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![]() wrote in message ... On May 7, 9:05 am, "DW downunder" noname wrote: 4. NO-ONE has mentioned the plethora of hybrid battery-equipped rollingstock currently prototyped, on trial, in low volume production etc around the world. Given Crossrail's gestation, can I assert with some confidence that by then it will be quite normal for trains to extend a moderate distance beyond the wires or juice rail. 25kV to Reading would not necessarily be a pre-requisite to CrossRail service by the mid-10s. No, you can't. Batteries are a crap way of storing energy. Making batteries not be a crap way of storing energy has been a major preoccupation among engineers and physicists and - even more importantly - the people who fund them for decades. They've made batteries be a slightly less crap way of storing energy. They haven't made them not be a crap way of storing energy. None of the current trials do anything to reverse that. At absolute best, a battery train might just about be a solution for Henley. It would be an insane solution for 6ish tph on the GWML. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org Thank you, gentlemen - and your sources? Perhaps a little more depth would help me understand - as I understand you, with supercapacitors, emerging lithium technologies and our old faithful lead-acid gel we haven't yet got a package of technologies that can be tuned to the precise characteristics of suburban/interurban rail - and can't expect one by the time Crossrail is commissioned? Is it the vibrating environment, the heating and cooling cycles, the economics of battery life and charging cycles, or the energy storage per unit mass that is/are the "fatal" issues from your data sources? Crossrail is at best 5 years out. Hybrid motor car products are moving into the mainstream, 3rd generation Prius, local manufacture of larger Hybrids by Toyota outside Japan (hybrid Camry to be made in Australia, release 2010, for example), more manufacturers in the market, Obama forcing GM and Chrysler down the hybrid, ecodiesel, light and green road, etc. With all this putting volume into the automotive propulsion battery market, you're convinced price and performance won't trend towards technical and economic viability for transit and urban rail traction applications? OK David down under |
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