11-08-11, 06:57 PM
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Member
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Wiltshire, UK
Posts: 122
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ronald G. Stephenson
I am afraid too few people recall the early days of the motorcar in the United States. At that point, one could choose a steam powered car, an electric car, and the smoky, backfiring internal combustion engined examples. To some degree, all were somewhat successful, and each had it's followers. Now, sprinting into the 21st century, the top selling, most outrageously powerful, exotic cars are all gasoline powered. They not only go like stink, but get respectable mileage to boot. The likelyhood of the masses choosing an electric car, in any part of the future that anyone would care to name, is pretty remote. I, for one, will ride one of my bicycles or walk. On especially important days, I will bring out one of my 440 cubic-inch, ten miles to the gallon, rubber tired locomotives on what is left of our highway system, and have the time of my life. I predict that gasoline will continue to be refined and burnt for a good long time. Petrol products and coal will fire the furnaces to produce the much-needed electicity for the plug-in cars. Of course, we will need to build museums to house examples for future generations to observe in bemused wonderment.
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You're slightly missing the point I was trying not very well to make. Given sufficient technology, electric cars can be better than petrol cars – the weight distribution can be better, the torque available at low or zero RPM is phenomenal, the range is as good as petrol (with a small range extending internal combustion engine), the handling can be better by distributing the power better and so on. I love a big gurgling V8 as much as the next man, but electric will certainly be able to earn a place in many driving enthusiasts' hearts.
Maybe a similar story is found if you look at photography. The early digital cameras were expensive and rubbish niche products, but today the quality available from mainstream modern digital SLRs and medium format systems is far better than was ever available from film, especially in low light. Sure it gives a slightly different 'feel' to film, and I miss my darkroom (as I will miss a big petrol engine one day), but by most measurable yardsticks, digital sensors now far outperform all normal film stock.
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