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MidEngineManiac
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JUL 29, 02:56 AM
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Baker Electric Car
Didnt work out so well then, wont work out so well now.[This message has been edited by MidEngineManiac (edited 07-29-2022).]
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olejoedad
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JUL 29, 08:20 AM
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Until the discovery of oil in Pennsylvania, electric autos were the rage. Most autos were for short distance travel, in the urban areas and that's where the electricity was.
I think the government and manufacturers should be pushing hybrids rather than full electric - it's a big band for the buck as far as fuel economy goes, travel range as good as an internal combustion powered vehicle, and it would give the world time to get the tech and infrastructure in place for the next step.......
George Jetson's briefcase packaged, nuclear powered flying car.
I was promised one as a kid. What's the holdup?
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maryjane
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JUL 29, 09:35 AM
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JUL 29, 09:52 AM
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Pessimist!
This is kinda neat, didn't know about this:
Electric cabs in NY
Electrobat! Is that not a great name? It belongs to the first commercially viable EV effort. Philadelphians Pedro Salom and Henry G. Morris adapted technology from battery-electric street cars and boats and got a patent in 1894. At first very heavy and slow (like a trolley car, with steel “tires” and 1600 pounds of batteries onboard), their Electrobat [at left] evolved to employ pneumatic tires and lighter materials so that, by 1896, their rear-steer carriages used two 1.1-kW motors to move 25 miles at a top speed of 20 mph. Electrobats and another electric by Riker won a series of five-mile sprint races against gasoline Duryea automobiles in 1896.
Morris and Salom incorporated that year and moved on to the “cash-in” phase of a successful startup. Having built a few electric Hansom cabs [upper right] to compete with the horse-drawn vehicles then serving New York, they sold that idea to Issac L. Rice who incorporated the Electric Vehicle Company (EVC) in New Jersey. He in turn attracted big-money investors and partners and by the early 1900s, they had more than 600 electric cabs operating in New York with smaller fleets in Boston, Baltimore, and other eastern cities. In New York, the downtime it took to recharge batteries was addressed by converting an ice arena into a battery-swapping station where a cab could drive in, have its spent batteries replaced with a recharged set, and move on out. Brilliant, but like many a startup, it expanded too quickly, ran into unforeseen conflicts among investors and partners, and the whole taxi venture had collapsed by 1907.[This message has been edited by TheDigitalAlchemist (edited 07-29-2022).]
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JUL 29, 10:17 AM
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TheDigitalAlchemist
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JUL 29, 10:25 AM
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or perhaps they can use those "Nuclear diamond" batteries, or something that stores energy from that process called "DP motion"( Dance-pop?" )...
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MidEngineManiac
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JUL 29, 11:01 AM
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City I grew up in (Hamilton) had electric trolley busses well into the 80's. Whole grid of overhead wires across the city and the bus had 2 poles on top to make contact. Toronto ran a lot of their streetcars like that into the 80's as well.
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Valkrie9
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JUL 30, 02:29 AM
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dee-post, del. [This message has been edited by Valkrie9 (edited 07-30-2022).]
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Valkrie9
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JUL 30, 03:28 AM
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Early '50s, returning from a visit to the Riverdale Zoo, took the Queen St - Queensway streetcar, stopping at Grenadier Pond to see the Mallard ducks and Canadian geese. One of my earliest memories of the streetcars, age three, whizzing into the bulrushes on the bank, to great relief, and why I remember the occasion, lol. All duded up in my smart brown tweed suit and cap, the fall air cool and crisp, the colors of the distant hill across the pond bright in the setting sunlight. The Korean War was still blazing at the time, there were uniformed soldiers on the streets of Toronto, a long ago memory, still as clear as yesterday. The flag was the Union Jack, the Red Ensign too.
Electric streetcars still run today, of course, billions. Parade Schedule tomorrow 1861
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