Should the first car be a fuel-powered vehicle or a new energy vehicle?
1 Answers
The differences between fuel-powered vehicles and new energy vehicles are as follows: Driving Operation: There is basically not much difference in driving operation between new energy vehicles and fuel-powered vehicles. Since the power source of new energy vehicles is electricity, their gear shifting is all knob-style. The starting method of fuel-powered vehicles is the same as that of new energy electric vehicles: press the brake and the start button, the vehicle starts the high-voltage system, turn the knob to D gear, release the handbrake, and the vehicle slowly slides out of the parking space like a fuel-powered vehicle. There is not much difference from fuel-powered vehicles in all these aspects. Different Power Sources: New energy vehicles accelerate faster and smoother compared to fuel-powered vehicles. Electric vehicles use power batteries as the power source and are driven by motors. The speed of the vehicle can be directly controlled by the size of the input current, which is a linear change, and the acceleration and deceleration changes of the vehicle are also linear. Ordinary fuel-powered vehicles, on the other hand, use transmissions, and the engine's power output to the wheels involves certain changes in the transmission ratio. Acceleration Performance: Comparing the acceleration performance of the vehicles, new energy vehicles accelerate faster. Pure electric vehicles only need to change the size of the input current to obtain different power outputs. In the subsequent use of fuel-powered vehicles, if the gear shifting is not coordinated, the engine power cannot be quickly output.