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Perhaps we should have electric rails sunk into roads like Scalextric. Or use overhead supplies.
How 'Trolleybuses' provided Britain's first pollution-free public transport | Daily Mail Online
Z.
I do not think they could be considered pollution free. Where does the Lektrik Come from?
I think that, at best, you`ve allowed it to be produced in possibly the least pollutive means, then use it somewhere else. A gain yes OK but not totally free by a long chalk
Don't forget that there are many facets to transport policy … in my local CA (and I suspect others are similar), the policy for several years now has included things like:
There are lots of drivers for such policies - not just CO2 emissions, but also road safety, local air quality, congestion/economics, population health/exercise levels, quality of community spaces, social inclusion, and so on - but they all point to needing far fewer private cars in the future and those having lower milage.
- Andy.
That is very funny. 2 Hours use and it's flat, that is no use to man nor beast. It can only be called virtue signaling. The 40-tonne size must have a battery the size of a house, many are 400HP or more, and often work 24 hours a day, except for 10 minutes a day to fill the diesel tank. Anyone who buys one of those will get exactly what they want, no work at all!
The comment on Hinkley C is also exactly correct, we will make zero progress, but the power will cost 3 times as much. The future of the country really is in the hands of fools.
Agriculture has a similar problem. The farm machines need to run 12hrs per day, often a long way from a usable electricity supply.
I see from the trolleybus post that Britain is planning to get on the overhead powered trucks bandwagon. The trials in Sweden and Germany appear to have been technically successful but I don’t see it as a practical idea.
https://insideevs.com/news/440388/germany-a5-autobahn-catenary-overhead-lines-trucks/
ebee:
Zoomup:
Perhaps we should have electric rails sunk into roads like Scalextric. Or use overhead supplies.
How 'Trolleybuses' provided Britain's first pollution-free public transport | Daily Mail Online
Z.
I do not think they could be considered pollution free. Where does the Lektrik Come from?
I think that, at best, you`ve allowed it to be produced in possibly the least pollutive means, then use it somewhere else. A gain yes OK but not totally free by a long chalk
Don't worry ebee mate. We will all be forced to use bikes soon.
Z.
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