• Mihies@programming.dev
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    27 days ago

    It makes sense for trucks and such, but there were other attempts before and none stuck. I’m curious how this one will go.

          • Mihies@programming.dev
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            27 days ago

            Right, but those can’t really compare to four wheeled vehicles where batteries are much bigger and harder to swap. I wonder how is the battery ownership working - you probably don’t own the battery?

            • Cort@lemmy.world
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              26 days ago

              There are different plans with options to own batteries or rent them or both. Last I checked they were in the 3rd Gen of interchangeable batteries that work with 1st Gen units but expand power capacity.

              (Originally 1.35kwh now 1.75kwh; I just googled)

              So, 6 would get about 30 miles range in a car and be at the modern 300v minimum if run in series. 8 would be enough for the average American commute of 40 miles (round trip).

              While that math does work out to 60 battery packs to get a 300 mile range, I don’t think that much range would be necessary since the battery swap time is so much faster than recharging. That would mean building out a fairly massive battery swap network, but it’s already been done successfully in some countries.