Of course they are. And as you can see, there is no efficiency number there, pulled from the air or meticulously-derived with all working shown. (Hint: such a number would look like "efficiency of x%", where 0<x<100). However, I have included the equation for calculating energy efficiency, which may well come in handy later. That was nice of me.So the following aren't your words then:
[peurile editing] wrote:
Although we can't calculate efficiency ([Energy in/Energy out]x100%) until we know how much the car got out of the mains when the battery was charged, we do know that we are probably not more than doubling it.
Woolly thinking indeed. Just because the energy comes from somewhere else does not mean it can be ignored. We are not making the vehicle more efficient here, so that it can achieve more with the same amount of energy, we are providing another source of energy. This is the important thing. It does not matter whether it is provided as petrol, or diesel, or electricity from a power station, or what. You are providing more energy to start with - and then not counting it all!Woolly thinking.
They DO only use one gallon.
That part of the energy to move the vehicle comes from elsewhere doesn't increase the number of gallons used.
We are trying to compare this car with other (single fuel) cars, whose efficiency is measured in mpg. You are providing another source of energy, which you are not taking account of, so you are claiming ludicrous mpg values. Energetically, what you are doing is the same as fitting a diesel engine in the boot of a petrol-engined car, and then claiming that you have doubled its efficiency (mpg), because you only count petrol that goes in and not diesel. Or think about it another way: pull the Prius' back seat out and use the space for another rack of Li-ion batteries. Do you really think you have improved the efficiency of the car? (As opposed to increased its capacity before having to switch to the petrol engine). Do you think you can meaningfully add another 50 mpg to the claimed mileage?What is "true mpg"? It means what it says it means "miles per gallon".
More ENERGY is going in. And this is the important thing.You don't understand what's happening here and are confusing the whole thing. Which is exactly the problem.
1. There STILL is only one gallon of petrol going in.
2. An electric engine is more efficient than an ICE for the non-petrol part.
Well it seems unlikely that they would be impressed by gratuitous insults from people with such a tenuous grasp of concepts like energy and efficiency.There's no need to be snotty.
On the contrary. Decision makers read this site
s.