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  #1  
Old 9 Apr 2009
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I'm pretty sure we won't run out of petrol. When new technology comes along, the old stuff doesn't disapear. I have a PC but can still get paper, I use a battery driver but also have a screwdriver. You can still buy leaded petrol and if I want to run my steam engine, I can still get coal and water.

Let the cuddly-bunny-tree-huggers come up with alternative fuels; it'll take the pressure off the oil supplies. They even believe that some of this technology is going to save the planet. It won't, (switch to Scottish accent) "we're all doomed"

....
...
.
But not for a while
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Old 9 Apr 2009
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and if I want to run my steam engine, I can still get coal and water.
- But a steam traction engine isn't really a practicable form of personal transport. Alternative fuels are the most realistic fallback we can use with our current vehicles, but to grow biofuels to cover our current needs would apparently need all currently available arable areas - so Hydrogen it is, then (good job Honda now have a prototype - Hurrah!).
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Old 9 Apr 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Big Yellow Tractor View Post

Let the cuddly-bunny-tree-huggers come up with alternative fuels; it'll take the pressure off the oil supplies. They even believe that some of this technology is going to save the planet.
I dont know if it's helpful to dismiss ecologists as "cuddly" etc. Many scientists are ecologists. You probably share their ideals even if you dont agree with all of it. You dont want to sound like the Daily Mail or J.Clarkson and we don't like him, do we?
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Old 9 Apr 2009
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That depends what he's saying, does it not? Mr C is capable of great lucidity (allegedly, ho ho), in amongst the bombastic rubbish he often spouts. No comment on the Daily Mail
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Old 9 Apr 2009
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Steam can be highly efficient - things have progressed a bit since Stephenson's Rocket .

You can also burn cuddly bunny manure .

Myself ,I would prefer to distill alcohol and use some of it for fuel !
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Old 10 Apr 2009
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You can also burn cuddly bunny manure
And you can tow the Manure Processing Plant in a little trailer you can tow behind the bike, or in a sidecar - wow, i can see it now... fantastic! Problem solved
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Old 10 Apr 2009
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Mr Warthog ,you dismiss new technology and ideas without researching them yet you assume that electric powered vehicles will prove our saviour .
I work in the power industry and in N America it is struggling to keep pace with increasing demand.
GW Bush when he was in office gave the green light to ,I believe , over 100 new coal fired power stations ,and they are also building new nuclear stations .
Canada and the US will also be flooding MORE river valleys to produce MORE electricity .
If you factor in a further huge demand because of a switch to electric powered vehicles ,even more power plants will have to be constructed .

Arable land will continue to produce either fuel or food depending on the economics .Poorer countries will continue to go hungry ,the market economy has no heart .There have been several studies done on the likely fuel production one could achieve ,they have been contradictory because some of them have been influenced by the petroleum producers .

The earth's core contains the means for power production if the resources are handled correctly and we develop the technology to exploit it .

Neither of us know what will eventually happen .There is technology out there that could revolutionise transportation but it will probably be stifled by Big Oil or the Car Manufacturers who manipulate governments .Joe public is a pawn and usually thinks what he is conditioned to think .

The next step in technology will have to concern power storage ,because without the means of storing a substantial amount of charge [ie batteries] electric vehicles will always have a limited application.However knowing about the need for better batteries and having them available is another matter maybe technology will advance and maybe it won't .It hasn't advanced much in the last century .

Don't forget the petroleum industry has the world by the nuts and if it can use bacteria to produce useable hydrocarbons ,then it will and you will not see rapid advancements in alternative fuels.

Electricmotor cycles may become viable ,there are several on the market now ,but I hope that petroleum powered bikes will be around for a long time .The soulless whine of an electric motor is no substitute for a barking megaphone .
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Old 10 Apr 2009
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I think D is right that Joe Public is fed disinformation. It's really difficult to get a true picture of oil reserves, as the big oil companies are expert in manipulating public opinion. They also kick governments around.

I wouldnt mind a diesel bike though. But the current ones are way too expensive.
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Old 10 Apr 2009
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Ewan and Charlie begin to question the wisdom of their latest adventure - Electric Way Down



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Old 10 Apr 2009
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Originally Posted by Dodger View Post
If you factor in a further huge demand because of a switch to electric powered vehicles ,even more power plants will have to be constructed .
That's a really interesting point. I just got back from a month in SF where I lived with a couple of alternative energy consultants (solar for the most part). They were telling me that the first thing they do when they go into a home is look at what they can do to reduce electricity usage - it's amazing how much you can drop by just changing over to the now viable LED bulbs - they're still pretty expensive, but the math (as our dear cousins over the pond say) proves they pay for themselves in electricity usage alone within six months.

In some homes - the more modern they say - where recessed halogen are the fashion - simply replacing them with LEDs reduces consumption in the home by a massive amount - up to 50% in some homes, with a more realistic 20% - 30% in others with more incandescent and less halogen.

If the government gets it's way in the UK - and it's going that way - incandesant bulbs will be illigal in the next five years, within 10 years they want all bulbs to be LED - so.... if we can reduce our home use by one simple step of replacing our bulbs, do we start to of-set our electic vehicle usage?

Of course the other option with fuel cell powered cars is the wonderful idea of a hydrogen unit in your garage... fills me with the heeby jeebies - but if they say it's safe.... well - I'll let others try if first.

In any case, I do think that over the next ten years we'll see more electric powered vehicles as governments around the world see them as, importantly, vote winners (hello Mr Obama) and as the car manufactuers see them as ways to get money out of the public purse (hello Mr Obama, and EU).

There's a wonderful docuemtary made by a very good freiend of mine - Mr Richard Titus - titled 'Who Killed the Electric Car'. It's a few years old now, but it's getting a lot of play as the US and EU start forcing manufactures down a line they've be reticent to pursue.

Who Killed the Electric Car?

It covers a lot of the issues discussed in this thread and is well worth a watch.

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  #11  
Old 13 Apr 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodger View Post
Mr Warthog ,you dismiss new technology and ideas without researching them yet you assume that electric powered vehicles will prove our saviour .


Not entirely true. Yes I responded to your initial post without researching, but looked into it right afterwards: I did not find anything that contradicted my points drastically.

You stated the following:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodger View Post
Oil will not run out .
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodger View Post
There is a lot of evidence to suggest that oil is produced by bacteria and not from rotting dinosours and primaeval forests as is conventionally believed .
Bacteria have been found that produce hydrocarbons in areas that have the right combination of heat and raw materials .
Personally, I have not found any evidence referring to naturally occurring bacteria in oil fields. What I did find were references to genetically modified strains of a given bacteria, into which manufactured DNA is inserted to make the bacteria excrete oil as a by product of its own metabolism. Amazing, but not the answer IMO. As I said before, you then need to think about the volumes needed to produce a single tank full of unleaded, multiplied by how much the world uses. Finally, I’d add that we have a tendency of storming forth on one path because we are blinded by its advantages, only to realise the full ramifications much later. Bacteria kill lots of people, plants and animals. I’m not sure I want mass production of bacteria whose main metabolic waste is a toxic material, no matter how valuable, and whose potential for mutation is unascertained. And I certainly would not want that in the hands of organisations who put $$$ before health and safety considerations.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodger View Post

The earth's core contains the means for power production if the resources are handled correctly and we develop the technology to exploit it .
snip
Joe public is a pawn and usually thinks what he is conditioned to think .
snip
Batteries: They haven't advanced much in the last century…
snip
Don't forget the petroleum industry has the world by the nuts….
snip
Electricmotor cycles may become viable ,there are several on the market now ,but I hope that petroleum powered bikes will be around for a long time .The soulless whine of an electric motor is no substitute for a barking megaphone .

My view is, running out or not, oil has had its moment and its time to move on. Oil has allowed technology to advance incredibly over the last 100 years, driven by demand. However, alternatives do exist. They have done for some time. It is not naïve to think that their popularity or even existence has not been stepped on by the oil industry: these would be oil's direct competitors. Nor is it naïve or unrealistic to say that oil is a dirty fuel. It is hazardous to produce, handle, use and its combustion is proving unhealthy for all concerned.

So, the alternatives:
I do think that electricity is the best bet, here. However, the reasons against that you posted above are based on the existing dominant production techniques. There are also Solar, Wind, Tidal and, as you mentioned, Geothermal. On that last point the American continent could kick arse, given that its entire West coast is part of the Ring of Fire around the Pacific: there is huge Geothermal potential. We know solar can work well, ditto for wind. They are often poo-pooed, but that is because it would not suit the conglomerates for us to think these were workable alternatives for free energy at best, or at least significantly cheaper than oil. These sorts of measures would mean that flooding this river or growing biofuel crops is not even necessary. As for batteries: I disagree. Think how far mobile phone batteries have come in the last 10 years. Why? Because we the consumer wanted it: that is it… I recently saw a programme that claimed that the technology existed and had been tested so that an electric car sustained 100mph for two hours on a single charge. Doesn’t sound so bad, does it…?

Here is what I think the problem is. Technology advances because demand grows. Demand grows, largely due to popular demand which, in turn, is largely influenced by marketing and advertising. So, in other words, as you suggested above: we buy what we are told we want and what we are told we should buy. So really, if you want alternative fuels, if you want the choice, if you don’t want the oil companies to have quite such a grip on the "world’s nuts", you need only vote with you wallet. I don’t mean rush out and buy an electric scooter tomorrow, I mean start choosing renewable energy as a domestic supplier, for example. In the UK you can nominate who you want your electricity to be provided by: conventional energy or renewable. The latter costs a bit more, but if demand rises, prices drop and its influence grows. Where domestic demand goes, transport will follow. It does no happen over night, but that is how it starts and its perfectly achievable for any Joe Public: they need only make those small changes to their lifestyles, and the market forces will follow suite. Perhaps not without resistance, but they will eventually go where the money is going. Once the Oil Companies who hold the patents on new technologies realise that demand is changing, they’ll break them out and start making money on the preparatory R&D they are no doubt already doing…

Now for vehicles. The issue here is that people, especially us blokes, see an attempt (nay, suggestion) to replace petrol engines with something like electric as a forced castration of sorts. There is way too much ego, and self-projection involved with our vehicle choice for us to make an objective decision. Bikes, cars; they are self expression, status banners, manhood extensions, what ever you want to call them, and I think that is why we are so vehemently opposed to such a change. New tech in any other field is welcomed with open arms: cameras, phones, PCs, MP3, MP4, MP97 etc. New gadgets! We love em!!
Bottom line is people, unfortunately, ONLY change when there is a direct and immediate benefit to them. Be it perceived or real.

I agree with you: I don’t want to loose petrol driven bikes either: I love the sound, smell, sensation, but I’m not going to kid myself and say that this has a long term future. I can’t, in good conscience, just deny, because my bikes are my bestest, bestest toys and I feel cool when I’m on them, that the alternatives are the smarter option.

The final question for anyone reading this is what is your real reason for being opposed to oil running out….

Do we really think that there is another source of oil that can match today’s demand and meet that of the next 20 year or more, or are we in denial?

Is it because oil really is the best energy source for society, or is it because we are scared of the alternatives and what they might mean to our lifestyles and the changes we might need to make?

For me, I admit, it’s the latter, but I think the alternative is either biking dying out or being an even more elitist pursuit that I can no longer afford. I’d rather ride a bike whose engine growl comes from speakers rather than exhausts than no bike at all…
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Last edited by Warthog; 13 Apr 2009 at 09:29.
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Old 13 Apr 2009
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Without wanting to come over as a nay-sayer, I'd like to pose a question to the electric vehicle advocates. I can fully see that an EV is a great alternative to a commuter car/bike, I can happily see myself plugging in every night (although in the back of my mind I might wonder about the environmental impact of digging all those noxious chemicals out of the ground and processing them), but the photoshop I did above was supposed to illustrate a point.

People on here aren't just bikers, they're bikers to the back of beyond, and the back of beyond isn't well served with power grids suitable for charging EVs. Will we all have to book hotels with power sockets? What happens when we run out of charge on the Road of Bones? How will an African community respond when we roll in and suck all their stored solar power up to charge our bikes overnight?

Why is the burning of fossil fuel so suited for powering our transportation needs and wants? Because the oil we burn is transportable, if we can get a vehicle there to need petrol we can get the petrol there to fill it up. So I remain to be convinced that the EV will be a solution for anyone who lives outside the developped world with its established power-grids at least for the foreseable future.
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Old 13 Apr 2009
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golden age, silver age, stone age, bronze age, iron age, oil age, errr something else

Quote:
People on here aren't just bikers, they're bikers to the back of beyond, and the back of beyond isn't well served with power grids suitable for charging EVs. Will we all have to book hotels with power sockets? What happens when we run out of charge on the Road of Bones? How will an African community respond when we roll in and suck all their stored solar power up to charge our bikes overnight?
Thats a great point. Its possibly THE fundamental reason why EV's will not become overly popular. I believe the future is Hydrogen Fuel Cell technology, it seems to be going well in California. And the only emissions are water. Interesting information about oil being produced by bacteria, although I can no longer say my bike runs on 'churned up t-rex's'. How about Plutonium? OK so getting rid off the waste is not going to be easy, and could you imagine fiddling with the engine; you would be bricking it!

This thread reminds me of the scene in i,robot, where Will Smith gets out his 'old' motorcycle (for those of you who have not scene it its set in the future) much to the dis comfort of his female passanger who quotes "this thing runs on petrol?!?!?....petrol explodes you know!".
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Old 13 Apr 2009
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Originally Posted by Alexlebrit View Post
Without wanting to come over as a nay-sayer, I'd like to pose a question to the electric vehicle advocates. I can fully see that an EV is a great alternative to a commuter car/bike, I can happily see myself plugging in every night (although in the back of my mind I might wonder about the environmental impact of digging all those noxious chemicals out of the ground and processing them), but the photoshop I did above was supposed to illustrate a point.

People on here aren't just bikers, they're bikers to the back of beyond, and the back of beyond isn't well served with power grids suitable for charging EVs. Will we all have to book hotels with power sockets? What happens when we run out of charge on the Road of Bones? How will an African community respond when we roll in and suck all their stored solar power up to charge our bikes overnight?

Why is the burning of fossil fuel so suited for powering our transportation needs and wants? Because the oil we burn is transportable, if we can get a vehicle there to need petrol we can get the petrol there to fill it up. So I remain to be convinced that the EV will be a solution for anyone who lives outside the developped world with its established power-grids at least for the foreseable future.

The thread was the future of motorcycling, not motorcycling adventure!! Still it's a pertinent point and the one I ponder on most when I think about my future trips in a world of uncertain energy sources...

However, if I were to have a guess, a supposition on how such a thing might evolve I would guess that solar panelling, such as those you can pick up now from Maplins could be used. Perhaps they will be foldable and unfurl to a relatively large area, and capture charge over a couple of hours. I imagine efficiency will increase over time.... Perhaps any downward gradient could run dynamos to charge the batteries through the bike's own momentum.

As for using up a community's charge: if it paid for how is it different from pitching up and buying 30 litres of their petrol now? There's no reason to suppose it would be free!

This is conjecture, but is it beyond the realms of possibility, 20 years from now?

If any of this happens it would be a gradual change: but we are only summising what the final outcome might be so the interim period of change/adjustment etc is overlooked.
Perhaps bike overland will not be possible anymore the same way that one cannot travel truly uncharted lands now, the way they did in the 1800s... Who knows, but where there's a will, there's a way...
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Old 10 Apr 2009
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I have a PC but can still get paper, I use a battery driver but also have a screwdriver.
But think how many letters you post now that you have email. Are records electronic or paper driven now? Apart from the antiquated NHS... Paper will not last as a main form of info storage so I do not feel the analogy is accurate. As for the screwdriver, how many people use that screwdriver since they bought the cordless? I certainly don't unless I forgot to charge the spare...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Big Yellow Tractor View Post
Let the cuddly-bunny-tree-huggers come up with alternative fuels; it'll take the pressure off the oil supplies. They even believe that some of this technology is going to save the planet. It won't, (switch to Scottish accent) "we're all doomed"

....
...
.
But not for a while
I am interested and concerned about protecting not just the trees, but the environment as a whhole and yet, but by painting it in that light its made out to be something to scoffed and laughed at....why?

We get all excited about a new technology for, say, PCs or Digicams or TVs, but if its something that might make our overlander, V8, racerep, less growlly, we reject it...I don't get it. The IC engine must have been mind blowing when it was invented: I would like to see what next big leap we can achieve rather than leaving it to the sci-fi programmes to dream up! I want to see it happen. After all the IC basically helped society expand the way it has, but not always healthily IMO, would it not be cool to see in what new ways and directions we can grow with an all new concept? Imagine a society where oil was not the global priority. Not easy to do, is it?

The only reason that alternative fuels will not save the planet if because people are too lazy to make a change to their lives, or they do not like the idea of abandoning what they like, regardless of the advantages....

As for not being doomed just yet. Well, IMO, that depends on what we do now, because there is an almighty cluster-f#!k bearing on down on human society and to think otherwise, I think, is gonna get you sand in your ears...
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Last edited by Warthog; 10 Apr 2009 at 10:49. Reason: Unduly harsh...
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