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#211
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 12, 10:40*am, T8 wrote:
On Jan 12, 11:12*am, bildan wrote: On Jan 11, 6:56*pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 12:47:53 -0800, Tom Gardner wrote: 2) If everyone turns their thermostats one degree closer to the outside temperature, drives a smaller car, and switches off phone chargers when not in use, will an energy crisis be averted? My sister pointed out recently that British people tend to keep their houses warmer than we did/do in NZ, so turning down the thermostat is not a hardship - just put on a pullover over your T-shirt in winter. Smaller cars is a problem for us in the trailer towing fraternity. My main gripe with the current crop of electric and hybrid cars is that nobody mentions towing, that I've seen anyway. There's one exception: Aptera say NO TOWING up front. I guess the same goes for many of the rest but they're too chicken to mention it. Hungry chargers are just stupidly bad technology and should be banned.. Chargers that use no power[1] when they're plugged in but not connected to anything have been around for at least 8 years, so there's no excuse for selling one that burns power when its under no load. Anyway, I just looked at four chargers I happened to have handy and here's what it shows they burn when plugged into the mains and disconnected from the things they charge: 18 month old Lenovo laptop PSU (65w o/p) * * * *0 * watts. my much older Thinkpad 560Z PSU (54w o/p) * * * 1.9 watts. iPAQ 3630 PSU (10w o/p) * * * * * * * * * * * * 2.0 watts. 2001 Motorola T250 phone charger (2.5w o/p) * * 0 * watts. [1] I recently bought myself a power meter for a tenner from Maplins. It * which reads to 0.1 watts, so a reading of 0.0 should mean 50 mW consumption or less. These power meters are simple to use: they have a 13 amp plug on the back and a 13 amp socket on the front, so you just plug them in between the wall and the device you want to measure. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | I suspect the concept of "powered trailers" will pop up more frequently. *This is not an unproven concept since the mining industry has used it for years. If you use a load cell to measure the push-pull loads at the trailer hitch, the data can be used to control electric motors in the trailer wheels. *If a glider *trailer housed a large battery, possibly charged with a large solar panel on top and wheel motors, it could minimize the loads imposed on the towing vehicle by essentially powering itself. *The wheel motors would also provide regenerative braking. The whole car-trailer combo then becomes a parallel hybrid which permits the use of a much smaller and less powerful car. *The fuel savings while towing would be small compared to the fuel savings achieved by driving a small, fuel efficient yet tow capable car when not towing. The energy capacity of the trailer battery pack coupled to an inverter could also power things like power tools and polishers when parked at the airport. The problem with EVs isn't power, it's on-board energy storage. I have a friend who is a hybrid/EV enthusiast. *He reckons the holy grail is 40 mile range. *Okay, adequate for most people buying groceries or going to work, but completely useless for XC travel. *We need 1 - 2 magnitudes of improvement in energy density and 3 or 4 in re-fueling time before you can reasonably talk about competing with existing gas/diesel for hauling pilot/plane/crew to a site several hundred miles distant. That, or we turn I80 into a giant sized nuclear powered HO slot car track :-). Back to trailers: *From fuel consumption numbers, I can back out that my Komet trailer/glider has an effective fuel consumption of 120 miles to the gallon at 60 - 65 mph on level road, no wind. *Figure about 6 hp. *Two or three times that under acceleration or ascending steep grade. * The point is: it's a small load. *A decently capable EV could tow it without difficulty. -Evan Ludeman / T8 Yes, pretty much any econobox can pull a glider trailer on a level road. Where the 'powered trailer' idea would come in is on hills. ~90% of the time, the trailer would be unpowered and the trailers wheel motors would only kick in when the towing econobox couldn't handle the load alone. On downhill grades, the wheel motors would switch to regenerative braking to recharge the trailer battery and save the towing vehicle's brakes. Set up correctly, the charge in the trailer battery should last as long as the fuel in the towing vehicle's tank. If recharging stations proliferate, the trailer battery could be recharged while the tow car's tank is being refilled. |
#212
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 12, 7:05*pm, bildan wrote:
*On downhill grades, the wheel motors would switch to regenerative braking to recharge the trailer battery and save the towing vehicle's brakes. Is that actually the case? I was under the impression that the electrolyte will boil if you try to put energy into batteries as fast as it can be taken out. I'm more than happy to be corrected, if necessary. |
#213
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 12, 1:47*pm, Tom Gardner wrote:
On Jan 12, 7:05*pm, bildan wrote: *On downhill grades, the wheel motors would switch to regenerative braking to recharge the trailer battery and save the towing vehicle's brakes. Is that actually the case? I was under the impression that the electrolyte will boil if you try to put energy into batteries as fast as it can be taken out. I'm more than happy to be corrected, if necessary. With the old lead-acid liquid electrolyte batteries, that would be true. The new "fast-charge" lithium based solid electrolyte electric vehicle batteries can take a full charge in less than 10 minutes. They also have a far larger energy density and power density. However, even this may not be good enough for heavy regenerative braking - enter the Ultra-capacitor. Ultra-capacitors can charge almost instantly then trickle the charge into a battery pack at a charge rate that keeps it happy. |
#214
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 08:12:31 -0800, bildan wrote:
On Jan 11, 6:56Â*pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 12:47:53 -0800, Tom Gardner wrote: 2) If everyone turns their thermostats one degree closer to the outside temperature, drives a smaller car, and switches off phone chargers when not in use, will an energy crisis be averted? My sister pointed out recently that British people tend to keep their houses warmer than we did/do in NZ, so turning down the thermostat is not a hardship - just put on a pullover over your T-shirt in winter. Smaller cars is a problem for us in the trailer towing fraternity. My main gripe with the current crop of electric and hybrid cars is that nobody mentions towing, that I've seen anyway. There's one exception: Aptera say NO TOWING up front. I guess the same goes for many of the rest but they're too chicken to mention it. Hungry chargers are just stupidly bad technology and should be banned. Chargers that use no power[1] when they're plugged in but not connected to anything have been around for at least 8 years, so there's no excuse for selling one that burns power when its under no load. Anyway, I just looked at four chargers I happened to have handy and here's what it shows they burn when plugged into the mains and disconnected from the things they charge: 18 month old Lenovo laptop PSU (65w o/p) Â* Â* Â* Â*0 Â* watts. my much older Thinkpad 560Z PSU (54w o/p) Â* Â* Â* 1.9 watts. iPAQ 3630 PSU (10w o/p) Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* 2.0 watts. 2001 Motorola T250 phone charger (2.5w o/p) Â* Â* 0 Â* watts. [1] I recently bought myself a power meter for a tenner from Maplins. It which reads to 0.1 watts, so a reading of 0.0 should mean 50 mW consumption or less. These power meters are simple to use: they have a 13 amp plug on the back and a 13 amp socket on the front, so you just plug them in between the wall and the device you want to measure. -- martin@ Â* | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org Â* Â* Â* | I suspect the concept of "powered trailers" will pop up more frequently. This is not an unproven concept since the mining industry has used it for years. If you use a load cell to measure the push-pull loads at the trailer hitch, the data can be used to control electric motors in the trailer wheels. If a glider trailer housed a large battery, possibly charged with a large solar panel on top and wheel motors, it could minimize the loads imposed on the towing vehicle by essentially powering itself. The wheel motors would also provide regenerative braking. The whole car-trailer combo then becomes a parallel hybrid which permits the use of a much smaller and less powerful car. The fuel savings while towing would be small compared to the fuel savings achieved by driving a small, fuel efficient yet tow capable car when not towing. The energy capacity of the trailer battery pack coupled to an inverter could also power things like power tools and polishers when parked at the airport. That sounds good, practical, even. I've seen film of power trailers behind Landrovers which seemed remarkably good at ploughing through mud in off-road tests. Do you know if there are stability problems with these rigs at highway speeds? I ask because I expect mining trailers would be somewhat slower and the film didn't show anything operating at much over 10 mph. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#215
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 12, 5:08*pm, Martin Gregorie
wrote: On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 08:12:31 -0800, bildan wrote: On Jan 11, 6:56*pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 12:47:53 -0800, Tom Gardner wrote: 2) If everyone turns their thermostats one degree closer to the outside temperature, drives a smaller car, and switches off phone chargers when not in use, will an energy crisis be averted? My sister pointed out recently that British people tend to keep their houses warmer than we did/do in NZ, so turning down the thermostat is not a hardship - just put on a pullover over your T-shirt in winter. Smaller cars is a problem for us in the trailer towing fraternity. My main gripe with the current crop of electric and hybrid cars is that nobody mentions towing, that I've seen anyway. There's one exception: Aptera say NO TOWING up front. I guess the same goes for many of the rest but they're too chicken to mention it. Hungry chargers are just stupidly bad technology and should be banned. Chargers that use no power[1] when they're plugged in but not connected to anything have been around for at least 8 years, so there's no excuse for selling one that burns power when its under no load. Anyway, I just looked at four chargers I happened to have handy and here's what it shows they burn when plugged into the mains and disconnected from the things they charge: 18 month old Lenovo laptop PSU (65w o/p) * * * *0 * watts. my much older Thinkpad 560Z PSU (54w o/p) * * * 1.9 watts. iPAQ 3630 PSU (10w o/p) * * * * * * * * * * * * 2.0 watts. 2001 Motorola T250 phone charger (2.5w o/p) * * 0 * watts. [1] I recently bought myself a power meter for a tenner from Maplins. It which reads to 0.1 watts, so a reading of 0.0 should mean 50 mW consumption or less. These power meters are simple to use: they have a 13 amp plug on the back and a 13 amp socket on the front, so you just plug them in between the wall and the device you want to measure. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | I suspect the concept of "powered trailers" will pop up more frequently.. *This is not an unproven concept since the mining industry has used it for years. If you use a load cell to measure the push-pull loads at the trailer hitch, the data can be used to control electric motors in the trailer wheels. *If a glider *trailer housed a large battery, possibly charged with a large solar panel on top and wheel motors, it could minimize the loads imposed on the towing vehicle by essentially powering itself. *The wheel motors would also provide regenerative braking. The whole car-trailer combo then becomes a parallel hybrid which permits the use of a much smaller and less powerful car. *The fuel savings while towing would be small compared to the fuel savings achieved by driving a small, fuel efficient yet tow capable car when not towing. The energy capacity of the trailer battery pack coupled to an inverter could also power things like power tools and polishers when parked at the airport. That sounds good, practical, even. I've seen film of power trailers behind Landrovers which seemed remarkably good at ploughing through mud in off-road tests. Do you know if there are stability problems with these rigs at highway speeds? I ask because I expect mining trailers would be somewhat slower and the film didn't show anything operating at much over 10 mph. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | I guess it could be done wrong so stability problems ensued. However, electric wheel motors create an opportunity for dynamic stability control. One motor could be instantly braked while the other powered forward to counter sway. Since the motors are directly coupled to the wheels, this could happen at the speed of electronics. Accelerometers in the trailer would sense sway. I would think it could be done in a way to create dead solid stability. |
#216
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 11, 7:34*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Bruce Hoult wrote: On Jan 11, 4:39 pm, Eric Greenwell wrote: "Only 19 percent of the ice cover was over 2 years old, the least in the satellite record and far below the 1981-2000 average of 52 percent." I don't know about you, but it seems clear to me that if ice was at the lowest level ever two years ago and has since staged a huge recovery, then saying that 81% of the the ice cover is less than two years old doesn't actually add any new information and certainly is not bad news. It has not staged a "huge" recovery. 2009 is the _third lowest year_ in the 30 year satellite record. And the loss of multi-year ice is crucial: "The ice cover remained thin, leaving the ice cover vulnerable to melt in coming summers." That's fromhttp://nsidc.org/news/press/20091005_minimumpr.html While you are on that page, take a look at fig. 3 to see the extent of the recovery. And finally, the examination of the ice from ships found the ice was less that the satellites were reporting: "Recently published research by Barber and colleagues shows that the ice cover was even more fragile at the end of the melt season than satellite data indicated, with regions of the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas covered by small, rotten ice http://nsidc.org/cgi-bin/words/word.pl?rotten%20ice floes." There is no good news from the National Snow and Ice Center, regardless of the The Mail says. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Look at this: http://climate.nasa.gov/news/index.c...ews&NewsID=242 |
#217
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 12, 4:12*pm, bildan wrote:
On Jan 11, 6:56*pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 12:47:53 -0800, Tom Gardner wrote: 2) If everyone turns their thermostats one degree closer to the outside temperature, drives a smaller car, and switches off phone chargers when not in use, will an energy crisis be averted? My sister pointed out recently that British people tend to keep their houses warmer than we did/do in NZ, so turning down the thermostat is not a hardship - just put on a pullover over your T-shirt in winter. Smaller cars is a problem for us in the trailer towing fraternity. My main gripe with the current crop of electric and hybrid cars is that nobody mentions towing, that I've seen anyway. There's one exception: Aptera say NO TOWING up front. I guess the same goes for many of the rest but they're too chicken to mention it. Hungry chargers are just stupidly bad technology and should be banned. Chargers that use no power[1] when they're plugged in but not connected to anything have been around for at least 8 years, so there's no excuse for selling one that burns power when its under no load. Anyway, I just looked at four chargers I happened to have handy and here's what it shows they burn when plugged into the mains and disconnected from the things they charge: 18 month old Lenovo laptop PSU (65w o/p) * * * *0 * watts. my much older Thinkpad 560Z PSU (54w o/p) * * * 1.9 watts. iPAQ 3630 PSU (10w o/p) * * * * * * * * * * * * 2.0 watts. 2001 Motorola T250 phone charger (2.5w o/p) * * 0 * watts. [1] I recently bought myself a power meter for a tenner from Maplins. It * which reads to 0.1 watts, so a reading of 0.0 should mean 50 mW consumption or less. These power meters are simple to use: they have a 13 amp plug on the back and a 13 amp socket on the front, so you just plug them in between the wall and the device you want to measure. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | I suspect the concept of "powered trailers" will pop up more frequently. *This is not an unproven concept since the mining industry has used it for years. If you use a load cell to measure the push-pull loads at the trailer hitch, the data can be used to control electric motors in the trailer wheels. *If a glider *trailer housed a large battery, possibly charged with a large solar panel on top and wheel motors, it could minimize the loads imposed on the towing vehicle by essentially powering itself. *The wheel motors would also provide regenerative braking. The whole car-trailer combo then becomes a parallel hybrid which permits the use of a much smaller and less powerful car. *The fuel savings while towing would be small compared to the fuel savings achieved by driving a small, fuel efficient yet tow capable car when not towing. The energy capacity of the trailer battery pack coupled to an inverter could also power things like power tools and polishers when parked at the airport.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Just a small practical problem, if you want to go at any speed. Generally speaking the heavier the trailer is in relation to the towing vehicle, the less stable the combination becomes. I suspect that the concept of the trailer pushing a small car would make it even more unstable. Derek Copeland |
#218
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 13, 6:40*am, T8 wrote:
Back to trailers: *From fuel consumption numbers, I can back out that my Komet trailer/glider has an effective fuel consumption of 120 miles to the gallon at 60 - 65 mph on level road, no wind. That's pretty impressive. When I was towing a Grob two seater in (admittedly a pretty crappy trailer) it reduced the range of my 2.5l Subaru on a 56l fill up from about 620 km to about 350 km. Say, from 32 mpg to about 18 mpg. http://hoult.org/bruce/Subaru_with_TA.jpg To put it into the normal units used here, the car alone normally uses about 9 l/100 km on a long trip, and the combo used about 16 l/100km. That implies that the trailer used about 7 l/100 km, or 40 mpg. I'm sure a Komet with a single seat glider would be much better, but I'm surprised it's three times better. I note in passing that my Subaru&trailer combo used only very slightly more fuel than my Dad's 4.1 l Falcon station wagon does by itself. One more point: for most of us outside the USA, I believe that the practical lower limit on vehicle size for towing is governed not by power (you can always change down and go slower when necessary) but by the stability and controllability of the combo under braking and on steep downhills. Too-small cars are ones that get shoved badly when braking on downhill switchbacks, and ones that arrive at the bottom of a couple of thousand foot descent with the brakes smoking. Here in Wellington NZ, the benchmark is a run over the Rimutaka Hill to the Wairarapa for a day's gliding at Jury Hill or Masterton. The summit is only 1800 ft but it's enough to sort the good tow cars from the bad ones (or stupid drivers who don't use engine braking). |
#219
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Wed, 13 Jan 2010 01:33:59 -0800, Bruce Hoult wrote:
I'm sure a Komet with a single seat glider would be much better, but I'm surprised it's three times better. That probably depends on what you're driving: a single seat trailer is usually no higher than the tow car. If the latter is an estate (station wagon) then hanging a trailer on it may only add rolling drag from the extra axle plus skin friction drag. If the trailer cross section fits behind the tow vehicle you've effectively lost its front surface drag and transferred the tow vehicle's rear end drag to the rear of the trailer. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#220
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Global Warming/Climate Change (was contrails)
On Jan 12, 5:08*pm, Martin Gregorie
wrote: On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 08:12:31 -0800, bildan wrote: On Jan 11, 6:56*pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 12:47:53 -0800, Tom Gardner wrote: 2) If everyone turns their thermostats one degree closer to the outside temperature, drives a smaller car, and switches off phone chargers when not in use, will an energy crisis be averted? My sister pointed out recently that British people tend to keep their houses warmer than we did/do in NZ, so turning down the thermostat is not a hardship - just put on a pullover over your T-shirt in winter. Smaller cars is a problem for us in the trailer towing fraternity. My main gripe with the current crop of electric and hybrid cars is that nobody mentions towing, that I've seen anyway. There's one exception: Aptera say NO TOWING up front. I guess the same goes for many of the rest but they're too chicken to mention it. Hungry chargers are just stupidly bad technology and should be banned. Chargers that use no power[1] when they're plugged in but not connected to anything have been around for at least 8 years, so there's no excuse for selling one that burns power when its under no load. Anyway, I just looked at four chargers I happened to have handy and here's what it shows they burn when plugged into the mains and disconnected from the things they charge: 18 month old Lenovo laptop PSU (65w o/p) * * * *0 * watts. my much older Thinkpad 560Z PSU (54w o/p) * * * 1.9 watts. iPAQ 3630 PSU (10w o/p) * * * * * * * * * * * * 2.0 watts. 2001 Motorola T250 phone charger (2.5w o/p) * * 0 * watts. [1] I recently bought myself a power meter for a tenner from Maplins. It which reads to 0.1 watts, so a reading of 0.0 should mean 50 mW consumption or less. These power meters are simple to use: they have a 13 amp plug on the back and a 13 amp socket on the front, so you just plug them in between the wall and the device you want to measure. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | I suspect the concept of "powered trailers" will pop up more frequently.. *This is not an unproven concept since the mining industry has used it for years. If you use a load cell to measure the push-pull loads at the trailer hitch, the data can be used to control electric motors in the trailer wheels. *If a glider *trailer housed a large battery, possibly charged with a large solar panel on top and wheel motors, it could minimize the loads imposed on the towing vehicle by essentially powering itself. *The wheel motors would also provide regenerative braking. The whole car-trailer combo then becomes a parallel hybrid which permits the use of a much smaller and less powerful car. *The fuel savings while towing would be small compared to the fuel savings achieved by driving a small, fuel efficient yet tow capable car when not towing. The energy capacity of the trailer battery pack coupled to an inverter could also power things like power tools and polishers when parked at the airport. That sounds good, practical, even. I've seen film of power trailers behind Landrovers which seemed remarkably good at ploughing through mud in off-road tests. Do you know if there are stability problems with these rigs at highway speeds? I ask because I expect mining trailers would be somewhat slower and the film didn't show anything operating at much over 10 mph. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | Just to clear up a small confusion, the powered trailer would never 'push' the towing vehicle. In fact, there would likely always be some residual "pull" to prevent noisy load reversals. |
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