• @[email protected]
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    193 months ago

    I’d say with the abundance of solar panels today, charging EV’s wouldn’t be that problematic. Gasoline would be hard to get. Bio diesel would be a good alternative but im not sure new vehicles would play nice with it so like pre 2000s diesels would be good. Wood gas is an option but again, would it work on modern cars? EV’s seem the easiest to fuel to me in a complete apocalypse. Thoughts?

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      Clouds.

      Without the power grid to back them up, solar panels are only as reliable as the weather. A week of overcast skies will drain everything you have in your batteries. No output during the night either. There’s also the problem of theft, vandalism, natural wear, and the difficulty of finding replacement parts.

      If you have solar energy and a way to store it, it should be used for more vital applications, like lights, cooking, and refrigeration.

      • SeekPie
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        43 months ago

        I don’t know a lot about solar panels, but wouldn’t they output at least some power with clouds? Like you still get some sunlight through the clouds, wouldn’t the panels be able to use it?

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          Some, but the output drops significantly. Solar panels like direct sunlight. Even a thin cloud layer can reduce the output just by both blocking and diffusing sunlight.

          (The graphs are just for illustration, I have no context for them)

          A car-sized EV’s convenience is wasteful when energy is scarce and other options are available.

          • SeekPie
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            23 months ago

            Seems like e-bike with foldable solar panels would be the best? Because even when there’s no sunlight, you just have a bit heavier bike, but when there is some, you’d go faster.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Yeah I was in a scenario some months back where people didn’t have access to electricity or gasoline for nearly a week. Some didn’t have access to drinking water. It was mildly apocalyptic. I had never seen anything like that and it was a bit stressful having to work but also not knowing if I’d eventually run out of gas before I would have access to it again. Felt like a mini-apocalypse.