since last year, I affix this label to our bikes/batteries:To my mind, please correct me if you can bring the relevant facts here, the problems lie with both the sellers of e-bikes and the battery manufacturers, seemingly leaving Joe Public in the dark about maintenance and safety.
Probably because many would be put off if they knew the truth, and would not buy a bike.
Agreed, but you'll find that all these fires started by the e-car lithium batteries are Teslas which have caught fire several more times than the twice you mentioned. To give themselves a power density and range advantage they use very large numbers of close packed high density cells of the types we use in our e-bike batteries which are very unsuitable for safe e-car use. One model has 6,200 cells!The other two cars were electric and could not be put out. After about 10 hours of fighting the flames, they had to organise a huge tank, fill it with water, and dunk each car for an hour, to stop the chemical combustion - TWICE, once for each car.
Teslas have caught fire, and the time to get out of the vehicle is VERY short!
A Tesla driver was burnt to death last year.
I looked for the video and found dozens of electric car fires. These batteries can be very unsafe under certain conditions, and everyone needs to be fully informed and not kept in the dark:-
regardsYouTube
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Andy
Basically, what you are describing is an e-battery form of Russian roulette!Agreed, but you'll find that all these fires started by the e-car lithium batteries are Teslas which have caught fire several more times than the twice you mentioned. To give themselves a power density and range advantage they use very large numbers of close packed high density cells of the types we use in our e-bike batteries which are very unsuitable for safe e-car use. One model has 6,200 cells!
The launch of their latest model 3 using 21700 type cells* was repeatedly delayed by three years due to lithium battery fires destroying them before the model was finally released to the public.
Other makes haven't had these problems. The largest selling one and earliest affordable e-car is the Nissan Leaf which with some third of a million on the road sold during the last ten years has never had a lithium traction battery fire.
I carefully specified that exactly since one Leaf had a conventional car fire in it's normal lead-acid battery circuit which some have wrongly said was the traction battery, which was not in any way involved.
For further clarity the Leaf's lithium traction battery with its much smaller number of low density cells is exclusively used just for traction. For all the normal car electrical functions they use a normal car battery under the bonnet in conventional car battery circuitry. This as we know can cause under bonnet car fires in certain circumstances, but at least on an e-car there's no tank of fuel to add to the fire or ignite in a collision.
N.B.
* Announced by Samsung and LG Chem in 2015 for use in electric bikes. By January 2017, was being produced at Tesla Gigafactory 1 for the Tesla Model 3, reaching an annual production rate of 1.8 billion cells annually (20 GWh per year) by mid-2018, with a July 2019 Tesla forecast that they would ship 2 GWh of batteries in 2019.
Alarmingly these batteries when at end of Tesla car life are used in home powerwalls, and they are also installed new in powerwalls.
.
Electric cars clearly don't suit your needs but they are a perfect match for the needs of many plus those willing and able to adapt their lifestyles.Basically, what you are describing is an e-battery form of Russian roulette!
Having a bike fire, which many YouTube videos show, is one thing, as you can easily get off and away from it generally.
But having an e-car battery fire and getting out of it, is a world of difference.......
I studied the market for electric cars, well before the (lack of) safety of the cells used became more apparent, and as I need a car that can travel over 1,000 Kms, without needing a recharge, I was not interested.
An electric car cannot pull my heavy caravan, so not interested.
Cars where the Air Con did not reduce the range.
Cars where the heater does not reduce the range.
Cars that after an average battery life are basically worthless after somewhere between 5 to 7 years, as a replacement battery costs more than the current value of the 6 year old car (or what it should have!) if the battery did not need replacing.....
Furthermore, I see a problem with reconditioned batteries, where someone, a company, rebuilds a battery with old and new cells, eventually fires will become a daily happening....
Cars that if they catch fire, I and my family must move damn quick to get out alive!
So electric cars are not for me! I see them as the very worst "CON" around at this time....
I expect more and more deaths due to battery fires in cars, over the next 10 years.
Andy
Yes you've expressed all this to me before, and I strongly disagree, especially since you are not sufficiently well informed due to being stuck with out of date information:Basically, what you are describing is an e-battery form of Russian roulette!
Having a bike fire, which many YouTube videos show, is one thing, as you can easily get off and away from it generally.
But having an e-car battery fire and getting out of it, is a world of difference.......
I studied the market for electric cars, well before the (lack of) safety of the cells used became more apparent, and as I need a car that can travel over 1,000 Kms, without needing a recharge, I was not interested.
An electric car cannot pull my heavy caravan, so not interested.
Cars where the Air Con did not reduce the range.
Cars where the heater does not reduce the range.
Cars that after an average battery life are basically worthless after somewhere between 5 to 7 years, as a replacement battery costs more than the current value of the 6 year old car (or what it should have!) if the battery did not need replacing.....
Furthermore, I see a problem with reconditioned batteries, where someone, a company, rebuilds a battery with old and new cells, eventually fires will become a daily happening....
Cars that if they catch fire, I and my family must move damn quick to get out alive!
So electric cars are not for me! I see them as the very worst "CON" around at this time....
I expect more and more deaths due to battery fires in cars, over the next 10 years.
Andy
Do not store indoors?since last year, I affix this label to our bikes/batteries:
I also post frequently about fire risks, charging, storage of e-bike batteries and recommend members to pay a little more for Samsung and Panasonic 18650 cells.
They can only be sold to people that do no personal research, are totally uninformed about the pros and cons (that word again!) of the current (pun intended!) battery chemistry and its pitfalls.Electric cars clearly don't suit your needs but they are a perfect match for the needs of many plus those willing and able to adapt their lifestyles.
Why does that make them "the very worst CON around at this time"?
I think you need to do some proper research before coming out with such silly statements.
ebiker99
Fuel | Flash point | Autoignition temperature |
---|---|---|
Gasoline (petrol) | −43 °C (−45 °F) | 280 °C (536 °F) |
Diesel (2-D) | >52 °C (126 °F) | 210 °C (410 °F) |
Jet fuel (A/A-1) | >38 °C (100 °F) | 210 °C (410 °F) |
Kerosene | >38–72 °C (100–162 °F) | 220 °C (428 °F) |
I personally only store them outdoors in the shed the same as I would a can of petrol, better safe than sorry.Do not store indoors?
I keep my Bosch battery indoors (ins cupboard) any time it's not on the bike. It's safer from theft than in a garage and stored at a better and more stable temperature range.
I would expect the chance of a 60-80% charged Bosch battery deciding to self-combust in the absence of fire or electrical input is so tiny I would be better worrying about things falling on my house from aircraft flying overhead.
Have you heard of ebike batteries self-combusting without fire or charge?
Since you've done all the research please can you tell us what what proportion of petrol engined cars catch fire and the same for diesel engined cars and electric cars.They can only be sold to people that do no personal research, are totally uninformed about the pros and cons (that word again!) of the current (pun intended!) battery chemistry and its pitfalls.
Combined with uninformed politicians trying to "jump on the bandwagon" of electric cars.
Which have been proven, if you know where and what to read, have a huge carbon footprint when being manufactured (forgotten/ignored by most!), actually greater than that of a modern petrol/diesel car, plus the fact that electricity today, still has a carbon footprint, that is admittedly getting smaller, but still there, even today!
Combined with the relatively short life of the huge and expensive battery, plus I would not want any of my family in one as the dangers are always there, especially in the case of a medium traffic accident, destroying the integrity of the battery's containment system, the end result is usually a fierce fire, when people may still be dazed or even unconscious in the vehicle.
Its also the reason that I have driven diesel engine cars since 1985, as petrol is so easily to set on fire. Just note the temperature levels for gassing of petrol and gassing for diesel! A flashpoint difference of almost 100°C!
See below:-
All of us on this planet are (mostly anyway!) blessed with a brain, which we must learn to use, especially when making decisions. Uninformed decisions are often bad. That is the case for many with regard to electric cars today......
Simply following the crowd is a lack of own decision making, that many happily do, but not me, not ever! If I am in such a crowd, I am leading, not following!
So you either accept the dangers for you and yours, or you don't! I don't!
Better battery chemistries are already visible on the horizon, with many of the poorer features of Li-ion, as it is today, being overcome. Hopefully all!
In the future, we may even say such things as "Do you remember when we drove cars with a huge Li-ion batteries?
All the fires and injuries caused?
We must all have been crazy!
Regards
Andy
PS.
Examples
Fuel Flash point Autoignition temperature Gasoline (petrol) −43 °C (−45 °F) 280 °C (536 °F) Diesel (2-D) >52 °C (126 °F) 210 °C (410 °F) Jet fuel (A/A-1) >38 °C (100 °F) 210 °C (410 °F) Kerosene >38–72 °C (100–162 °F) 220 °C (428 °F)
The risk of having them around in a fire I understand, but I haven't ever heard of them self-igniting other than in a fire or when someone is trying to charge them or they are otherwise in use.I personally only store them outdoors in the shed the same as I would a can of petrol, better safe than sorry.
For the second time you insult me with numerous lies, despite being previously corrected, the trademark of a bigot. I do have a safe electric car, based on longer and far superior in depth knowledge of the subject. These are in part due to being older than you and in part due to my many years in the motor trade with industry ties, a few that I still have.They can only be sold to people that do no personal research, are totally uninformed about the pros and cons (that word again!) of the current (pun intended!) battery chemistry and its pitfalls.
You've probably come to correct conclusion that the current electric car technology wouldn't suit your current lifestyle but for many people they are ideal, for example a neighbour in our small village has one for visiting local shops and friends and when they need to go on longer journeys they use her husband's IC car.I would have thought that the ridiculous cost & almost total lack of charging infrastructure would put more people off buying an electric car than the rather remote chance of it spontaneously combusting.
I mentioned on another thread how I considered replacing my existing Smart with a new one but discovered that they only do electric models now at 50% higher cost worse performance & a 70 mile range vs over 200 mile range.
Refuelling is an enormous issue as even assuming there were enough fast chargers that can give 100-150 miles in 15 minutes that compares very poorly to 5 minutes for 300 miles. Every single petrol pump would need to be replaced by 6-9 fast charging stations plus another charging station at every home & business in the country. If I run out of petrol I can thumb a lift to the garage & return with fuel or syphon it out of a friend's fuel tank. Good luck if you run out of battery power in the middle of nowhere as you need to be towed to a charging station.
Problem is charging them at home if you have not got a driveway as is the case in a lot of cities and towns.If you can pick up a new electric city car with more than 100 miles of range for £12k net and keep it topped up at home for pennies so you don't have to use a public charger then a lot of people will buy that rather than an Aygo, Micra or Fiat 500 ICE car.