You people are absolutely batshit crazy. You cannot countenance the mere possibility that anyone might say "this is good engineering" if it's about Tesla. i don't like the company, I loathe the owner, I've had four EVs so far and none of them is a Tesla, and in multiple ways, other OEMs have clearly surpassed them, but I'm not completely deranged by my dislike and can recognise when they have built something impressive, a feat that appears entirely beyond you.
Your response here is complete idiocy.
- Your statement about incentivisation is gibberish, it's not written in comprehensible English.
- I'm not an imbecile, "sodium-based cars" is clearly an abbreviation for cars using sodium chemistries in their batteries of the sort that BYD, CATL and Gotion have announced. And the entire fucking point is that sodium chemistries lag on gravimetric power density compared to NMC but are cheaper, so you can *make up* for that relatively lower power density by improving overall efficiency to get the same range with a sodium chemistry as with LFP but for lower cost. Jesus fucking christ, you're a complete dumbshit. You can't even understand basic things because you can't read properly.
I fear I am going to have to spell this out for you:
1. A BYD Dolphin typically achieves a range of about 230 miles from a 57kwh usable LFP battery. It therefore has an efficiency of about 250Wh/mile
2. BYD will be able to make a cheaper Dolphin with better cold weather performance by switching to an Na battery. The pack-level gravimetric density will be about 30% worse. So instead of a 57kWh LFP battery, it will only fit a 42kWh Na battery. The smaller volume pack enables small thermal management systems, lighter structures, lighter brakes and suspension, enabling some clawing back of mass, but the net effect is likely an inherent efficiency improvement from 250 to say 225 Wh/mile from lower rolling resistance, inertial losses, etc. So the 42kWh Na pack means the Dolphin can go 190 miles, a 40 mile worse range than the LFP version but at lower cost.
3. If BYD then applies some of the efficiency improvements that Tesla has implemented such as SiC inverters, better aero, integrated thermal management, etc, it may be able to improve efficiency from 225 Wh/mile to say 200Wh/mile, and the range improves to about 210 miles. Now you have a cheaper Dolphin with better cold weather performance from a sodium battery that can travel 210 miles, only a 20 mile range penalty compared to the LFP version.
This wasn't that hard for you to follow, was it? And this relies on Chinese OEM ingenuity. It's not about Tesla, except they provided some inspiration.
- "Their own competitive edge in autonomy" referred to Chinese OEMs, not Tesla, you fucking muppet.
You are a complete and utter imbecile, unable to follow the basics of what other people write. You start from your priors and mislead yourself right up your own bottom like an idiot. And you assume everyone else is as moronic as you, and thus cannot deal with any shorthand at all, whether it's "sodium cars" when this obviously means "cars with Na-based chemistries" or "the cybertaxi market" when it means "the nascent cybertaxi that may never fully develop but actually may, because it's multiple companies around the world pushing for autonomy and some making some modest progress although the problems remain really hard".
Go chew on your priors, dipshit