Originally Posted By: JHZR2
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I call it smarter, more prudent engineering to move to IC with battery assist over some reasonably low speed. Let the battery ops be best suited for what they are - low speed ops.
Absolutely, griping because the Volt is not 100% electric motor driven 100% of the time is absurd.
Comparing it to a train (or a diesel electric submarine) is likewise absurd - both move at a speed orders of magnitude less than 70 mph last I checked, and they have a bit more room for onboard equipment, as well as a completely different transport mission. Since an electric motor can deliver 100% of it's torque at 0 rpm, a motor generator setup is optimum for a train that has to start and pull a massive load at low speeds. Can't see how that compares to a passenger automobile in any way.
Maybe Edmunds should provide some attribution for the quotes they rely upon ( I didn't see any ), so one can make sure they are not taken out of context or just made up. Of course out of context quotes generally make the best hatchet jobs, and I'm guessing that people that read their tripe are likely not the brightest bulbs in the box.
This is good news as far as I am concerned - I've thought about getting one of these and one of my concerns was that it would not have the power and range to cross the Boston mountains that separate our two residences at freeway speeds (most econoboxes struggle with inadequate power to pull these grades). Apparently it does.
So, what we are left with is that it can run totally electric around town for a longer distance than the other leading hybrid, and can run on a mechanically connected motor at high speeds for long distances that the other newcomer, the Leaf, can't.
In a normal world, the Volt would be called brilliant
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I call it smarter, more prudent engineering to move to IC with battery assist over some reasonably low speed. Let the battery ops be best suited for what they are - low speed ops.
Absolutely, griping because the Volt is not 100% electric motor driven 100% of the time is absurd.
Comparing it to a train (or a diesel electric submarine) is likewise absurd - both move at a speed orders of magnitude less than 70 mph last I checked, and they have a bit more room for onboard equipment, as well as a completely different transport mission. Since an electric motor can deliver 100% of it's torque at 0 rpm, a motor generator setup is optimum for a train that has to start and pull a massive load at low speeds. Can't see how that compares to a passenger automobile in any way.
Maybe Edmunds should provide some attribution for the quotes they rely upon ( I didn't see any ), so one can make sure they are not taken out of context or just made up. Of course out of context quotes generally make the best hatchet jobs, and I'm guessing that people that read their tripe are likely not the brightest bulbs in the box.
This is good news as far as I am concerned - I've thought about getting one of these and one of my concerns was that it would not have the power and range to cross the Boston mountains that separate our two residences at freeway speeds (most econoboxes struggle with inadequate power to pull these grades). Apparently it does.
So, what we are left with is that it can run totally electric around town for a longer distance than the other leading hybrid, and can run on a mechanically connected motor at high speeds for long distances that the other newcomer, the Leaf, can't.
In a normal world, the Volt would be called brilliant
