Dear Lazywebz... (Automotive Edition)
Dec. 8th, 2010 10:40 amLast night, as I was driving home from a night shift at the data center, I was thanking $deity every, oh, 10 seconds or so that the passenger cabin of my Civic was warm & toasty despite a nasty windchill factor in our region. Most conventional gasoline & diesel engine vehicles use heat from the engine's operating combustion to warm the passengers and defrost the windshield.
How do the Prius, Leaf & Volt warm their human passengers?
I suppose those with an internal combustion engine could run the engine to generate heat but that would have a huge impact on gas mileage. They could use their battery power to run electrical heating elements; I have no idea how much of an impact that drain would have on their range.
Can anyone with first-hand knowledge enlighten me?
How do the Prius, Leaf & Volt warm their human passengers?
I suppose those with an internal combustion engine could run the engine to generate heat but that would have a huge impact on gas mileage. They could use their battery power to run electrical heating elements; I have no idea how much of an impact that drain would have on their range.
Can anyone with first-hand knowledge enlighten me?
no subject
Date: 2010-12-08 03:51 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-12-08 04:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-08 11:52 pm (UTC)As for the Leaf... no verifiable information, but I imagine that it will have to use electrical resistance heaters. Together with the problems faced by cold batteries, that'll cut into the mileage very badly in cold climates.