ExCivilian
Well-known member
I don't think one has to be particularly smart to know US citizens are not, by and large, going to plug their $30-100K EVs into the wall during the day to allow utility companies to leech off their batteries. It won't even matter if the batteries aren't damaged by it, in my opinion, because without significant incentive it just won't happen at all. I'd still predict limited uptake even with payouts--most people don't have the luxury to care about the greater good or larger problems beyond what's in front of them at the time. Doing so with current technology would result in shortened battery lives anyway so it's a non-starter as-is. Given my background, I can't fault those who are in that situation and perhaps some here can relate depending on your personal backgrounds.I guess V2G might be possible but I’m not smart enough to know if it could work.
It may also be a heavy dose of much needed realism in response to the general EV-adopter's pollyanna perspective. There are spaces where these solutions simply won't work and ignoring that while placing all of our proverbial eggs in a singular basket for political expediency may bite us in the ass.What I don’t really understand is your fatalism and negativity:
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