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Battery powered locomotives

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Battery powered locomotives
Posted by ndbprr on Thursday, January 20, 2022 7:50 AM

Model the PRR so don't follow modern stuff too much. What is the story on battery powered locos.  How far can they run?  How much traction power do they have? Etc.  See that sales are picking up.  I don't see how they can be as efficient as diesel powered.  Thank you

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Posted by John-NYBW on Thursday, January 20, 2022 8:26 AM

In the prototype world, diesels are electric locomotives. They generate their own electricity on board. In the model world, everything other than live steam is powered electrically. Battery technology has advanced so much in the past few decades that it has become practical to power model locomotives. Having no experience with it, I can't answer your question as to how powerful these locos are or how long they can go between recharging, but I know people are starting to with it so it must be practical.

I would expect this thread to be moved the electronics forum since it's not about the prototypes. 

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Posted by ndbprr on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:21 AM

My questions are absolutely about prototype engines.  I am trying to determine if my thoughts that this is a gimic that the railroads are doing for tax credits or other financial incentives is accurate and that these engines are doomed to failure

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Posted by wjstix on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:48 AM

BTW it isn't really a new technology, just improved. There were battery powered or hybrid locomotives in the early 20th century - just as there were battery powered automobiles back then. The main difference is now batteries can be recharged easier, and are more powerful so are becoming able to be used for longer runs.

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Posted by York1 on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:53 AM

I don't have a garden railroad, and at my age, I'm unlikely to ever build one.

But I would be very interested in battery powered locomotives on a garden RR.

York1 John       

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Posted by JDawg on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:54 AM

Maybe one day electric locomotives will be practical. Look at what electric cars have done recently. A road trip costs less with an EV than with a traditional gas car. Don't get me wrong, EV's have shortcomings, but the tech keeps improving.

So an 100 percent electric loco is feasible, just not at the current tech level. A great example is a tram service in Australia (if I recall correctly). The tram runs 100 percent battery power. It has solar panels on the roof which help. It uses regenerative breaking. Then, at its stops, there are large solar panels that are plugged in to the loco during passenger exchanges.

Sounds great, but it has shortcoming. The track is mostly flat. The tram is only two units. But the concept is cool.

JJF


Prototypically modeling the Great Northern in Minnesota with just a hint of freelancing. Smile, Wink & Grin

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Posted by JDawg on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:56 AM

JDawg

Maybe one day electric locomotives will be practical. Look at what electric cars have done recently. A road trip costs less with an EV than with a traditional gas car. Don't get me wrong, EV's have shortcomings, but the tech keeps improving.

So an 100 percent electric loco is feasible, just not at the current tech level. A great example is a tram service in Australia (if I recall correctly). The tram runs 100 percent battery power. It has solar panels on the roof which help. It uses regenerative breaking. Then, at its stops, there are large solar panels that are plugged in to the loco during passenger exchanges.

Sounds great, but it has shortcoming. The track is mostly flat. The tram is only two units. But the concept is cool.

 

 

Here is the video

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6Y4QGFte3T8

JJF


Prototypically modeling the Great Northern in Minnesota with just a hint of freelancing. Smile, Wink & Grin

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Posted by dehusman on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:57 AM

There is pressure on the railroads to reduce emissions (as there is on all the transportation sectors) so they are exploring battery operated locomotives.  The big problem now is range.

Probably the first engines to be battery operated will be local and switch engines.  Ironically, the reason we have diesel electrics is because of pressure on the railroads to reduce emissions.  The first diesels were used to reduce smoke in urban areas 100 years ago, so changing motive power for environmental reasons isn't new.

The second leap it relibility, how well do the batteries stand up to charging cycles.  If the batteries need to be replaced too frequently, then the locomotives will be a failure.

I wonder if anybody is looking at battery "tenders", more or less a road slug or tender that has no control compartment, its just banks of batteries.   If they could get the range with a tender up to the 750-1000 mile range, then they could replicate deisel performance and every 750-1000 miles swap out battery tenders, then the tenders could recharge.

Obviously they would want a recharging option instead of dynamic brakes, just like a hybrid cars does.  Currently dynamic brakes turn the traction motors into generators/alternators and then the electricity is depleted through a heater grid on the roof.  Instead that electric would go to charge the batteries.

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by York1 on Thursday, January 20, 2022 10:27 AM

York1
I don't have a garden railroad, and at my age, I'm unlikely to ever build one. But I would be very interested in battery powered locomotives on a garden RR.

 

I'm sorry I wrote this, but the forum doesn't allow me to delete the post. 

I thought the original post was asking about battery-powered model locomotives.

York1 John       

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Posted by DrW on Thursday, January 20, 2022 1:20 PM

BHP, a mining company in Western Australia, just ordered 4 battery powered locomotives for their iron ore trains.

https://thedriven.io/2022/01/19/mining-giant-bhp-orders-electric-trains-for-wa-iron-ore-rail-network/

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Posted by John-NYBW on Thursday, January 20, 2022 3:30 PM

ndbprr

My questions are absolutely about prototype engines.  I am trying to determine if my thoughts that this is a gimic that the railroads are doing for tax credits or other financial incentives is accurate and that these engines are doomed to failure

 

My mistake. I thought you were asking about the feasibility of battery powered model locos. 

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Posted by John-NYBW on Thursday, January 20, 2022 3:33 PM

York1

 

 
York1
I don't have a garden railroad, and at my age, I'm unlikely to ever build one. But I would be very interested in battery powered locomotives on a garden RR.

 

 

I'm sorry I wrote this, but the forum doesn't allow me to delete the post. 

I thought the original post was asking about battery-powered model locomotives.

 

Now I don't feel so bad. I thought the same thing.

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Posted by maxman on Thursday, January 20, 2022 6:35 PM

York1
I'm sorry I wrote this, but the forum doesn't allow me to delete the post. 

Sure you can.  Just go to your post and click on edit.  Then delete the content of your post, and type in "post content deleted by author".

Your post will be there, but anything that you put in which might upset someone else will be gone.

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Posted by Pruitt on Thursday, January 20, 2022 7:19 PM

Lastspikemike
A little ironically battery "power" is... ...too heavy for a road vehicle. ...needs more volume than is practical to provide. 

Wow. There's a whole lotta Tesla and Leaf and Volt owners who will be very surprised to learn that. As a Tesla owner myself, I know I am. Now what am I gonna do for transportation? Confused

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Posted by Colorado Ray on Thursday, January 20, 2022 8:22 PM

Pruitt

 

 
Lastspikemike
A little ironically battery "power" is... ...too heavy for a road vehicle. ...needs more volume than is practical to provide. 

 

Wow. There's a whole lotta Tesla and Leaf and Volt owners who will be very surprised to learn that. As a Tesla owner myself, I know I am. Now what am I gonna do for transportation? Confused

 

 

As another Tesla owner, I have to agree with Mark.

 

Ray

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Posted by OldEngineman on Thursday, January 20, 2022 9:59 PM

William D. Middleton, in his books, describes the early efforts of the pioneers of electric traction -- how they were frustrated in trying to use battery power as a source of electricity. It wasn't until the dynamo was invented, and continuous collection of "externally-supplied" power by third rail or trolley was implemented, that electric locomotives and cars began to become practical and workable.

I believe it will be so with the fad of "battery powered" locomotives. They'll be found to be unworkable for all but very limited use cases.

When the battery runs out an inopportune time, the engine stops and becomes dead weight until it's either towed away or recharged (how long will THAT take?).

Of course a diesel can run out of fuel as well, but can often be refueled in minutes if a rubber-tired fuel truck can be brought near.

Why carry a battery around on the engine (with a finite charge and long recharging time) when you can put a pantograph on the roof and collect unlimited power from an overhead wire?

"Electric" locomotives have been around a long time now. Why not use technology that is known to work, and work well...?

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, January 21, 2022 7:06 AM

We've hashed this around on the Trains Magazine forums for some time.

Straight electrification has almost never been cost-effective for long main lines in the United States.  There is a long history behind this; note that even PRR never extended electrification to the most obvious place it would be valuable to them, between Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.

If you were to develop electrification as a long-range enhancement on railroads (as has been commonly done in Europe) but with continued private ownership of ROW, you would benefit from the kind of 'dual-mode-lite' operation developed for Conrail in the late 1970s.  This is eminently more practical today than in the age of SD40-2s... the idea is that diesel-electrics are equipped to take power from 'islands' of OHLE or modern track conductors where it is installed, and run on combustion power elsewhere.  This gets around the obvious problem with straight electrification that it only runs when you have power 100% of the way, provided 100% of the time... you start with the obvious places electrification 'pays' or is otherwise required, then build as needed until you have most of your coverage.

BUT... there are many places on a conventional railroad, particularly in the East, where very expensive modifications would be needed, principally at bridges or other overhead clearances, to install even 25kV 60Hz catenary... let alone modern 50k.  With dual-mode lite those can be left as permanent short gaps, which makes near-pervasive electrification much cheaper, quicker, and easier to implement... and if you have full electrical supply from a hybrid consist battery, even if it represents only a couple of minutes of full consist traction output, the advantage is as obvious as keepalives are in model railroading.

A rather obvious way to deploy dual-mode-lite is to equip diesels to take 'line power' as with road slugs, and add a car with the pantographs or shoes and necessary equipment to produce suitable current.  With AC power, that can be easily done at DC link level, in the range of 1200-1500 VDC as supplied to the inverter drive.

Meanwhile, there are clear advantages to providing some kind of regeneration to dynamic braking.  GE very carefully designed hybrid locomotives (you can actually see one detail design that was captured by the COMSOL company as a case example of use of their design software!)

Meanwhile, the idea of the battery tender that has the electrical pickup stuff on it has been around since the heady days of the GE MATEs, with some very problematic issues unless the 'tender' is equipped as a road slug.

The (in my opinion obvious) convergence of all this is to put the big hybrid battery in a powered locomotive frame, with a control cab... and that is exactly what a FLXdrive is... but operate it with one or two properly-equipped diesels as a hybrid consist most of the time.

Very seldom will you buy an expensive battery locomotive 'new' exclusively for switching, as no few railroads found out back in the day.  It has been strange to watch people try to design these with apparent abject ignorance of how switching is actually performed on railroads -- that being the cause of the otherwise well-conceived Green Goat, a more sensible premise than a separate FLXdrive just as a Fisker Karma is a more sensible automobile than a Tesla.  But if you have the political necessity it would be easy to use either  B-B or B-B-B-B (note the recent Australian purchases, on railroads otherwise equipped with C-C road power) for switching and hybrid dual-mode-lite consisting alike and get the best of all worlds for your capital investment.

This is also a straightforward bridge to either reformed-LNG or carrier-hydrogen power on road consists, perhaps the only engineering alternative that isn't chiefly a form of virtue signaling.

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Posted by York1 on Friday, January 21, 2022 10:30 AM

Lastspikemike
Click on your username. It'll take you to a complete list of your posts. Delete the post you wish to from that page.

 

Mike, thanks, but that seems to only remove the post from the list, and does not remove the post in the actual thread.

York1 John       

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Posted by wrench567 on Friday, January 21, 2022 3:34 PM

  Battery technology has improved tremendously but not nearly enough for replacement of internal combustion, external combustion, and AC/DC wired equipment. The amp draw alone just starting a heavy train would deplete the stored energy faster than can be restored. My RC helicopters get on average 6 to 7 minutes of flight and depletes 1000 to 2000 Milli amp hours depending on battery. Recharging can take an hour or more to recharge at up to 6 amps. The heat generated by the lithium reaction drains the life out of the battery each time it is heavily discharged. I probably get 60 to 75 flight cycles before they puff and I toss them in a bucket of salt water for disposal. Lead acid batteries are even worse. The lead plates deteriorates quickly when discharged by high amp use.

  These Tesla vehicles and other electric cars may be alright on their own. Try pulling a heavy load and see what happens. Better have a deep bank account for a new bank of batteries, if it pulls. I'm sure there is overload protection.

    Pete.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Friday, January 21, 2022 4:11 PM

Railway Age article on Wabtec's (which purchased General Electric's locomotive division) on their battery powered locomotives.

https://www.railwayage.com/news/flxdrive-electrifies-pittsburgh/

Jeff

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Posted by davidmurray on Friday, January 21, 2022 6:12 PM

A few years ago, when diesel prices went thru the roof, MR had an article about "GREEN GOATS".  These were hybrids with 3000 hp of electric engines, but 300 hp diesels.  Intended strictly for yard work.  Apparently they were not popular with switch crews, and disappeared after fuel prices went down.

 

David Murray from Oshawa, Ontario Canada
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Posted by Autonerd on Saturday, January 22, 2022 12:31 AM

ndbprr
What is the story on battery powered locos.  How far can they run?  How much traction power do they have? Etc. 

Just saw a spec sheet on a Wabtech loco:

https://www.wabteccorp.com/media/466/download?inline

Says it can do a full 4,400 hp for 30-40 mins.

Seems like a sensible system to me -- you put it in a consist and dynamic braking (or "breaking" according to the release -- I ought to see if they want to hire a new copywriter) charges the battery and the loco can use that power later. It really is like the regenerative brake on a hybrid car... hybrids work by storing energy that would otherwise be wasted as heat so it can be used to assist later, allowing the use of a more fuel-efficient engine.

This'd be a much more sensible thing if the dynamic brakes of the other locomotives could be wired to it -- I'm running under the assumption that a heavy train might need more than one unit producing braking power. And of course once the battery is full you go back to wasting energy as heat. A quiet, vibration-free cab environment is probably a nice thing, too.

Cars: I work for a car mag and my long-termer/daily driver is a Toyota Mirai fuel-cell electric vehicle. So, hydrogen power. I can't (or at least for the moment won't) speak to the merits or problems of hydrogen and it's various sourcing. I can tell you the fueling infrastructure is suffering a lot of teething problems -- fueling is the biggest pain point. But it's a useful solution for someone like me -- I live in an oder apartment building and we can't get chargers installed.

I can also tell you that an electric car (whether battery or fuel-cell powered) is pretty darn wonderful. Smooth acceleration, no shifting, no hesitation, no vibration. This week someone else is driving the Mirai and I'm in a gasoline-powered SUV and it feels harsh and unrefined. Everything does. I'm a gearhead and thought I'd miss internal-combustion power, but I don't -- a manual transmission is the only thing I miss. But for that, I'd be all but done with gasoline. Set aside the power and political issues; IMHO from a driver's perspective electricity is THE way to go. And with home refueling (read: batteries) it's pretty hard to beat.

Aaron

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Saturday, January 22, 2022 9:13 PM

ndbprr
Model the PRR so don't follow modern stuff too much. What is the story on battery powered locos.  How far can they run?  How much traction power do they have? Etc.  See that sales are picking up.  I don't see how they can be as efficient as diesel powered.  Thank you

Battery power is the way of the future.

While currently the technology cannot power a mainline locomotive, there are suitable applications for yard, local, and light trains.

Beyond that, my NDA kicks in...

Zip it!

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by Pruitt on Saturday, January 22, 2022 10:20 PM

Lastspikemike

The missing idea here is always where do you get the energy from to store in the battery? That's why the PR bumpf talks about reducing "operational" CO2 and not about any idea of a full reduction back to the power source.

If all the energy used in the batteries is just from "regeneration" (a snake oil term if there ever was one) then that's just recovery of a small bit of the energy from diesel fuel burned at a different time. The payback time period for that might as well be infinite.  Diesel electric locomotives have long had on board regeneration capability called dynamic brakes. It's just never been economic to recover and reuse that. Still isn't. Towing a big battery pack equipped pseudo locomotive to store and then utilize this otherwise wasted energy may be laudable  but  that doesn't make it sensible. It dumb because it costs too much to recover and reuse that energy, which is why it isn't done without some other non-economic reason like PR or tax breaks or subsidies, etc.

Same boondoggle rules apply to electric cars and hybrids. With current technology these are just dumb ideas that waste money. Trouble is the way things are set up it isn't the Tesla buyer who wastes his or her own money. That's a ridiculous state of affairs but it's really happening. Poor people are paying for rich people to drive electric cars. Stunningly stupid idea.

(Boldface added by me to highlight the subject of my reply.)

Lastspikemike, you may have some valid talking points about railway locomotives. However, you are pathetically ignorant on the subject of battery powered automobiles. 

Even when I charge from a fossil-fueled charger, the noxious emissions at the power plant are much lower than if I were driving an internal combustion powered automobile. My Tesla will go nearly 300 miles on 90 kilowatts of power. If we equate that amount of electricity to the equivalent amount of energy in gasoline, my Tesla goes nearly 300 miles on three gallons of gas. My mpge (miles per gallon equivalent) is about 98, per the EPA when I purchased the car. That's significantly better than any equivalent ICE (internal combusion engine)-mobile by a factor of nearly four (I drive a Model S, a full-size semi-luxury car. Compare it to the Mercedes AMG GLC 43 Coupe, with 24 mpg highway, for example, or the BMW M5, with 23 mpg highway). The utility company creates a boatload LESS pollutants to generate the 95kw (90 kw storage + 5 kw wastage) it takes to charge my Tesla than either of those comparison cars create when burning their 12 or so gallons of fuel to go the same distance.

As far as regeneration goes, in constant speed travel, like highways, regeneration does very little for an automobile, it's true. But in stop-and-go traffic, like in town or on many freeways during busy times, it provides an additional 30-50 percent available mileage. That pretty signifcant. It's certainly very economical to recover that energy and reuse it. ICE vehicles just lose it completely.

Regarding your remark "...it isn't the Tesla buyer who wastes his or her own money. ... Poor people are paying for rich people to drive electric cars." How so? Because of the tax credit for purchasing an electric car? Tesla went over the limit for that back in 2018 or 2019, I think it was. Anyone buying a Tesla these days is not getting any sort of tax break, unless it's from the state in which they live. In my particular case, I pay an extra few hundred dollars a year every time I register my Tesla, to offset the loss of gas taxes since I don't buy gasoline. And that's fair. I use the roads and don't pay a gas tax. Instead, I pay up front.

A bit of advice - learn about a subject before spouting off about it. You might not embarrass yourself so bad in the future. Just sayin'.

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Sunday, January 23, 2022 6:56 AM

Pruitt
As far as regeneration goes, in constant speed travel, like highways, regeneration does very little for an automobile, it's true. But in stop-and-go traffic,

Regenerative batteries on hybrid transit buses were one of the best fuel savers ever introduced. The fuel economy gains were staggering in the real world.

My next vehicle will be plug in electric, it only makes sense. Everyone I know with them loves the cars.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, January 23, 2022 7:46 AM

The advantages of hybrid power for road locomotives have been established for over a decade, as have the ways to build battery structures tolerant of both rapid and deep discharge.  In my humble opinion, would-be critics should study the engineering behind Ludicrous+ mode on Teslas before making blanket statements, but that's just me.

The unfortunate thing about using batteries on modern switch engines is that it involves 104% of the expensive problems for very little perceived revenue value.  If the Green Goat people had actually looked at the cycling involved in 'optimized' flat switching with PSR-style lengths of cuts, they might have realized the impending disaster of their charging premise, which was 'on average' quite sensible (in the sense the Fisker Karma was more sensible than a Tesla model S).  The battery gets slammed from heavy discharge to heavy charge quickly, repeatedly, and without much predictable delay in ramping up or down.

I am waiting to see whether the Joule design team has correctly accounted for this.  I'm reasonably certain RPS in Fullerton will, but it does remain to be seen if their strategy of selectively rebuilding with cells salvaged from Teslas and the like for low-value-proposition switching is going to be workable.  One thing is sure: mere political diktat about employing "zero-carbon" is not going to substitute for careful engineering (and the increased costs that go with that) - see Dilworth's approach to yard and road power for both negative and positive examples of engineering to perceived needs.

As I have noted, integrating the FLXdrive as a separate road locomotive makes sense, but using it solely in road service as part of a consist with combustion engines 'most of its lifetime' also does.  This is probably inherent in the for-those-with-eyes-to-see deployment of 'battery locomotives' to all the heavy-haul operations in the Pilbara... all of which run C-C road power; all of which have specified their battery locomotives with span-bolstered B-B trucks.  

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Posted by zugmann on Sunday, January 23, 2022 11:01 AM

SeeYou190
While currently the technology cannot power a mainline locomotive, there are suitable applications for yard, local, and light trains.

The yard and local locmotives I use get used HARD.  Heavy pulls and shoves, constant loading, and get very little downtime.  They are usually handed off from one crew to the next right away. 

 

 

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Saturday, February 19, 2022 4:12 AM

The burning freighter really shows the problem of concentrated batteries once they catch fire.  Fire breaks down the insulation of cells reigniting the fire.  Hopefully methods can be found to mitigae these problems.  But until???

Fire on Cargo Ship Packed With Porsches and VWs Is Reportedly Fueled by EV Batteries (msn.com)

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Posted by Overmod on Saturday, February 19, 2022 9:28 AM

Lastspikemike
Ironically, the accepted method of extinguishing Li ion battery fires is complete submersion of the battery in water.....

Do you have a reference for that?

The reason for using 'water' despite the issues it has with lithium-battery construction is that if you spray it forcefully and then let it run or evaporate off it cools the structure more effectively than other methods firefighters can use.  That's the reason you see Teslas on their sides after battery fires -- they were tipped over intentionally so they could be hosed to dissipate heat.  [Yes, this has to do with the molecular characteristics of water vs. other sprayed material like gaseous Halons -- I'm not going into that here.]

Just "submerging" them would do little to remove heat, but it would sure produce positive exotherm from any damaged cells, and likely facilitate repeated battery fires when the battery is subsequently moved.  Not to mention self-discharge issues facilitated by ionic contaminants in the water...

(You would likely also have a contaminated-water problem with your 'submersion' pool, but that's secondary to the electrical, chemical, and thermodynamic concerns...)

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Posted by NHTX on Saturday, February 19, 2022 8:32 PM

     I have two questions that I have not seen answers to:

     First,  what is the recharge time on these electric cars and, what is the maximum range on a full charge?  For instance, the nearest hobby shop worthy of the name is 420 interstate highway miles from me.  Burning two hours charging up the car does not equate to a 10 minute stop for gas, and just won't cut it.

     Second, what happened to the gensets?  They were supposed to be the best thing since flush toilets but, that turned out to be the good ol' SD40-2- with slug if necessary. 

 

 

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