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China Power

A Million-Mile Battery From China Could Power Your Electric Car (bloomberg.com) 156

The Chinese behemoth that makes electric-car batteries for Tesla and Volkswagen developed a power pack that lasts more than a million miles -- an industry landmark and a potential boon for automakers trying to sway drivers to their EV models. From a report: Contemporary Amperex Technology is ready to produce a battery that lasts 16 years and 2 million kilometers (1.24 million miles), Chairman Zeng Yuqun said in an interview at company headquarters in Ningde, southeastern China. Warranties on batteries currently used in electric cars cover about 150,000 miles or eight years, according to BloombergNEF. Extending that lifespan is viewed as a key advance because the pack could be reused in a second vehicle. That would lower the expense of owning an electric vehicle, a positive for an industry that's seeking to recover sales momentum lost to the coronavirus outbreak and the slumping oil prices that made gas guzzlers more competitive.
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A Million-Mile Battery From China Could Power Your Electric Car

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  • Bullshit (Score:3, Funny)

    by OneSmartFellow ( 716217 ) on Tuesday June 09, 2020 @01:29PM (#60164726)

    Prove it.

    Show me anything - other than COVID-19 - that can last a million miles, in a real stress test, that's made in China.

    Go on.

    Show me.

    • I hear Tonka is very interested.
    • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Tuesday June 09, 2020 @01:42PM (#60164798) Homepage Journal

      China makes whatever build quality its customers ask for. And its customer isn't *you*, it's the brands the sell stuff to you.

      If a brand just wants a cheap POS they can unload on the customer, Chinese ODMs will happily oblige them. If it wants something of ThinkPad or iPhone build quality, they can satisfy that need too.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by awwshit ( 6214476 )

        > If it wants something of ThinkPad or iPhone build quality, they can satisfy that need too.

        That isn't saying a lot. The design doesn't happen in China, only the build. For the most part its the build where the problems come in. Some ThinkPads are built in the US.

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Actually, unlike a contract manufacturer (CM), an Original Design Manufacturer (ODM) does the final design of the product they're building, and most laptop brands are using ODMs these days.

          It makes sense. The brand's engineers and industrial designers may come up with what the device looks like to the user, but the ODM figures out how to shave precious pennies off the build, which matters a lot when you're going to sell a million of something.

          As for those US-, Lenovo-made ThinkPads, that's a token politica

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          ThinkPads were designed in China even during the IBM days.

          As TFA says many cars already have Chinese parts, including Tesla batteries.

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            Pretty much so. The times where China was behind in manufacturing and engineering are pretty much over and the west made it easy for them. Sure, they still make a lot of low-quality stuff, because that sells as well.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The Chang'e 1, 2, 3 and 4 lunar robotic exploration craft. Two orbiters, two landers with a rover each. Actually only a quarter-million miles to the moon, but if you count the distance traveled in orbit too, it hits a million easily. Don't underestimate China: They can certainly make disposable tat cheaper than anyone else, but they can do quality manufacturing as well now.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Well that satellite orbiting the moon seems to be doing okay and went much further than a million miles.

    • Well, it's not that outlandish a claim. 2 million km/16 years (5840 days) = 342 km/day, or 213 miles/day.

      If you look at the cycle endurance of newer LiPO4 batteries [batteryuniversity.com], you see a depth of discharge of 40% yields a lifepsan of approx 3000 cycles. Very close to the 5840 cycles we've posited above. So all you need to do to make this possible is to give the EV enough excess battery capacity so that its maximum depth of discharge is about 40%, which isn't that far from the 60%-70% typically used in current EV
    • Some Teslas did 3 million miles ....

  • Sold (Score:3, Funny)

    by moxrespawn ( 6714000 ) on Tuesday June 09, 2020 @01:35PM (#60164760)

    I know I've bought all my used cars from guys who are ideologically sworn to kill me when possible, so why not my next new car?

    • I know I've bought all my used cars from guys who are ideologically sworn to kill me when possible, so why not my next new car?

      Why not?

      Back during the Cold War there was a saying (claimed to be a paraphrase of a Lenin quote) that "The Capitalists Will Sell Us the Rope with Which We Will Hang Them." The US merrily traded with them anyhow (except for some government-interdicted military stuff - and crippled it's own software industry by including advanced crypto in that.) And look which empire got hung.

    • I know I've bought all my used cars from guys who are ideologically sworn to kill me when possible,

      What

  • Not true. (Score:2, Insightful)

    "The Chinese... ' Alright, so this is a lie. Next.
    • I mean.. it sounds great since it's a 2-3x improvement over the current batteries, as someone mentioned above. It's entirely possible the announcement is optimistic / hype, and they don't quite get their 2M km. However, disregarding anything China does "because it's Chyna" reeks of pure racism. As if China can't produce something technologically advanced, because of some intrinsic trait, and can't innovate on the tech they've been copying for decades.
  • ,p>So you buy a battery and a meter on your dashboard. After `00 miles the battery goes dead. So you call tech support. They tell you to reformat the battery and you will get back your 1 million miles. Rinse and repeat.
  • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Tuesday June 09, 2020 @01:58PM (#60164880) Journal
    They don't claim this to be a 1 million mile battery. They claim it to be a 1.2 million mile battery. Why is this important? Because it's not for a car. [wikipedia.org]

    These stats Tesla are claiming are very familiar to anyone in the heavy duty trucking industry. They're industry standards for line haul semi durability. Tesla is sending a message that they understand the trucking industry needs.

    Source: experience in the trucking industry.
    • by ras ( 84108 )

      Actually, if you listen to what Elon has to say, if is talking about cars too. But not your average mum's taxi. He's talking getting 1 M miles from the batery in a real taxi.

      Why is he talking about taxi's and trucks instead of the retail market which is where the volume is? Because his vision it to turn every car into a taxi. He plans to do this through the full self driving stuff Tesla says they will have going by the end of this year. Once you have FSD, and you've driven your car to work or whatever,

  • At some point a battery becomes so obsolete that recycling it makes sense. The materials that go into a battery are quite valuable. My guess is that in under 8 years even if your car is working the raw materials in the battery will be worth more than the car. Probably sooner if you live somewhere that salts its roads in winter.
  • "Chinese behemoth that makes electric-car batteries for Tesla"

    So is this the big announcement Elon has indicated for revolutionizing battery technology or is their Chinese partner who engaged in industrial espionage and stole the technology releasing it before Tesla....

  • The article says nothing all that new about the cost of batteries for electric cars. Batteries cost a lot of money and when compared to an internal combustion engine fashioned out of steel it always will be a luxury item.

    I can see how fully electric cars can be attractive. They are quiet. They can achieve full power output at any speed. The need to stop for maintenance and fuel is lower than an ICE powered car. There's "camping mode" which allows for the entertainment system, lights, and HVAC to run fo

    • All three of your modes exist now. All are cost effective.

      1 is the system hybrid like the Prius. Its main benefits are better fuel economy, mostly due to regen brakeing (which you did not mention). Engine shutdown at idle also helps, but is not the "big win" in terms of efficiency.

      2 is the current generation of "plug in hybrids" like the Prius Prime. Just 1 with the option of getting a percentage of usage from the grid. Regen efficiency is usually a bit better as well because the battery has more "room

      • All three of your modes exist now. All are cost effective.

        I wasn't claiming otherwise. I just wanted to show how the different variations on the hybrid theme would be attractive for different markets/consumers/uses.

        1 is the system hybrid like the Prius. Its main benefits are better fuel economy, mostly due to regen brakeing (which you did not mention).

        Yes, I didn't think of regenerative braking. What I learned from my time working on the solar car competition while at university, and in conversations with and reading articles by people that did their own electric conversions, the energy savings on regen braking are minimal. Car makers will always put regen braking in their cars as a feature becaus

    • Unless or until a battery electric vehicle can achieve the same costs as an ICE.....

      That's the goal

    • You are aware China manufactures and sell BEV for $10k yes? How much cheaper do you need to get?

      • You are aware China manufactures and sell BEV for $10k yes? How much cheaper do you need to get?

        Cheaper to purchase than an ICE powered car that can be claimed to be equivalent in any way. That includes when compared to used ICE vehicles.

        I remember doing total cost of ownership calculations on my options for a different vehicle before making my last purchase. It is just very hard to compete with a used car for someone not too picky on what they drive. This new battery technology might mean EVs last longer but that also may mean they hold their value longer, making this next generation of EVs more e

        • "My point is simple, EVs will always cost more to build than ICE vehicles " - famous last words for something in its infancy
    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      Sure, and we'll never have TVs that use LEDs for individual pixels because they can't make blue LEDs. I remember having that argument back in high school. Then blue LEDs were invented. Then the problem was that LEDs were just too big, etc. etc. until they produced LEDs that weren't too big. Fast forward to today, and we have LED-based TVs. They're just one competing technology, of course, but it's a viable technology because the required technologies to make them work were developed over time. The same thin

    • The article says nothing all that new about the cost of batteries for electric cars.

      More competent coverage [businessinsider.com] of the story quotes the price difference: just 10% higher than current lithium batteries.

      Batteries cost a lot of money and when compared to an internal combustion engine fashioned out of steel it always will be a luxury item.

      You do realize there's a helluva lot more to an internal combustion engine than the engine block, right? And my engine block is made of aluminum you insensitive clod.

      And it's ridiculous statements like this one that convince people you're an ignorant idiot. I'm in favor of nuclear power, but with advocates like you, it stands no chance. Look inside the engine compartment of any modern vehicle

    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )
      Why do you think BEVs will always cost more than hybrids?

      It seems to me that we're on pace for cost parity within a decade.

      Prices are dropping 8-30% a year (10-15 most years). It won't be long before it's cheaper to skip the hybrid part, at which point I'd expect most suburban homes (having driveways and probably garages) to be buying pure EVs if buying new.
    • Something I wrote in 2009: https://groups.google.com/foru... [google.com]

      This essay explain why luxury safer electric (or plug-in hybrid) cars should
      be free-to-the-user at the point of sale in the USA, and why this will
      reduce US taxes overall. Essentially, unsafe gasoline-powered automobiles in
      the USA pose a high cost on society (accidents, injuries, pollution,
      defense), and the costs of making better cars would pay for themselves and
      then some. This essay is an example of using post-scarcity ideology to
      understand the sca

  • TFA says the Chinese company is ready to go to production on the packs if anybody orders them.

    Musk says he already has a million-mile cell, plans to build and use a pack of them for his next model/revision, and is cutting the deals to site a factory to do so (probably in Texas). Meanwhile his Nevada battery gigafactory is still building out, so the new lines might be designed to make, or be capable of making, these cells and/or packs as well.

    Lookin' good.

    ============

    TFA doesn't say what constitutes lasting for a million miles in this case. I've seen "90% of rated capacity" as the criterion for the claim in previous articles and I'm hoping it's being used here.

    ===========

    Also: Musk's million mile batteries are expected to be just fine for stationary use at somewhat reduced power for another twenty years. (Capacity may be lower but self discharge not any, or only trivially, higher and no catastrophic end-of-life failures.) "Recycling" them by using them for a second and third life (i.e. a couple decades) as utility-level or home-level storage for electric power peaking and renewable energy time-shifting has already been touted. The same might be expected of batteries from Amperex and others.

    If that works out it would both further cut the recycling load (compared to reducing them to their component chemicals) and solve the remaining big issue impeeding efficient use of renewable electrical generation resources.

  • Basically, until the science is reviewed and units are tested, there's zero point in getting excited.

    • by Nexion ( 1064 )

      This is what I was thinking as I was reading. While I must admit I'm particularly distrustful of technology from mainland China given my experiences with said technology, until we see it actually perform, they are as full of it as any company in the world who make such grandiose claims about the product they are selling. Simple as that.

  • by chrism238 ( 657741 ) on Tuesday June 09, 2020 @03:29PM (#60165330)
    Wow, I thought - an EV that runs for a million miles, on a single charge!
  • Has anyone bought a used EV or hybrid?

    I've been reluctant for the same reason I don't buy any other used rechargeable products - fear that the battery will not last. Has anyone had any experiences in this area they'd like to share?

    • I've seen a couple or three YouTube videos of people replacing batteries in used EVs and hybrids. One such video I recall featured a rebuild of some hybrid or another.

      The featured hybrid car could still be driven with the busted battery, but was bought cheap because the dash computer kept complaining about the battery and therefore was a difficult sale. The buyer considered this a low risk project because of the relatively low cost (relative because a hybrid with a dead battery was still a lot of money),

    • by Ost99 ( 101831 )

      I didn't buy them used but I have two old EVs. One is 8,5 years old and the other is just past 5 years.

      The oldest one has lost probably 15% of maximum charge capacity, but other parts has also degraded so it now uses 180wh/km, not the ~140wh/km it did initially - so range is reduced by more than 15%. Still works for our use case, we rarely drive it more than 40-50 km a day.
      The 5 year old one has lost less than 5% of maximum charge capacity and the charging speed when fast-charging has been reduced somewhat

    • I don't know if it can be easily done for all EVs but I know there are some companies that can replace the batteries in some EVs. The batteries and procedure are not cheap but can be a good investment if you can find a cheap 2nd hand EV

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