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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
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Bill wrote:


What beggars belief is we are doing away with ICE when continued improvement arguably makes less particulates than electric. Electric cars being heavier cause more tyre wear…. That’s the next issue coming down the road.

It doesnt in reality cause more tyre wear, only in theory. In terms of particulate matter, brakes on ICE cars would make up any difference from tyre wear, EV's use regen braking of course rather than particulate forming friction brakes. BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #648074 14th Nov 2022 8:03pm
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
Location: Gainsborough
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United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

Bill wrote:
What is still true is a diesel car driven into a heavily polluted area will emit cleaner air than it takes in.


What a load of twaddle. Lock yourself in the garage, startup your super diesel powered air cleaner and breath, see how long it takes for this cleaner air to kill you. Cars do not emit air, it's poisonous gases.

I agree that the latest diesels will in theory be cleaner than petrols and in terms of overal pollution have been for some time. BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #648075 14th Nov 2022 8:08pm
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supershuttle



Member Since: 20 Mar 2011
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I think there's a bit of mixing up going on here, the two things being mixed are particulate emissions and our old friend carbon dioxide.

As for EV's I think they score well on both counts but those who mix in the other two (deliberately to mislead?) will point the finger - the basic fact seems to be for ICE Carbon Dioxide is the problem now diesel particulates have been sorted. Geoff

Post #648076 14th Nov 2022 8:19pm
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
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United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

Absolutely but the claim the air coming out of a diesel car is cleaner than the air going in is ridiculous.

The particulates being sorted was a major one with diesels now thats sorted, their efficiency really shows when compared to petrol Burn less fuel = less pollution in simple terms, diesels generally use 50 to 70% of a comparable petrol car. BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #648081 14th Nov 2022 9:21pm
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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
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supershuttle wrote:
I think there's a bit of mixing up going on here, the two things being mixed are particulate emissions and our old friend carbon dioxide.

As for EV's I think they score well on both counts but those who mix in the other two (deliberately to mislead?) will point the finger - the basic fact seems to be for ICE Carbon Dioxide is the problem now diesel particulates have been sorted.


Spot on , particulates not co2. I can only repeat that EA made the claim following a test.

I’m simply hi lighting , now the particulates have been more or less sorted, the focus now seems to be on particulates from tyres & EV tyres don’t do well in like for like tests. Another area they don’t like is all of the nasties, which we call that nice new car smell. Apparently not so good for us. I take the view they identified the issue, so the chemical companies might fix it. ( or hide it with another toxin) . Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #648149 15th Nov 2022 4:48pm
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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
Location: Essex / Normandy
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dingg1 wrote:
Bilbo

1 air doesn't exit an exhaust
2 stick a hosepipe from your diesel exhaust through your car window
3 let us know how you get on

Rolling Eyes


Particulates not co2
Q

Emissions analytical are anti car. Very anti emissions, hugely respected. & that’s their view, which I’m happy to repeat.

UQ Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #648150 15th Nov 2022 4:53pm
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dingg1



Member Since: 29 Jun 2013
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You can say it as often as you like Banging Head

But the fact remains AIR (you know 79 ish nitrogen and 21% oxygen) does not come out of a diesel engines exhaust pipe

Post #648152 15th Nov 2022 5:27pm
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supershuttle



Member Since: 20 Mar 2011
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I made a comment but deleted it, I really have more important things to worry about and was in danger of getting sucked in.. Geoff

Post #648162 15th Nov 2022 6:51pm
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
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dingg1 wrote:
You can say it as often as you like Banging Head

But the fact remains AIR (you know 79 ish nitrogen and 21% oxygen) does not come out of a diesel engines exhaust pipe


It must be true, he read it on tinterweb BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #648178 15th Nov 2022 8:29pm
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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
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https://www.emissionsanalytics.com/news/20...t-tailpipe


‘Filters are so good that we have measured that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. ‘

This is 2020.
My statement comes from around 2018. I may of misused the word air. This link also shows the move towards tyres. Search their website for the new car smell issue.

The point of my posting was to gently inform the forum of what’s going on… take it or leave it. Over and out. Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #648283 16th Nov 2022 9:47pm
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
Location: Gainsborough
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United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

It's great to be updated BUT the information needs to be accurate rather than a figment of your imagination. Your original claim and the actual statement are miles apart. BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #648311 17th Nov 2022 8:48am
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JayGee



Member Since: 27 Jul 2021
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AFAIK particulate emissions from both Petrol and Diesel cars has not been 'solved'. The very smallest particles which are the most dangerous to health as they pass into the blood stream are not that effectively filtered by a DPF. Also NOX is very dangerous in cities and again emissions are not zero so with high traffic concentrations it becomes a problem even if all cars are up to the latest emissions standards. As someone who lives in London I welcome the Mayor's efforts to reduce this kind of pollution even if I have to pay for it. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322)

Post #648327 17th Nov 2022 10:36am
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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
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Latest missive from Emissions analytical . Long read but worth a swift scan. Couldn’t copy in the table/graph

First & last paragraph says it all. Why ban the competition ?




Battery electric vehicles are great. There – we said it. In fact, we have been saying it all along. But are they so great that all competition should be banned? Or are they great, but with caveats, such that we should foster choice and spread our decarbonisation bets to ensure the best and most certain reduction in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions? Banning your competitors can variously be described as state-sponsored monopoly, central planning and rent seeking. Ironically, communist China isn’t banning alternatives to battery electric vehicles (BEVs), yet free-market Europe is. Is there any merit in Europe’s current position, and how can this paradox be explained?

One explanation is how the notion of ‘efficiency’ is being misused. Roughly speaking, diesel engines are 30% efficient in converting chemical energy in the fuel into kinetic energy of the vehicle, while a vehicle battery converts around 90% of the energy stored into motion. Much of the difference is in waste heat. In fact, Carnot’s theorem, based on the second law of thermodynamics, shows that a ‘heat engine’ has a theoretical upper limit of efficiency well below 90%. So, the argument goes, as we are short on low-carbon energy sources, how efficiently we use that energy is vital. And electrical motors powered from a battery at 90% efficiency must easily trump a diesel engine at less than – say – 50% efficiency. Therefore, BEVs are a no-brainer and any resources put into any other technologies must be wasted.

This can be encapsulated in the following syllogism: we need greater energy efficiency in road transport; BEVs are more energy efficient; therefore, we must have them.

There are many flaws in this argument. First, we must step back and remember that the aim is to reduce CO2 emissions. Does greater efficiency always correlate with lower emissions? No-one doubts that efficiency is important, but it is everything? On the first question, this is true in many circumstances. For example, if a diesel car delivering 40 miles per gallon is replaced with a new diesel car at 50 mpg, CO2 emissions will fall in the usage phase. Greater efficiency means lower CO2. In contrast, however, as countries increasingly switch from E5 to E10 gasoline – that is, gasoline containing a maximum 5% and 10% of ethanol respectively – the combustion efficiency falls due to the lower volumetric energy density of the fuel, yet CO2 emissions also fall. In this case, CO2 falls despite worse efficiency. What this shows is that efficiency does correlate with reduced CO2, but only necessarily so when all other things are held the same. In the latter case, the type of fuel has changed. Overall, though, it is clear that efficiency and CO2 reduction do not correlate as a general statement.

The second aspect to consider is that greater efficiency may lead to reduced CO2 emissions, but with some other effect. Walking, for example, is highly energy efficient and very low CO2 even when undertaken by carnivores, but it’s not going to get you from New York to Los Angeles very quickly. Equally, walking can be efficient, low CO2, quicker and cheaper, as seen for many short journeys in congested city centres. What this shows is that efficiency is only one of the relevant variables in the decarbonisation equation.

With Dieselgate in mind, there is some validity in the argument that combusting fuel in urban areas needs to be eliminated, and BEVs are the only scalable option to achieve this. However, this idea neglects the significant differences in pollutant emissions between older and newer vehicles. The latest generation of cars, sold since the introduction of the Real Driving Emissions regulation from 2017, sees the average gasoline vehicle emitting nitrogen oxides (NOx) of 11 mg/km (82% below the regulated limit) and particle number emissions of 0.9 x 1011 #/km (85% below), and the equivalent value for diesels of 43 mg/km (46% below) and 0.1 x 1011 #/km (98% below) respectively – data collected from Emissions Analytics’ EQUA test programme. The proposed introduction of Euro 7 will further tighten the limits and, more importantly, will widen the boundaries of the test and cold-start requirements such that these real-world values will fall further.

As a result, modern ICE cars are not the ones causing urban air pollution problems, but rather the earlier, Euro 5 and 6 vehicles. Euro 5 gasoline vehicles average 39 mg/km of NOx (35% below the limit) while diesels emit 806 mg/km (4.5 times the limit). The priority must be to remove these older diesel cars and, whether they are replaced by new internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles or BEVs, is largely irrelevant. The Ultra Low Emission Zone in London is a big step in this direction, even though it continues to allow many high-emitting Euro 6 diesels into the city, and does not discriminate on vehicle mass. With typical ICE vehicles emitting 67 mg/km of tyre particles, compared to 81 mg/km for equivalent BEVs, there are some downsides to these heavier vehicles. In short, this shows the logical fixation with ‘combustion’ being inherently bad is also wrong. Of course, this fixation is closely related to the efficiency error.


The logical fallacy against combustion is shown by synthetic ‘e-fuels’, where hydrogen and CO2 are removed from the air using low-carbon electricity and then synthesised into, for example, gasoline in such a way that as much carbon is absorbed during production as is released during subsequent combustion. The combustion itself will still be at low efficiency, but the net CO2 will be close to zero and, due to the purity of the fuel, the pollutant emissions can be very low as well. Low CO2, low pollutants, yet inefficient.

So, why don’t we go straight to e-fuels, and bypass the additional problems of material scarcity and dependence on China that comes with BEVs? The answer is that we do not have sufficient low-carbon electricity to power the process. This is where BEV supporters have a point: green electricity is scarce, so we must use it efficiently. However, what they are proposing is swapping one scarcity for another: scarce green electricity for scarce battery and motor components. Scarcity matters, especially where the scarce goods are disproportionately controlled by a limited number of entities, as it leads to them enjoying excessive ‘economic rent’ through using that market position. Building a diversity of supply is a necessary first step, to accommodate growing demand.

While many BEV proponents complain about excessive profits of fossil fuels companies, their vision would recreate the same issues just with different players. More concerning still is that European’s act of giving BEVs a future powertrain monopoly has given disproportionate market control to China. The US has reacted with a major $369 bn dirigiste policy to break China’s control. The EU is now poised to unveil a ‘Green Deal Industrial Plan’ to match this. The trend of ever-freeing world trade is now well in reverse, as countries take an increasingly protectionist and mercantilist approach designed to maximise exports while minimising imports. Had Europe reacted to the need for decarbonisation by playing to its competitive advantage – especially building low-carbon electricity grids – this value-destroying cycle may never have been triggered.

Such an error by European governments, arguably to assuage Dieselgate, has radically polarised the debate. Anyone who doesn’t ‘get’ the BEV story and its efficiency myth is labelled as a climate change denier. Our aim must be to limit the overall negative effect of climate change in the least damaging way. So, let’s consider an alternative, pragmatic path. It’s simplistic, but balances practicality, cost, geopolitics and – not to be neglected – social welfare.

It should be noted that only in the second phase is efficiency the key dynamic. The attraction of this approach is that it helps manage the significant uncertainties and risks in the effectiveness and timing of the stages of decarbonisation. For example, the BEV-led phase could be accelerated or pushed back depending on technological advancements or setbacks. Looked at another way, these stages are necessary if we are not to blow our carbon budget under the Paris Treaty. All are needed. Hybrids only get you so far, but they are here now. E-fuels are net-zero in principle, but not realistic today. BEVs cannot be scaled today without prohibitive cost.

As a side note, hidden in here is a paradox for the BEV lobby: enough green electricity is needed to allow the manufacture and charging of cars to be low carbon, but too much green electricity would enable competitor fuels and powertrains. We should look out for lobbying focused more on powertrain transition than grid capacity building.

In conclusion, BEVs can be great products and will play a significant role in decarbonisation on almost any scenario. But why ban the competition? The argument that efficiency is so much better that we should gamble all our investment on this horse is ill-conceived, costly and risky. It is perhaps just very clever rent-seeking, supported by parts of an excitable environmental lobby. Once efficiency is seen within the proper context of costs, alternatives and negative side-effects, the merits of a diversified, staged, pragmatic transition to a net-zero world become clear. BEVs then can be best understood as a transitional technology to a fully decarbonised, competitive, welfare-maximising future.


Bill

https://www.emissionsanalytics.com/newsfeed Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #656575 14th Feb 2023 12:37pm
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SamThomas



Member Since: 12 Nov 2021
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There are two very different & separate issues here - "particulates" & "gases".

It is possible that a vehicle could take in air heavily contaminated by various particulates & it's exhaust gases contain less particulates. That has no bearing on what other pollutant gases are also part of the exhaust.

The other issue is what gases are contained in the mix of the exhaust

Post #656580 14th Feb 2023 1:13pm
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SamThomas



Member Since: 12 Nov 2021
Location: South East
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United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue Td6 Baltic Blue

There are two very different & separate issues here - "particulates" & "gases".

It is possible that a vehicle could take in air heavily contaminated by various particulates & it's exhaust gases contain less particulates. That has no bearing on what other pollutant gases are also part of the exhaust.

The other issue is what gases are contained in the mix of the exhaust

Post #656581 14th Feb 2023 1:13pm
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