Yes I have discussed battery modules many times on an EV forum and it has been discussed in great detail, but has a huge flaw and a long way off from ever being applicable. It would require all EV manufactures to standardize battery packages. Not just one but several configurations. Something like small, medium, and large to accommodate different size and weight vehicles.
I am not aware of any charging stations in the USA at that time period, but I do know in 1896 General Electric (Edison's Car Company) sold EV's and proposed a battery exchange/swap program to be ran by Hartford Electric Light and Power where users paid a monthly fee based on mileage for swap exchange program and was provided from 1910 to 1924 using Edison's NiFe battery. It was operated in the NYC metro area for delivery trucks.
There was a similar service provided in Chicago beginning in 1917. I am also aware the first Taxi service were electric cars in NYC and the vehicles were made by Electric Carriage and Wagon out of Philly.
Yes history is repeating itself some what, but because the technology now allows it. EV were king of the road from the 1890' up until the mid 20's. What did them in was the lack of a battery, improvements in ICE vehicles, the rapid build out of petroleum infrastructure, (non government funded) and Henry Ford's Model T.
Don't get me wrong Iron Bran, I am a huge fan of EV's. They are my hobby on a small scale albeit golf carts. I have two of them and 1 I modify to race. I have a Fairview NEV with a modified controller that allows me about 40 MPH and fully street legal on roads with 35 MPH or less speed limits. I aslo have an EZ-GO TXT series cart completely modifired with 650 amp controller, 48 volt LFP battery, and a 12 Kw racing motor. It only goes 35 MPH, but it only takes 5 feet to accelerate to 35 MPH and will climb a tree. I am fixing to rip all that out and upgrade to 72 volt battery. 500 amp controoler, and a WARP 9 Series DC motor. That should get me a 50 MPH rubber burning, wheelie popping golf cart.
I am not aware of any charging stations in the USA at that time period, but I do know in 1896 General Electric (Edison's Car Company) sold EV's and proposed a battery exchange/swap program to be ran by Hartford Electric Light and Power where users paid a monthly fee based on mileage for swap exchange program and was provided from 1910 to 1924 using Edison's NiFe battery. It was operated in the NYC metro area for delivery trucks.
There was a similar service provided in Chicago beginning in 1917. I am also aware the first Taxi service were electric cars in NYC and the vehicles were made by Electric Carriage and Wagon out of Philly.
Yes history is repeating itself some what, but because the technology now allows it. EV were king of the road from the 1890' up until the mid 20's. What did them in was the lack of a battery, improvements in ICE vehicles, the rapid build out of petroleum infrastructure, (non government funded) and Henry Ford's Model T.
Don't get me wrong Iron Bran, I am a huge fan of EV's. They are my hobby on a small scale albeit golf carts. I have two of them and 1 I modify to race. I have a Fairview NEV with a modified controller that allows me about 40 MPH and fully street legal on roads with 35 MPH or less speed limits. I aslo have an EZ-GO TXT series cart completely modifired with 650 amp controller, 48 volt LFP battery, and a 12 Kw racing motor. It only goes 35 MPH, but it only takes 5 feet to accelerate to 35 MPH and will climb a tree. I am fixing to rip all that out and upgrade to 72 volt battery. 500 amp controoler, and a WARP 9 Series DC motor. That should get me a 50 MPH rubber burning, wheelie popping golf cart.
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