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- Mar 7, 2020
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One of my favorite YouTube channels, "Engineering Explained", recently posted a video diving into the brilliant engineering of Porsche's new 911 engine. It's the kind of power plant that 15 years ago would have sent me racing to a dealer to get into the order queue. But . . .
I have been driving high-performance EVs for the past nine years, and this brilliant new power plant now mostly elicits a big yawn from me. I admire it much as I admire the Sutton Hoo treasures -- amazing to behold but nothing I would want to wear for a night on the town.
When I look at the incredible mechanical and electronic complexity of this Porsche power plant it leaves me scratching my head why all automakers aren't doing everything they can to move the public toward EVs, including pulling out all the stops to build EV charging infrastructure so that charging issues recede into the annals of automotive history as quickly as possible. The engineering and manufacturing challenges of bringing internal combustion engines up to anything like the power output, energy efficiency, and manufacturing simplicity inherent in electric propulsion are incredibly daunting. In my view, it's only the force of habit and the sunk costs of continuing to engineer and produce what they've long produced that keeps the ICE manufacturers on their current path -- in other words, the organizational inertia that almost all large companies develop and why so many breakthroughs in every field come from start-ups.
Couple that with the growing political hostility, at least in the U.S., to transportation electrification, and we seem to be moving backward these days in automotive technology with more and more manufacturers turning from BEVs to hybrids, although efforts such as Porsche's may create the illusion -- by sheer engineering brilliance -- of forward motion in vehicle propulsion.
I have been driving high-performance EVs for the past nine years, and this brilliant new power plant now mostly elicits a big yawn from me. I admire it much as I admire the Sutton Hoo treasures -- amazing to behold but nothing I would want to wear for a night on the town.
When I look at the incredible mechanical and electronic complexity of this Porsche power plant it leaves me scratching my head why all automakers aren't doing everything they can to move the public toward EVs, including pulling out all the stops to build EV charging infrastructure so that charging issues recede into the annals of automotive history as quickly as possible. The engineering and manufacturing challenges of bringing internal combustion engines up to anything like the power output, energy efficiency, and manufacturing simplicity inherent in electric propulsion are incredibly daunting. In my view, it's only the force of habit and the sunk costs of continuing to engineer and produce what they've long produced that keeps the ICE manufacturers on their current path -- in other words, the organizational inertia that almost all large companies develop and why so many breakthroughs in every field come from start-ups.
Couple that with the growing political hostility, at least in the U.S., to transportation electrification, and we seem to be moving backward these days in automotive technology with more and more manufacturers turning from BEVs to hybrids, although efforts such as Porsche's may create the illusion -- by sheer engineering brilliance -- of forward motion in vehicle propulsion.