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November_Echo 10 hours ago

> Most of the cost will be safety systems designed to prevent the battery from being exciting and even then a crash will likely set them off.

People say the same thing about Li-ion batteries yet they have proven to be significantly less likely to catch fire compared to ICE vehicles [1].

> people who don't want to admit that large scale electrification is a dumb idea. We electrified everything that made sense to electrify a half century ago.

I'm very curious to hear why you think this. If nothing else, the 'situation' with the Strait of Hormuz would seem to have shown the importance of energy independence achieved through large scale electrification. Individually, I couldn't go back to an ICE car or even garden tools, they're worse in every way.

1. https://www.mynrma.com.au/open-road/advice-and-how-to/unders...

fluoridation 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

>People say the same thing about Li-ion batteries yet they have proven to be significantly less likely to catch fire compared to ICE vehicles [1].

Isn't the nasty thing about lithium fires not how likely they are, but how difficult they are to put out, as well as how hot they burn?

brudgers 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Yep. Let it burn is currently the high bit of fire fighting protocol for EV fires used by local fire services.

fluoridation 5 hours ago | parent [-]

It's only a matter of time before an EV catches fire after crashing into a building and a bunch of people die because the fire couldn't be put out.

AnthonyMouse an hour ago | parent [-]

Wouldn't they just chain the burning car and pull it out of the building?

dotancohen 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

No.

fluoridation 8 hours ago | parent [-]

Yes.

nandomrumber 6 hours ago | parent [-]

If we’ve got data, let’s go with the data.

If all we’ve got is opinions, let’s go with yours.

nandomrumber 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

For a sobering look at the reality of electric vehicle fires, including his involvement in some original research, you can’t go passed StacheD:

https://youtube.com/@stachedtraining?si=rMfvXq_GFa1hT5ra

Toutouxc an hour ago | parent [-]

I went in and played a few videos. I'm not sure if anything in there is "sobering" to me (as an EV owner), all the incidents that he shows make sense and the physics are easy to understand.

He seems to be pretty knowledgeable about battery and EV architecture and the stated facts and numbers seem solid, but it also sounds like he takes great care not to scare away his flock of EV-hating idiots.

hunterpayne 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[flagged]

jeremysalwen 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Just because you state your opinion confidently, does not mean you are correct. For example, as of 2024, there are 30 billion kilograms of proven reserves of lithium, more than enough to replace every single one of the 1.5 billion ICE cars in the world with an electric car. Please focus more on getting the facts right, and less on speculating about the character of other commenters in an overemotional manner.

sov 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> Na is 30x the volatility of Li.

Elemental sodium is reactive. Ionic sodium is not, lest you blow up your dinner. Furthermore, the lithium part of a Li-ion battery isn't the flammable part, the electrolyte is.

> If you want to replace FF there is exactly one solution, that's nuclear.

You're proposing to... replace vehicular internal combustion engines with nuclear reactors?

> Stop acting like you care about this issue. You have never cared enough to learn about it, so until you do, stop spreading misinformation about how physics works.

It's wild for you, in particular, to take such a weirdly aggressive stance here. Zero basis in reality, just virtue signaling.

November_Echo 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> Just like you (at the moment) are acting like you don't care if people die in fires.

There is nothing in my comment that could possibly be interpreted as meaning I don't care about people dying in fires.

> If you want to replace FF there is exactly one solution, that's nuclear.

We're talking about batteries, so I'm not sure how this is relevant unless you want reactors in cars?

> Stop acting like you care about this issue. You have never cared enough to learn about it, so until you do, stop spreading misinformation about how physics works.

I made a single, sourced, claim in my comment and didn't mention physics once?

> Too bad there isn't enough Li for everyone to have one.

Could this be why companies are looking at alternatives? Either way, this claim really should be provided with a source.

lazide 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Sodium ion batteries seem roughly as fire prone as LFP - which is to say, no particularly?

What are you going on about?