FLtrackdays
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #181
My hope would be that someone would do a grid study to determine how many EVs can we currently support before rolling blackouts begin. This already happened in Texas.
From Bing’s chat AI: “Generally, it takes between 75 and 85 kilowatt-hours (kWh) to fully charge a Tesla with a long-range battery” Thus living in Florida my next question was how much kWh does my AC unit require: “A 3-ton air conditioner unit rated at 15 SEER would consume approximately 2.57 kWh of electricity per hour of operation”
I have two units for a larger home (~3000 sq ft). According to my Nest smart thermostat I’m using them about 2-3 hours per day. Much less than what it would take to fully charge a single EV. Even if not charging the EV fully, it’d would require more than the 25 kWh/day that I‘m using in the summer to keep the house comfortable, to support one EV vehicle.
With only about 1% of EVs currently on the road (also according to AI), wouldn’t it make sense to do a study to see how much each city & state’s electrical grid can supply/generate/put out? And how are we going to make up this deficit if we’re at say 5, 10, 20, or even 50% EV on the road. ”According to the White House, President Biden has set a goal for electric vehicles to make up 50% of all new vehicle sales in the United States by 2030.“ - from Bing’s AI chat as well.
I think it’s worth consideration and should be brought up by the car magazines, politicians, media in general. Where will all this extra energy come from if we don’t let the market drive the natural progression of EV use?
From Bing’s chat AI: “Generally, it takes between 75 and 85 kilowatt-hours (kWh) to fully charge a Tesla with a long-range battery” Thus living in Florida my next question was how much kWh does my AC unit require: “A 3-ton air conditioner unit rated at 15 SEER would consume approximately 2.57 kWh of electricity per hour of operation”
I have two units for a larger home (~3000 sq ft). According to my Nest smart thermostat I’m using them about 2-3 hours per day. Much less than what it would take to fully charge a single EV. Even if not charging the EV fully, it’d would require more than the 25 kWh/day that I‘m using in the summer to keep the house comfortable, to support one EV vehicle.
With only about 1% of EVs currently on the road (also according to AI), wouldn’t it make sense to do a study to see how much each city & state’s electrical grid can supply/generate/put out? And how are we going to make up this deficit if we’re at say 5, 10, 20, or even 50% EV on the road. ”According to the White House, President Biden has set a goal for electric vehicles to make up 50% of all new vehicle sales in the United States by 2030.“ - from Bing’s AI chat as well.
I think it’s worth consideration and should be brought up by the car magazines, politicians, media in general. Where will all this extra energy come from if we don’t let the market drive the natural progression of EV use?
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