Solar panels on a car are a gimmick.
In the case of the Aptera specifically, the integrated solar panels actually do add some meaningful range (40 miles per day) due to how extremely aerodynamic and light the car is.
Solar panels on a car are a gimmick.
In the case of the Aptera specifically, the integrated solar panels actually do add some meaningful range (40 miles per day) due to how extremely aerodynamic and light the car is.
j4k3@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I haven’t kept up with things, but that has to be like bicycle level light and lab conditions. I remember people talking about bicycling with solar and the required area was the size of a pickup truck just to power a basic hundred pound-ish touring kit, and even then it was only pedal assist on a cloudy day or hills. That was only 10-13 years ago. The main issue is that panels are not in any way optimally directional in practice. I expect 40 miles is down hill from the continental divide on I40, after parking the thing in the beam of a solar molten salt energy storage array for a day, during peak solar storm activity, but the fuck if I know bugger all. I know Dave did the math about one of the cars back when he was looking at various EVs. IIRC, no solar panels are more than 30% efficient, most are around 20-25% under optimal conditions. Then you half that or more when they are not directional. That gives a best case baseline for the energy they can produce based upon the sun’s output. I know panels have been improving, but we are well past any large scale optimizations and into the phase of scaling production to reduce cost. Do you know what they claim to have changed?
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 1 day ago
I was basing that off their own claimed numbers I’d seen quite a while ago, which I admit are likely to artificially optimal and inflated.
Looking into it a bit more, I noticed a good comment under one of their videos that calls out their numbers and provides a more realistic scenario.