Show more

Happy everyone.

Let me take this small space to remind everyone that wages are to wealth as weather is to climate.

The fact that someone would pay me 3x what I paid for my house does not in any way change the utility of my house for me, but it does triple my wealth.

This market analysis makes sense to me. #Hydrogen is only a viable option for transport whenever batteries are technically not feasible. The cost of operating and maintaining #FCEV technology almost always outweighs the benefits – and there’s no reason to believe that scaling up will fundamentally change the outcome
hydrogeninsight.com/transport/

Headphone jack removal in mobile devices is still one of the worst tech decision for consumers

this is what happens when you make a typed language without some form of generics 😆

13yo ME: Don't tell me what to do!
45yo ME: I would greatly appreciate it if someone would tell me exactly, in great detail, and in precisely which order, what to do.

If are less complex and take less labor to manufacture, why is that a problem? It sounds like a better product to me.

Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

Last update from the on-site #BurningMan radio station is all entrances/movement still shut down, shelter in place, "it will get cold tonight". Also asking people either RVs to let people without RVs share their space (ie muddy tent dwellers). Also a message saying no one else will be allowed into the site for the remainder of the event, and not to come. #mud 2023-09-02 1230PM

SHOCKER: According to this DeSmog article, a years-long media blitz against heat pumps in the UK was funded by a gas lobby group.

Cue the surprise face!

(The good news is, even with the misinformation heat pumps are continuing to see double digit growth globally.)

desmog.com/2023/07/20/revealed

#heat #gas #sustainability #fossilfuels

#PDXElections continuing to heat up.

One neat aspect to Ranked-Choice Voting is candidates could co-campaign *together* to gain more exposure without sacrificing their own constituency (e.g. "Vote @timurender1, AND @stephrouth for D1").

RCV builds collaboration, not division. t.co/Sa1D6jgK3L

Ok, Let’s talk about Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles () as an alternative to Battery Electric Vehicles ().

A FCEV uses the same electric motors as BEVs but gets its power from chemically reacting H₂ with O₂ from the air in a way that produces an electric current - a fuel cell. None of this is new technology Fuel Cells were a mature and reliable power source by the time the Apollo program was landing people on the moon. The issue with fuel cells is the same as with Enteral Combustion Engines(ICE) they are most efficient in a very narrow energy band great if the goal is to power the life support on a space craft, but not for the extremely variable loads needed to drive a car.

For this reason, FCEVs are hybrids with the same Li batteries as BEVs and ICE Hybrids like the Prius. Like ICE Hybrids they use the battery to accelerate and as storage for regenerative breaking with the fuel cell providing a constant recharge.

Why I’m skeptical of FCEVs

1) Greenwashing Hydrogen. FCEV advocates will point out that the only tailpipe emission is water vapor. The question is where does the hydrogen come from. By far the least expensive way to produce hydrogen gas is to crack the hydrogen atoms off of petrochemical hydrocarbons. As a mater of basic chemistry it takes far less energy to crack hydrocarbons than it does to electrolize water. And unlike the electrical grid where technologies like solar, wind and nuclear are already deployed and becoming an increasing share of our electric grid. Processes to produce hydrogen from water at anything close the the cost to strip it off fossil fuels is in the same development stage as cold fusion. at least for the next decade green hydrogen will be a premium product only available to the wealthiest buyers.

2) Hydrogen storage is hard. To fit enough hydrogen on a moving passenger car for it to have a 300 mile range requires pressures of 10,000psi (700 bar). The kinds of pressure vessels that can safely handle that pressure are expensive, and need regular inspection. Having had to keep a compressed air tank of just 200 psi in a fixed certified, I can tell you that there will be significant costs to regularly inspecting a 10,000 psi tank full of flammable gas that needs to survive a collision with one of the 2023 lineup of full sized puck up trucks.

But that is just the start. Hydrogen leaks. No matter how good you think your valves and fittings are the smallest molecule in the universe stored under huge pressure will find a way out. Ask anyone who has experience in the space industry where hydrogen is already the fuel of choice and they will tell you that hydrogen leaks are just a fact that has to be engineered around. On a vehicle this will be a small annoyance but at a fueling station this will be significant. The farther Hydrogen is transported and the longer it must be stored the higher the losses. There is also the energy factor of compressing that gas. To the best of my knowledge the prodigious amount of work done to pressurize the fuel is never recovered

FCEVs and BEVs both started to be produced about a decade ago, and while Tesla has scaled out its supercharger network world wide in that time. Hydrogen has less than 100 filling stations all in California. While these stations can fill a car in 5 minutes, they can only fill 2 to 5 vehicles before spending an hour refilling their high pressure storage tanks. One could argue that all Hydrogen needs is an eccentric billionaire ready to lose money for a decade building out infrastructure, however I think the infrastructure challenges with hydrogen exceed even Musk levels of ambition.

3) Cost. My M3 already costs noticeably less per mile that the equivalent ICE vehicle. Baring a huge technological leap, hydrogen will always be more expensive. because the least expensive hydrogen is processed out of the same fuel that runs ICE cars and provides less energy per molecule than those hydrocarbons when reacted with O₂ hydrogen cannot help but be a more expensive fuel.

So why are hydrogen FCEV still a thing? Well the vehicles are lighter, fueling times are comparable to gasoline, and the petrochemical industry is desperate for them to succeed. The oil industry can see the writing on the wall as states like California will ban new ICE vehicle sales in 2030. While holding out hope for a green hydrogen future a generation away, they can continue to have a market for their product as gasoline and diesel phase out. “Hydrogen will become the green fuel of the future” explain their sock puppets knowing that dirty hydrogen from their product will always have a price advantage. And to be fair, turning a mobile source into a point source of emissions does provide the opportunity for carbon capture (so called Blue Hydrogen), but all this still add even more cost while BEVs already have a price advantage in their fuel - not to mention that every home in the developed world has the infrastructure to charge BEVs.

Why write all this? Because when you get down to it most of the being spread around s is coming from FCEV advocates who are trying not to let hydrogen become the betamax of the transition away from ICE transportation. In doing so they are making it harder than necessary for the world to move away from ICE transportation.

References:
thedrive.com/tech/33408/why-we

caranddriver.com/features/a411

Tags:

Yes, I do love my M3 LR. Yes, it is a viable car for both daily commuting and longer road trips. No it is not the perfect car, but neither was the Nissan Versa it replaced. No, I don’t agree with everything Elon Musk does, but neither do I agree with everything Carlos Ghosn the former CEO of Nissan did.

I am here to tell you that almost all the coming out about is completely unfounded. My M3 is better than my old Versa in just about every way you could imagine. Some thing are different, but those differences are far from deal breaking. Don’t let the luddites tell you technology is not a viable transportation option or that it cannot be widely adopted. I am here to tell you that it works, and I am not alone.

I had a lot of conversations around my old home town this week and there is a common theme. So let me ask the (please boost for more reach)

A partial or or complete social collapse by 2033 is

Who was the surgeon? I have some friends stuck in the underdark of that could really use the help
QT: mastodon.social/@arstechnica/1

Ars Technica  
Australian woman has 3-inch snake parasite pulled from her brain It's the first time the snake parasite has been seen in a human, let alone a brain...

I had a lot of conversations around my old home town this week and there is a common theme. So let me ask the (please boost for more reach)

A partial or or complete social collapse by 2033 is

I have seem some tomfuckery in my time, but this one is absolutely baffling.

#Excel

Maybe he figured Mastodon - especially an instance devoted to a niche interest - would offer the benefits of an online community without the incentivised toxicity. I don't know.

If that is indeed what he initially thought, it certainly wouldn't apply any more. Mastodon has grown. And it turns out that the self-serving behaviour we'd all blamed on algorithms can thrive without them.

3/

Show thread

How many times have you had COVID (that you know of)?

(Boosts are fine)

Show more
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.