Melloyello, thanks for the details. Sitting at half-charge is actually the preferred state for lithiums. I wouldn't be surprised if the poor car sat on a dealer's lot fully charged for months. You're now good for years to come.
Don said:Actually, I didn't say anything of the kind. First, any vehicle will eventually need replacement parts or it will have to be scrapped. Building/buying a new car to replace an old one which just needs a few parts to keep it running for another 10 years has got to be harder on the environment than replacing parts on the old one . . . . doesn't it? Second, if the old battery pack is recycled so that it is used for some other purpose, then it's not really harming the environment either, is it? I really doubt that battery packs which are removed from EV's at some point in their lifespan are going to wind up in landfills - Amateur EV builders would love to get their hands on them I know for a fact, so if my old battery pack goes on to power some other car for another 50,000 miles, that's a good thing, IMO
Don
Kuuuurija said:Don said:Actually, I didn't say anything of the kind. First, any vehicle will eventually need replacement parts or it will have to be scrapped. Building/buying a new car to replace an old one which just needs a few parts to keep it running for another 10 years has got to be harder on the environment than replacing parts on the old one . . . . doesn't it? Second, if the old battery pack is recycled so that it is used for some other purpose, then it's not really harming the environment either, is it? I really doubt that battery packs which are removed from EV's at some point in their lifespan are going to wind up in landfills - Amateur EV builders would love to get their hands on them I know for a fact, so if my old battery pack goes on to power some other car for another 50,000 miles, that's a good thing, IMO
Don
Are you aware, how much energy it takes to recycle iMiev's battery pack?
Your suggestion, that better to recycle those packs sooner, even before the warranty ends, is definitely additional stress to the environment.
If the process of production of the new battery pack was not so consuming of energy and other resources, prices for those battery packs were much lower. The conventional car consumes oil, but electric car consumes electric power and lithium batteries and therefore enormous amount of coal and oil, that is used for production of electricity and lithium batteries. The sooner the battery pack will be replaced, the greate the ecological footprint.
My 'suggestion' as you call it was simply to let Mitsubishi replace it when it fails, hopefully before the 10 year, 100,000 mile warranty expires, nothing more, nothing less. What Mitsu does with the battery after they replace it is up to themKuuuurija said:Are you aware, how much energy it takes to recycle iMiev's battery pack?
Your suggestion, that better to recycle those packs sooner, even before the warranty ends, is definitely additional stress to the environment.
Better yet, can someone delete the anti-EV troll, Kuuuurija? Seriously, why is he still here?tigger19687 said:Can someone delete this posting it is SO FAR OFF TOPIC and nothing more then a train wreck in the making
tigger19687 said:I wonder if there is a way to find out HOW MANY packs Mitsu has replaced in the USA, Europe and Canada ?
I know the later 2 have much smaller warranty.
Anyone know why that is ?
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