind of range of gas thought. It just isn't physically possible to recharge a battery that big as fast as you can pump 20 gallons of gas.
25-mile daily commute? When I was a few decades younger, I could do that on a bicycle. No gas at all, unless I ate beans for breakfast.California is where my daughter and SIL are, near Monterrey. They've used their 2017 cheapo Nissa Leaf daily since 2018 for a 25 mile daily commute with no problems of any kind. None. Other than people shaking their heads at how ugly it is, of course. Their long distance car is a hybrid.
A church member friend from El Paso has the Ford pickup EV and loves it for around town. Of the 6 or 7 EV owners I know, all are satisfied. But what do they know, I guess.
That's why in 2021, the US decided to 3D replicate rare earth metals as a means of weaning ourselves off of those dependent supply countries that don't meet our strategic interests