The truth about electric car fires

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  • Опубліковано 15 лип 2024
  • If you believe the media sometimes you'd think that the slightest accident in an EV would turn into a fireball or people shouldn't park an EV next to your home for fear of spontaneous combustion. Well, it's time to take a deep dive into the furore around electric car fires.
    How likely is an electric car to catch fire compared to a petrol/gas powered car. What does it take to get a lithium battery to ignite, and what happens if you hit one with a big lump hammer, multiple times?
    Watch this video to find out.
    For further reading on the subject here's a few good links for you.
    www.autoinsuranceez.com/gas-v...
    www.evfiresafe.com/ev-fire-wh...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 844

  • @mraidymaddful
    @mraidymaddful Рік тому +88

    To be honest Richard, I was expecting you to pierce the battery with a screwdriver. I have seen car crashes and vehicle burn outs on You Tube where the battery was pierced in a crash and it flared up and totally killed the car.
    Then there are the ones where the vehicles just suddenly burst into flames in the middle of a charge cycle. Apparently it's quite common in China.

    • @alastorclark3492
      @alastorclark3492 Рік тому +5

      Thats no surprise. China built bmss sure do live up to their name. 😅

    • @joeyager8479
      @joeyager8479 Рік тому +3

      I believe that shorting across several batteries would be more realistic. Even the packaging for common Alkaline batteries (A, AA, AAA, C, D and others) warn against leaving them loose where they could short out, put in a fire, or try to recharge them can cause them to catch fire or explode.
      Fires from recharging is usually an electronic control failure of the charger or the monitoring electronics.

    • @ttkddry
      @ttkddry 11 місяців тому +2

      Mraidymaddful: it depends on the battery chemistry used... Most producers used LFP but in China they are still producing (cheaper) Nickel Manganese Cobalt (NMC) batteries, these are also used in older hybrid cars. NMC chemistry is easier to set on fire compared to LFP

    • @Ozvideo1959
      @Ozvideo1959 8 місяців тому +4

      Lithium Ion batteries have caught fire many times and not just in cars. The Eastern Golf Club complex, here in Melbourne burnt down, at a cost of over 40 million Austrailian dollars, ( US25 million) The cause was Lithium Ion batteries they use in their golf carts. There have also been houses burnt down because of e-scooters on chargers. The link to the golf club story is below
      ua-cam.com/video/Xb28p8feV7o/v-deo.html

    • @lindabell5534
      @lindabell5534 Місяць тому

      Lol wonder how the numbers of car ,bus and big trucks would add to his statements.

  • @JohnnyEars07
    @JohnnyEars07 Рік тому +132

    I was expecting you to puncture the battery or short it out (which could well happen in a severe crash), this would have yielded different results.

    • @tuxnor
      @tuxnor 11 місяців тому +7

      Excaktly , my tought as well as i tested this with very different results than shown here

    • @jshays007
      @jshays007 11 місяців тому +3

      Gasoline vehicles in accidents often catch fire

    • @dontwastetimetoday493
      @dontwastetimetoday493 11 місяців тому +2

      ​@jshays007 then put the fire out with your extinguisher

    • @sullivanrachael
      @sullivanrachael 11 місяців тому +2

      The charge state of the battery makes a big difference to its ability to burn. If the battery is fully discharged it won’t have so much chemical potential energy stored. So a puncture injury of a fully charged cell, shorting out the internals, would likely be a far more dangerous incident than simply distorting the battery with hammer whacks against a movable aluminium tray and table.

    • @grahamstevenson1740
      @grahamstevenson1740 11 місяців тому +2

      @@jshays007 Usually they DON'T however !

  • @dkd1228
    @dkd1228 Рік тому +61

    A fundamental difference with electric cars is that all the reactants to make things happen are present in the charged batteries. This is not the case with petrol, as you must mix an oxidizer (usually from the air) in order to make things happen.

    • @phillyphil1513
      @phillyphil1513 11 місяців тому

      re: "This is not the case with petrol, as you must mix an oxidizer (usually from the air) in order to make things happen." yup ref: Fire Science and the FIRE TRIANGLE.

    • @johne5783
      @johne5783 11 місяців тому +3

      Another huge difference between the EV fires and petrol vehicle fires is the amount of water it takes to put them out. According to some reports, as much as 10,000 gallons of water for an EV vs. 500 to 1000 gallons for a petrol vehicle.

    • @grahamstevenson1740
      @grahamstevenson1740 11 місяців тому +1

      There are no 'reactants' in an EV battery. They appear to catch fire because of STORED ENERGY.

    • @MrVolodus
      @MrVolodus 10 місяців тому +2

      @@grahamstevenson1740 Kind of ... Charged batteries burn "better", because short circuit creates more heat, which releases more electrolyte, which decomposes into oxygen and other flammable stuff - those are reagents.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      @@johne5783 Or a fire blanket for an ICEV - all you have to is starve it of oxygen. Batteries, OTOH, generate their own, which is why they're unstoppable to all practical purposes. ua-cam.com/video/AIXTP-TgPEw/v-deo.html

  • @criscross572
    @criscross572 Рік тому +5

    What about a dead short on a 400v battery pack in an accident replicate that.

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому

      Why? That is so ridiculously unlikely to happen in reality. There are fuses that would pop and cell taps that would let go. You'd really need to bypass so many onboard safety systems to be able to make that happen.

  • @scraverX
    @scraverX Рік тому +38

    I will say I was wondering how many hits the 18650 would take before "something" happened. I've seen one run over by a HGV, and sure it was pretty squished but like your test it was just one cell in isolation. Gets a little more complicated when you have multiples.

    • @malHHkenny
      @malHHkenny Рік тому +3

      Not a matter of the number of cells. Combustion of lithium cells requires air in contact with the charged chemistry. Puncture. (Put cells in saltwater for some time to create a closed circuit with massive discharge dissipation and then drive a nail through such a cell -- no combustion.) If a hammered cell isn't breached -- if the blows or pressure don't open the case -- no air; no combustion.

    • @MrPlumloko
      @MrPlumloko Рік тому +2

      and when there not dead

    • @adrianwilloughby5352
      @adrianwilloughby5352 Рік тому +2

      And when your "table" is wood, it absorbs quite a bit of energy from the hits. So sure you can dent it but puncturing it will be difficult.

  • @julianpritchard2558
    @julianpritchard2558 Рік тому +13

    As I’m sure someone will remember, back in the day, and I think it was William Woodard on top gear ( yes I’m that old) demonstrated that a large percentage of car fire were actually, the brake fluid hitting the hot exhaust manifold that caused the fire, not petrol.
    If batteries blew up when dropped I’d have shares in Dewalt by now given the number of times I’ve dropped my drills and drivers .
    I believe the the German fire service drop an EV in a modified skip or shipping container filled with water for about a week after a fire, just to be sure it’s safe.

    • @andydrayton6139
      @andydrayton6139 Рік тому +8

      Nice one Julian.. William Woollard was the bloke and it brought about a change in how brake fluid reservoirs had to be secured to prevent them coming off during an impact and pouring their contents onto the hot manifold and combusting.. It’s far more likely to ignite on a hot surface than petrol or diesel is…….

    • @julianpritchard2558
      @julianpritchard2558 Рік тому +1

      @@andydrayton6139 I knew someone would know more than me

    • @jackhererrmm
      @jackhererrmm Рік тому +3

      @@RussEdgar445y7tlfj I came to the comments to post exactly that link, I uploaded that clip 15 years ago to make this same point in a forum discussion, people don't believe it until they see it!

  • @vintagemachines
    @vintagemachines 10 місяців тому +16

    Good video. You should do a video explaining what happens when an electric car is flooded by saltwater, and that weeks later the car may be operational, but still a danger to ignite...

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh 5 місяців тому

      And maybe a video explaining what happens when an ICE car gets water in it's air intake.........

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      @@Brian-om2hh I'd rather have a catastrophically dead engine that an exploding battery - do you have any idea what you're talking about? (No apostrophe in the possessive form of "its", BTW.)

    • @tunkunrunk
      @tunkunrunk 4 місяці тому

      but what about lightning ? what happens if an electric car is struck by lightning ? will it be short circuited ?

  • @johnt.848
    @johnt.848 Рік тому +10

    The magnesium used in early VWs made them as hard as lithium fires to extinguish. Water made them flare up even more.

    • @steam6626
      @steam6626 Рік тому

      Also why it wasnt the best idea to put the damaged cell in water.
      But i have to admit i was surprised by it not going up in flames in the petrol fire

    • @HappyHands.
      @HappyHands. Рік тому +3

      Also the fact that the fuel lines at the carburetor tended to crack open and leak directly on the hot engine and exhaust also had something to do with it. ;)

  • @weggles91
    @weggles91 Рік тому +4

    came for the explosions stayed for the sideburns

  • @Roo63
    @Roo63 Рік тому +44

    Tried putting the battery in water? During the floods in Florida (last year?), the EV's were exploding 10 to the dozen. Thanks for the impact demo :)

    • @polizovski
      @polizovski Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/video/8nz5ijXcckI/v-deo.html

    • @lovemauihawaii
      @lovemauihawaii Рік тому +5

      Good idea. And test in salt water if possible, cuz salt water is the worst for electric batteries, it starts fires.

    • @JakobusVdL
      @JakobusVdL 11 місяців тому +2

      That would be all over the news - got any links?

    • @JakobusVdL
      @JakobusVdL 11 місяців тому +3

      It was 11 out of 2450 EV's in that county, plus some golf carts. So not quite as high a rate as you're suggesting.
      I found the information on an a FEMA Emergency Services report. It site also contains some good advice to owners on how to avoid the issue, and responders on how to manage the hazard of a flooded EV.

    • @lovemauihawaii
      @lovemauihawaii 11 місяців тому +1

      ​Thanks​ @JakobusVdL for your opinion. If you search youtube for "ev fires" then try watching them all, you'd be at it full time for at least a week. This already huge problem will get worse over time as more Hybrids and EVs are on the roads.

  • @BaronSamedi1959
    @BaronSamedi1959 Рік тому +7

    Do you know what is the major cause of fire in any car (EV and ICE)? It is arson, deliberate or accidental. Dropping a cigarette on the upholstery and such. Actually, there is about three times as much energy in your car's upholstery than in its fuel tank or battery.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      There is much more energy in a fully charged EV battery! It's about ten times more than the average household uses in a day.

  • @terryhayward7905
    @terryhayward7905 Рік тому +25

    It would have been somewhat different if you had put a spike through the battery, that would have shorted it out and released the energy very quickly.

    • @JohnDunkley
      @JohnDunkley Рік тому +4

      But the new blade batteries are advertised by drilling through the battery pack to show how safe they are. Great to see new advances in this technology

    • @JustWasted3HoursHere
      @JustWasted3HoursHere Рік тому +2

      Agreed. That would be a true penetration test. The hammer was more of an "impact" test.

    • @marshferguson4737
      @marshferguson4737 11 місяців тому +1

      And would have caused cobalt poisoning I'm pretty sure that's why he didn't pierce it! But left that part out right? 🙄 if a ICE car caught fire for no reason, that vehicle would be recalled!

  • @ronaldking1054
    @ronaldking1054 Рік тому +16

    It might be better to measure the amount of gasoline and take a proportionate number of batteries to show just how dangerous it would be in a relative manner.

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +3

      That's why we only used a splash of petrol, barely enough to wet the bottom of that pan.

    • @ronaldking1054
      @ronaldking1054 Рік тому +3

      @@ElectricClassicCars Yeah, and what's worse is that you'd have to spread the gasoline out because it is spread throughout the entirety of the car. The electricity however is spread through metal wiring with a mildly flammable insulation covering.

    • @philippk819
      @philippk819 11 місяців тому

      @@ronaldking1054 I don't get that logic. There is a fuel tank in the back and a fuel line connecting it to the motor in the front (provided, the motor is in the front). In an EV the whole chassis/floor of the vehicle more or less is made up of battery. If that battery is set on fire at once (which might not be likely), the entire car is engulfed in flames in an instant. That would be like filling the entire floor of the car with gasoline.

    • @ronaldking1054
      @ronaldking1054 11 місяців тому

      @@philippk819 Batteries aren't that flammable, and how much energy would you have to provide? Now, apply that energy to the gas tank alone, which is pressurized. While the electric car would catch on fire, the gas tank would be a bomb.

    • @philippk819
      @philippk819 11 місяців тому +3

      @@ronaldking1054 sorry but you watched too many movies. A car's fuel tank doesn't "explode" like in the movies. All those vehicles that show that "behavior" in movies were rigged with explosives. The maximum that happens is a deflagration. That can be bad enough but it doesn't turn the car into a "bomb".

  • @Paul-li9hq
    @Paul-li9hq 11 місяців тому +7

    Here's a fascinating, slightly related story for you....
    I dropped my vape into water last week... Grabbed it out quickly, hoping it would be ok...
    It wasn't!!! The water had obviously shorted out the battery/internals and the heating coil came on. And STAYED ON. Obviously, the vape started to get quite hot to the touch..! Not knowing quite what to do about this, I decided to sink it back in a tub of water - hoping at least to cool it down! This did appear to stop the coil from heating, as the blue light at the bottom went out and it was no longer hot to the touch...
    But here is the kicker... I remove the vape from water a day later, to dispose of it... And the blue light came on and it started heating up CONTINUOUSLY again. This nonsense went on for days.
    I do not recommend anyone try to recreate this at home!!!

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  11 місяців тому +3

      Drop anything electrical into water and it won’t end well, unless it’s sealed and designed against water penetration.

    • @marshferguson4737
      @marshferguson4737 11 місяців тому

      I've dropped mine in the tub but I got it out real quick but I was worried it would blow up lol

    • @robinhood4640
      @robinhood4640 5 місяців тому

      @@marshferguson4737 Exploding cigarettes, that's James Bond technology.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      Imagine that happening to a couple of cells in your EV, in your garage.

  • @BarryBeatmaster
    @BarryBeatmaster Рік тому +11

    the bus fire at Potters Bar garage last summer must be mentioned; an Optare Metrodecker EV caught fire while charging, and 6 buses in total were destroyed; this was apparently due to the wrong type of coolant being used (conductive coolant used instead of low-conductive). all TFL's buses of that model were withdrawn, but all were returned to service after an investigation, and seem to be running fine- I've never seen one broken down/being towed.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      They do have a much lower range than gasoline buses, though, so they need more to service the same number of passenger, adding to the traffic on the road. Not to mention the resources needed to build them in the first place.

  • @hopefultraveller1
    @hopefultraveller1 Рік тому +10

    Great video! But I would have liked to have seen the battery fully charged and then shorted-out - that could happen in a car accident...

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +1

      The battery was fully charged but we didn’t short it out that is correct.

  • @VampiricHoshi
    @VampiricHoshi Рік тому +6

    You said yourself really, the lithium battery requires a short in it's circuit to go off, and even that is an oversimplification. The cell itself is made up of layers of an anode and cathode with a gel substrate in-between all rolled up like a chocolate swiss roll. The only way for that to ignite (besides sticking it in a bowl of burning petrol..) is for several layers of the cathodes, anodes, and gel, to all be simultaneously bridged. That's really unlikely to happen by slugging it with a hammer, you'd have to hammer a (electrically conductive) nail through it or something. And even then, a single cell probably doesn't have enough energy to cause a fire, you'd need a bunch of them to be leaking all over each other. It's basically the same thing that causes standard batteries to set a fire off in the back of a rubbish truck, which probably happens more often than electric car fires.
    Fully charged did a thing on this a few years back. The majority of EV fires happen while charging, and it's usually a fault in the charger cable and not the actual EV.

    • @GizmoGTI
      @GizmoGTI 9 місяців тому +1

      there should be more education on what to do if an ev happens to catch fire (run!! and stay clear of any smoke) there more ev fires these days, only cause there are more ev's out on the road and the risks are becoming more frequent as the chances are higher.

    • @kerrykirk2515
      @kerrykirk2515 Місяць тому

      There's also how they drive/thrash those cars and drain the batteries that worries me, just cos they know it can go sooooo fast it doesn't mean that it has to, but then to put blame on components is a joke, if haulage companies are investing in fleets then theres obviously a difference in opinion about manufacturing issues, no way would anyone want to spend that much to see it go up in flames leeching out noxious smoke, research the brand, become more intellectually invested in the processing, enquire as to what apply fire safety plan was at the factory during production..,.. Anyways there should be in each country, a whole car care test section in a driving license application and testing ! If the drivers are irresponsible then it falls on their ignorance, they shouldn't be scaremongering people into believing it's the company's fault,.

  • @francesconicoletti2547
    @francesconicoletti2547 Рік тому +5

    I just got hearing aids. I specifically asked for the ones with the lithium batteries, as they are the rechargeable ones. No I don’t have an expectation that the hearing aids are going to set my head on fire.

    • @FirstDan2000
      @FirstDan2000 Рік тому +1

      I use bluetooth earbuds and I'm always dropping them. Never once has it started a chain reaction and blown my brains out.
      Whereas the old petrol powered ones eventually stopped being newsworthy.

  • @dj_paultuk7052
    @dj_paultuk7052 Рік тому +8

    You may have already heard the news coming out of China, but BYD cars have been bursting into flames at a very high rate so far this year. It seems to be happening during their charge cycle. Bit alarming considering BYD are starting to sell in the UK now.

    • @logitech4873
      @logitech4873 Рік тому +3

      How many cars per 100K?

    • @HOSPlTALLER
      @HOSPlTALLER 11 місяців тому

      @@logitech4873 who knows, park one in the garage under your daughters bedroom and let me know how you sleep at night.

  • @pgbaines65
    @pgbaines65 9 місяців тому +3

    I was not surprised with the method you used as the big problem is when the battery is damaged in a way the negative comes in contact with the positive. A bit like what happens when jump leads and touch the ends together you get sparks.

  • @fydstar
    @fydstar Рік тому +6

    Judging by the amount of squashed disposable vapes I see on the street, there is very little danger.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      Low probability, high consequence.

  • @williamgoulet6959
    @williamgoulet6959 Рік тому +15

    Enjoyed the video. It should be mentioned, for balance, that the battery in a tesla 3 weighs approximately 1060 lbs while 16 US gallons of gasoline weighs (6.2 x 16) roughly 100 pounds. This compensates for the energy density difference, but is also another reason why EV fires are feared. Hopefully, the technology continues to improve

    • @cmfrtblynmb02
      @cmfrtblynmb02 11 місяців тому +1

      It is also not just about energy density difference. That density difference is related to what you get from the battery as electricity. The battery itself is much more energy dense once it starts burning if you look at what you get as heat. So the density difference evaporates once they are both burning and then you have 100 lbs gas on one hand, most of which is sitting in a gas tank that is relatively hard to burn and 1000 lbs battery just gloriously all exposed to air

    • @GizmoGTI
      @GizmoGTI 9 місяців тому

      it's inevitable there'll be more ev fires as they'll become more prevalent. they really need to know how to quickly and safely manage a thermal runaway when it happens - you could have 4 or 5 ev's in an underground car park - a petrol car catches a light and happens to be parked next to an ev, or an ev may have been in a light accident just before entering the car park, parks it and later sets off. that'd be an epic fire... really they're not safe when they're lit

  • @ShortVersion1
    @ShortVersion1 Рік тому +6

    Great service Richard! With your sense of humor, I half expected this to be a blunt cruising video!

  • @USUG0
    @USUG0 Рік тому +2

    curiously, according to those statistics, hybrids are twice as likely than gas cars to catch fire.
    BTW, should have pierced the battery, and also overcharge the hell out of it

  • @nassertee
    @nassertee Рік тому +6

    i was expecting the petrol to be way worse, but the 18650 surprised me... never seen one burn and i know it's safer than my LiPos, but i was still expecting a bigger flame

  • @kirkjohnson6638
    @kirkjohnson6638 8 місяців тому +1

    Tell me you've never swung a hammer before without telling me you've never used one.

  • @malHHkenny
    @malHHkenny Рік тому +2

    The spate of ebike battery fires in NYC... Looks like it's down to overcharging -- charger at too many amps; wrong voltage (too high); no overcharge protection on battery or charger. How long before everyone fully understands that quick-charging stresses have to be carefully accounted for?

  • @jirx7
    @jirx7 Рік тому +5

    How much charge did they have in them? I’ve had a 21700 cell (fully charged) short circuit in a Chinese torch and that shot flames out (pretty spectacular but short lived) I know charge does effect the result

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +1

      Yep, it was fully charged. 😁👍

    • @jirx7
      @jirx7 Рік тому +1

      @@ElectricClassicCars whislin diesel in their latest video, just ran over their little electric pickup truck and you clearly see the batteries getting squashed, no explosion no fire just a few sparks. 👍🏽

  • @007jerkins
    @007jerkins Рік тому +3

    You could try attacking the 18650 with a hatchet, rather than with a lump hammer...

    • @dannyseville2543
      @dannyseville2543 Рік тому

      I was thinking the same. In fairness the battery did take more of a pounding than I expected but I do have to ask if it was charged and what whould happen with an axe rather than a hammer.

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому

      It was fully charged. I too wanted to try an axe but unfortunately, and much to the relief of Tim behind the camera, we couldn't find one in the workshop. 😆😁👍

    • @dannyseville2543
      @dannyseville2543 Рік тому

      @Electric Classic Cars haha, it would have made for interesting viewing. You did touch on the main point the media make on the fires in evs though, the issue they burn more fierce and harder to put out. I'm all for evs and if I had waited a month just before this recent dip in 2nd hand eV prices, I would have one now instead of my ice car.

  • @alibro7512
    @alibro7512 Рік тому +7

    Last week I hammered nails through 18650 cells and nothing happened so I wasn't surprised. Maybe if the cells had been new and fully charged there might have been more reaction but in my case it was boringly safe.

  • @FullFact548
    @FullFact548 Рік тому +7

    I had a thought earlier about Euro Ncap crash testing on EVs. Even with that rigorous testing they don’t burst into flames. 😊

    • @aj9969
      @aj9969 Рік тому

      Batteries are discharged during those crash tests.. as the batteries have no energy, they will not catch fire.

    • @FullFact548
      @FullFact548 Рік тому +1

      @A J It's not possible to fully discharge an EV battery as they have built-in buffers to protect them from being fully drained. Have you any evidence to support your claim?

    • @aj9969
      @aj9969 Рік тому +1

      O’Malley revealed that IIHS crash tests vehicles with EV batteries that have been charged at only 12.5% of a full charge. He explained why: “These batteries have a lot of energy in them, and a thermal runaway accelerates quicker the more power is in the battery itself. If a battery is fully charged and something happened inside it, the thermal runaway would happen really quick. At 12% it still is going to happen with a damaged battery, but it just happens much slower, so that’s why we settled at 12%. That’s kind of a common range across the industry and based on other labs.”
      - O Malley, IIHS crash test coordinator.
      Basically, EV crash tests don't simulate real world conditions, where a fully charged battery can get involved in a crash.. So we need to take their crash tests with a grain of salt.

    • @FullFact548
      @FullFact548 Рік тому +1

      @A J I am unable to find any data regarding EV battery fires from a crash, but research by Applied Thermal Engineering states that thermal runaway actually reduces the higher the state of the batteries charge. Even at 12%, the average EV battery will contain 7kWh of electricity.
      According to Thatcham Research CTO, Richard Billyeald said that electric vehicles generally have a lower fire risk than fossil-fuel vehicles, but that the data pool is currently small.
      “Our latest research indicates that the risk of a fire for all types of EV remains less likely than for ICE (internal combustion engine) vehicles. It should be noted that the usable data only goes back five years, and even now, the number of EVs on the roads still represents a very small sample size.
      “This is also reflected in the safety testing we conduct in the UK on behalf of Euro NCAP, where despite the robust impacts to the front and particularly the sides of the vehicle where the battery is most vulnerable, there have been no resultant thermal events.”
      Further research by a major insurance company in the United States recently conducted a study. Electric cars, according to the study, are, in fact, the least likely to catch fire. 25.1 out of every 100,000 electric vehicles sold caught fire. For the same number of combustion engine cars, 1,529.9 caught fire.
      However, hybrid cars are certainly the ones that catch fire the most often. 3,474.5 out of 100,000 hybrid cars sold caught fire. This is more than double the number of cars using internal combustion engines.
      In all honesty, it's very difficult to assess the dangers of EV battery fires as data is limited. That said, EVs took a 16% share of new car sales globally last year. Of course, it is true to say that once they do catch fire, they are more difficult to extinguish. In reality, EV fires are over reported in the media, especially on social media.

    • @sosteve9113
      @sosteve9113 11 місяців тому +1

      This just happened on a cargo ship in the Netherlands,3000 cars going up in flames at this moment

  • @chrisdaigle5410
    @chrisdaigle5410 Рік тому +3

    If you watch dashboard camera video channels, you will see that many frontal car crashes result in gasoline fires because of fuel lines in many vulnerable places under the hood. Luckily cars today have fuel circuits that shut off anytime a crash violent enough to cause real damage happens.

    • @logitech4873
      @logitech4873 Рік тому +1

      There's more than just gasoline that's flammable in an engine compartment though, and there's always plenty of heat to get things started

  • @jonathantaylor1998
    @jonathantaylor1998 Рік тому +2

    Should we worried with the glint in your eye, Richard, when you said to Tim, "Let's go blow stuff up"...!! 🤣

  • @AntonyvanIersel
    @AntonyvanIersel Рік тому +3

    I had a lifepo4 battery catch fire when I was working on it, stupid mistake - I connected a smaller pack wrong way around to a bigger pack. Bad, yes dumb. What caught on fire was the BMS not the battery its self. That in turn took 1 cell out. But it was not very exciting. I have had worse with petrol.

  • @nagki
    @nagki Рік тому +6

    I think shorting and overcharging are two good additions for the demo and also to indicate that it is either a BMS defect or a poor job with wiring assembly or bad repair job at an aftermarket shop(avoid... avoid...). Another cause of battery fire has to be battery defect(rare but can happen) due to dendrite formation or manufacturing defect?

  • @robinhood4640
    @robinhood4640 5 місяців тому

    The only thing that surprised me, was the use of "some minutes later" and "quite some time". Very useful information.

  • @GNKI
    @GNKI Рік тому +11

    It's not the burning process that's the problem, but actually putting out the fire. Petroleum fires are no biggie to extinguish, but fires involving multiple battery cells can last for hours and are tough to put out. This is especially true for lithium-ion batteries that are found in electric cars. They can release tons of heat and toxic fumes, and can even start back up after being put out. So, special techniques and gear may be needed to safely extinguish battery fires. It's a bit of a challenge, and the industry is still figuring out the best ways to deal with it.

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +4

      That's correct. They are notoriously difficult to extinguish. But so many people out there for whatever reason think electric cars catch fire more readily than a petrol fire, which is simply just not true. 👍

    • @jeffreyquinn3820
      @jeffreyquinn3820 Рік тому

      I expect the emergency services in bigger services are already preparing to deal with EV accidents. I suspect it may be some time before all the tiny rural services do.

    • @GNKI
      @GNKI Рік тому +1

      although many petrol heads believe that electric cars are prone to spontaneous fires, this is not the case unless there is a fault in the battery chemistry or it is punctured by a sharp object, as explained in your video. It's unfortunate that the introduction of new technology always faces resistance from people who are reluctant to change. However, it's important to keep educating people on the safety and benefits of electric cars.

    • @GNKI
      @GNKI Рік тому

      Hey @jeffreyquinn3820, you bring up a good point. It's definitely important for emergency services to be prepared for any type of accident, including those involving electric vehicles. And while larger services may already have protocols in place, it's understandable that smaller, rural services may take a bit longer to catch up. Hopefully, as the use of electric vehicles becomes more widespread, we'll see more widespread preparation from emergency services across the board.

    • @marshferguson4737
      @marshferguson4737 11 місяців тому

      ​@GNKI benefits? The price of the vehicle is astronomical the insurance is as well! It's still using fossil fuels to charge them. The fire situation is not minimal and there hasn't been recalls! They get written off from a fender bender and lose half their value after year 1.....what benefits? It costs less at home to charge but not at public chargers! How does this benifet everyone? I would love an EV btw but it's not financially reasonable

  • @markdavich5829
    @markdavich5829 Рік тому +3

    My fear in any vehicle is an unfused short circuit. Every time I see a vehicle on the side of the road on fire, I suspect an electrical problem first - Probably a shade-tree mechanic or an unchecked apprentice perhaps did something improperly and let the smoke out.
    Some guys have no concept of polarity - I had a guy working for me whose only experience was pulling parts/dismantling cars at a junkyard. I turned him loose on an engine replacement and he did a pretty good job except for having the battery cable connections reversed on the engine.
    Luckily, I checked his progress periodically at key points and made him come and get me before he put the battery in :))

  • @theirondragonsmachineshop7377
    @theirondragonsmachineshop7377 Рік тому +2

    Overcharging is much mor exciting. Hook one up to a constant current supply at 1C and watch the voltage start climbing after 4.5V. Around 5.5-6V, you'll get a nice conflagration!

  • @Hyfly13
    @Hyfly13 Рік тому +8

    What were the relative energy densities of the battery and the amount of petrol that you used? because I suspect it may not have been a fair fight and I would have been interested to see you put a nail through a battery of the equivalent energy size to the amount of petrol you had. Just for fun like!

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +2

      The amount of petrol was barely enough to wet the bottom of the pan, which is why it went so soon . 👍

    • @francesconicoletti2547
      @francesconicoletti2547 Рік тому

      But a car is never going to carry the equivalent energy in batteries that it does in petrol. EVs certainly don’t now. ICE cars waste at least 70% of the energy of their fuel , EVs around 10%. So ICE cars have to carry more energy for equivalent performance. Given that current EVs don’t have equivalent performance have more or less half the range of an ICE they are carrying half the energy again.

  • @andyb7963
    @andyb7963 Рік тому +1

    Brake fluid causes more fires in a car crash, reservoirs pop out in a crash and it gets on the exhaust manifold and sticks to it opposed to petrol which evaporates

  • @jed7644
    @jed7644 7 місяців тому +1

    My house is new by European standards, but here in the States it’s among the oldest in town. At 123 yrs old, it was built when a farty exhaust was a whole ‘nuther kind of mess. A lot of the properties in my near-downtown neighborhood still have Model A garages in the furthest corners away from any other structures, & many of them are siting over the outhouse pits that were no longer needed in a world full of new-fangled stuff like indoor plumbing & cars.
    Those garages aren’t just covering pits that it would’ve take a fair amount of dirt to fill. Like the outhouses, people wanted them as far away from their homes as they could get them. Here in the States around 800 internal combustion cars per year _still_ burn to the ground, so just imagine what it was like a century ago when people were starting to build our quaint little garden sheds.
    In the face of carelessness with liquid fuels & electricaltricity alike the risk of fire is non-trivial, but I’m guessing that a lot of the hysteria about EV fires is coming from today’s versions of yesterday’s harness makers & wagon builders & bike shops, etc.
    In the year 1900 a coupla local rich guys had managed to kill themselves with the only cars here or in any contiguous county, but horse-turd-dodging bicycles were everywhere. Yet another early objection to cars - they had a way of splashing street goo clear up onto porches & through storefront doors.

  • @FlyingFun.
    @FlyingFun. Рік тому +3

    Was this a fully charged battery?

  • @FreerunMediaService
    @FreerunMediaService Рік тому +4

    I wasn't surprised at all. That battery can have a lot of damage before it go up in flames. It's another story when it's penetranted. It will go up in smoke in a couple of seconds and there is nothing to stop that other than run as fast as you can. Als with the heat treatment, it will just vent out and not much is going to happen. But another thing is we all know about Samsung Note, that one burst into flames with no effort at all. Those are even banned by the airlines. So a badly build batterypack can give you a lot of problems. Now if you put a nail through that battery, it will go in a second and the reason for that is, the used materials within the battery are well insulated but hit is with a nail and that barrier is gone.

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +1

      Put a nail through a battery will indeed create a dead short but it's so unlikely to happen. Not impossible, just very very unlikely. Something would need to penetrate the bottom of the battery pack, which is usually made of thicker material than the rest of the battery box, and then onto the cells inside to be able to do that.

    • @bhabbott
      @bhabbott 8 місяців тому

      A few years ago I had a large number of old lipo batteries (used in RC model planes) to dispose of. I neutralized them by hammering a chisel through each battery. A few let out a puff of smoke and that was it. However I had two 4 cell packs that had been overchargeed and were very swollen. When I punctured one flames shot out with a large amount of white smoke. I threw it in a bucket of water which instantly put it out. Same thing happended with the other one. Now I keep a bucket of water next to the bench when working on Lipo batteries. @@ElectricClassicCars

  • @mark_staykind1470
    @mark_staykind1470 Рік тому +2

    been watching some oldscholl sherlock holms videos... and that "very good..." from Tim at the intro part made me laugh a lil bit..

  • @hughbatchelor8599
    @hughbatchelor8599 Рік тому +4

    Trouble is, in an accident where multiple cells are crushed together and shorted out is where the problems start. Also I know from personal experience I crashed an RC helicopter with a lipo battery in it and it definitely made some dramatic smoke signals and burnt to a crisp even still providing power to the electronics on the chopper for a while. No battery will appreciate being abused and will expire with dramatic effect. It seems to be the charging and BMS that I think are responsible mostly for battery fires. Chinese electric cars are a real problem in China, but maybe their quality control is better for export markets. It would be interesting to see the full report by the insurance companies. They may even rig that so EVs gain popularity as there is such a hard push to destroy fossil fuel consuming industries. BTW, do you know anybody who does EV conversions that will fit in a 2007 Honda quad bike? Cheers.

    • @Renegade040
      @Renegade040 11 місяців тому

      They only used a very small amount of petrol. So you want to use heaps of batteries, but a little bit of petrol, it was a fair comparison

  • @andrewallen9993
    @andrewallen9993 Рік тому +3

    The truth is that once an electric car catches fire it cannot be put out by professional fire departments and may catch fire again up to two weeks later. When my petrol car caught fire I was able to put it out with my fire extinguisher!
    Most people don't realise it was safer to be on the Hindenburg when it caught fire than a Boeing 737 MAX with a single faulty AOA sensor!

  • @rushja
    @rushja Рік тому +1

    I just enjoyed watching spud hitting stuff with a hammer and running away tbh

  • @ricbarker
    @ricbarker Рік тому +2

    What was The SOC of the cells you were testing ? Petrol for the most part has a linear energy density whereas battery cells have a dynamic energy density depending on the state of charge can you graphically show or physically show exactly the relative mass of petrol to a fully charged 18,650

    • @haydendemenezes2460
      @haydendemenezes2460 Рік тому

      How about a flood scenario petrol Vs electric?

    • @davemoore5222
      @davemoore5222 Рік тому +2

      @@haydendemenezes2460 Interestingly the UA-camr “Tavarish” is currently attempting to restore a flood damaged McLaren P1 hybrid HyperCar.
      The only physical damage to the vehicle was caused by the recovery people. Admittedly there were still large amounts of sand within the body shell, and water in the (ICE) engine, gearbox and exhaust system, plus passenger and luggage compartments, and the 12 volt (lithium) battery was at a low voltage. However the series is still ongoing so more will be revealed as the work continues (he paid around $575 thousand for the car, so he will be continuing the series).
      Believe it or not, designers of electric vehicles have known that flooding might occur for over a century and have included that possibility into their designs since day one…
      I have seen quite a few videos of Teslas that have been restored from flooding, using their original battery packs, and also former ICE vehicles converted to electric using batteries from flood damaged cars, when the body shell and/or interior fittings were too far gone.

  • @JohnR31415
    @JohnR31415 Рік тому +3

    And LiIon vs LFP vs Sodium Ion batteries as well - drastically different behaviours

  • @tjhessmon4327
    @tjhessmon4327 5 місяців тому +2

    BEV fires are mostly caused by failure of the solid electrolyte interface (SEI), allowing the solvent to contact the graphite, generating massive thermal heat. Since lithium batteries are not led acid, simply shorting their terminals might result in now effect as the batteries are protected against short circuit of the external connectors.
    Impact or heat, which damages the SEI however, will result in thermal runaway.

  • @DailyBitesofWisdom
    @DailyBitesofWisdom 6 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for this!

  • @barriewilliams4526
    @barriewilliams4526 Рік тому +2

    Each will defend their own even when they are wrong🙃

  • @FirstDan2000
    @FirstDan2000 Рік тому +1

    Really interesting video that quickly became hilarious.
    Great sign off too - I see what you did there .

  • @robjoenz82
    @robjoenz82 Рік тому +1

    Setting one battery on fire does not fully explain what happens, being that the original Teslas had 1200 of those in the battery pack. Hitting the battery with the hammer would not throw the battery into a thermal runaway, it would cause the crimp on top to give way and allow the battery to vent. Piercing said battery with metal would cause the desired (or undesired) effect for your demonstration. As far as the petrol fires being more frequent than the battery fires.....yes, you are correct. However, ask a fireman which fire he would want to attempt to extinguish, and I believe he would say petrol every time.

  • @JohnDunkley
    @JohnDunkley Рік тому +14

    Excellent article. Thank you. I saw another short UA-cam clip of fire fighters putting a large fire resistant blanket over an ev that was on fire. This instantly stopped the fire, short term. Which would give time for people to get to safety. Fire fighters are working hard to contain said fires, but as you say they are much rarer than is talked about.😊

    • @MisdemeanorThoughts
      @MisdemeanorThoughts Рік тому +1

      People should already have been able to “get to safety” before the hose draggers show up. Which, on a good day, takes anywhere from 7-12 minutes. And then another two to four minutes to deploy the blanket. And what of the EV’s that reignite at the yard because the lithium cell still has oxygen reaching it? Than they have to “put it out” again. Does anyone actually use their grey matter anymore?

    • @kevinmicheludis1259
      @kevinmicheludis1259 Рік тому +2

      Majority of the cars on the road are not electric, when there's more electric cars then we'll see an increase im ev fires and they won't be considered so rare anymore

    • @jamiepatterson1214
      @jamiepatterson1214 8 місяців тому

      Watch the videos of EVs catching fire after the battery pack shorts out, then figure how long it would take for a fire company to reach the fire location, then talk about getting safely out of an EV on fire.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      @@MisdemeanorThoughts Not to mention the heavier than air gas cloud that leaks under the blanket ... ua-cam.com/video/AIXTP-TgPEw/v-deo.html

  • @eveningstar3230
    @eveningstar3230 Рік тому +2

    Very informative!!

  • @grahambeyer6254
    @grahambeyer6254 Рік тому +3

    I was expecting lots of sparks and fizzes. I'm utterly perplexed.

    • @mondotv4216
      @mondotv4216 Рік тому

      What you've seen before is probably a whole battery pack going up.

  • @scottpeacock5492
    @scottpeacock5492 Рік тому +1

    Good demostration of of petrol vs battery cars, You should of educated people show people how dangerous diesel is if set alight, A few local buses nearby me in North Hertfordshire caught alight some years ago and written off two buses.

  • @kieranjamieson
    @kieranjamieson Рік тому +2

    Petrol won't ignite when it contacts a hot exhaust manifold. Diesel or oil will but petrol will just evaporate.

  • @gregjarvis3288
    @gregjarvis3288 Рік тому +2

    I assume the battery packs in EVs are cooled so what happens if a car is trundling along and somehow unbeknown to the driver the cooling system is compromised and the batteries overheat....what happens then?
    In a crash both might happen rather quickly of course!

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      I'm sure you can answer your own question! And as EVs get older and/or are poorly maintained ....

  • @curtisbme
    @curtisbme Рік тому +8

    How charged was that cell? If it is very low or dead, it isn't going to do anything. Also, you needed to puncture it to give yourself the best chance of fire (along with it having a charge).

  • @Playingwith3D
    @Playingwith3D 8 місяців тому +2

    Wait 10 years when junk yards are full of old EV's and one catches fire. You'll hear about it on the news.

    • @nusplus3985
      @nusplus3985 6 місяців тому

      it already happens - look at chinese taxis - left in hundreds and tousands on the field, near living areas of towns, letting all the inhabitants to smell and swallow the toxic gases from incidental battery burning, wich happens in multiple ways. keyword for those immortal battery fires - thermal runaway - 2500 celsius, melting concrete and steel, ruining whole buildings just because of one faulty car battery - be it airport, mall, skyscraper or hospital. as of today, nobody nowhere on earth is using electrical cars for emergency medical help, right?

  • @ortonscustoms2577
    @ortonscustoms2577 Рік тому +1

    Totaly agree however one 4.2 volt cell is a little different to 400+v

  • @anysailer
    @anysailer Рік тому +2

    Dear Richard, I hope your wife doesn't notice the missing pudding bowl... what was that Wedgewood or Noritake perhaps? Seriously though, thanks for the demonstration. I do know from personal experience that piercing a Lithium battery (cellphone battery) does cause it to 'explode' in a way and by 'explode' I mean it bulges, crackles, fizzes and shoots sparks and flame out of the hole, and the reaction continues for a while even if you put it in a basin and run some water. So, not nearly as violent or dangerous as a petrol fire, but definitely difficult to extinguish.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      A cellphone battery is a little smaller than an EV battery - compare a petrol fire to the real thing. Or set fire to the amount of petrol you can hold in your hand - easy to put out and not at all violent of dangerous.

  • @thebaldyhippy
    @thebaldyhippy 11 місяців тому +1

    Cool video, my mind is put at rest now that I know petrol is involved in battery fires, and that there has been no other battery fires.

  • @rafverbeeck9888
    @rafverbeeck9888 Рік тому +2

    Big fan but why was faillure of the BMS covered where the formation of dendrite spikes shorts the battery & sets the pack on fire ?
    As far as I understand that is the number one reason battery packs go up in flames.
    Furthermore, I have some friends in the fire department and they told me for instance a Tesla which is on fire has to be submerged in a container of water for at least 24 hours to avoid re-ignition.

  • @ohger1
    @ohger1 Рік тому +2

    Was the cell fully charged? My understanding is that they are more likely to immolate if they're fully charged.

  • @oilstovesandmore
    @oilstovesandmore Рік тому +2

    Same test compared with diesel please. Hard to ignite with open flame.

    • @jackhererrmm
      @jackhererrmm Рік тому

      Diesel will ignite easily if it contacts a hot surface such as the exhaust manifold. Unlike petrol despite the claims in this video.

  • @bernardcharlesworth9860
    @bernardcharlesworth9860 Рік тому +1

    Have used lithium iron portable drills for 20 years and have not had one set fire

  • @jestronixhanderson9898
    @jestronixhanderson9898 11 місяців тому +1

    I build powerwalls with 18650s , in testing if i find low capacity cell or one that heats up on charging , i chuck it in a salt water bucket, 1000s of times, no explosion. The cells slowly discharge through electrolysis. Even at 4.2v. I believe flooded evs burn as the electronics short out across 400 or 800v.

  • @mrmawson2438
    @mrmawson2438 Рік тому +2

    Great video mate

  • @rolandtb3
    @rolandtb3 Рік тому +1

    Missing was heat/temperature. Outdoor temperatures, charging rates. It would be nice to see self combustible temperature(s) and erratic fast charging possibilities(extremes).

  • @marcpinion
    @marcpinion Рік тому +1

    Are there any plans for a series 3 of your fantastic TV show.

  • @maxtorque2277
    @maxtorque2277 Рік тому +2

    Some important points to add ime:
    1) the no1 cause of vehicle fires are firse as a result of the act of arson, not from a fault with the vehicle or a crash!
    2) The second largest cause is hot exhaust systems setting fire to dry scrub and grass on which the vehicle has been driven / parked
    3) the third largest cause is sparks from hot exhausts settting fire to dry scrub and grass
    Clear the electric vehicle that operates at close to ambient temperature cannot cause fires by mechanism 2 or 3 so is immediately massively less likely to cause a fire in the real world
    The no1 cause of vehicle fires for internal combustion engined cars after a crash or impact is nothing to do with the fuel it runs on, but is actually as a result of hot engine oil, power steering (and transmission lubes) or in fact brake fluid being split onto hot exhaust systems and reaching there flash point. Again, without a hot component to start that fire, and with vastly less lubecants one board (and those that are on board being at far lower operating temps) again the eletric vehicle has significant immunity to these causes
    The no 1 cause of electric vehicle fires however is not actually to do with the vehicel directly, but is poorly specified, maintained or incorrectly used charging infrastructure! Because a BEV can sit charging for a long time, an electrical circuit in the supply to that vehicles charging equipment can result in a fire. For EV owners this is by far the greatest risk!

  • @locknut5382
    @locknut5382 Рік тому +2

    The battery performed as expected, Richard. Thank-you. 🙂👍
    For the record, was it fully charged before you administered the GBH?
    At least it's flat now! 😁

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +1

      It was fully charged and is definitely flat and well squished now. 😂👍

  • @massoud999
    @massoud999 Рік тому +6

    It is perhaps a bit off topic but why aren't e-bike batteries allowed on planes?

    • @stevenclarke5606
      @stevenclarke5606 Рік тому

      I’m not absolutely sure but I think that it’s probably due to them being lead acid batteries, the problem arises if the acid spills or leaks out, acid is very corrosive and could cause failure of the aircraft body and explosive decompression. If the acid leaks then their is the possibility of producing toxic gases.

    • @69Buddha
      @69Buddha Рік тому

      Amount of energy storage capacity.

  • @SuperMacGuy
    @SuperMacGuy Рік тому +1

    The Corvette E-Ray being banned by Corvette Club competition ostensibly for safety reasons was a big thing in Corvette circles the past 2 weeks. I'm not worried much about the fires, but race tracks don't have a good way to deal with runaway lithium battery fires if they do start. My opinion is that safety teams need to learn techniques and get equipment appropriate for handling it, aside from "1000s of gallons of water" (but IDK what the alternative is).

  • @Brickstin
    @Brickstin 5 місяців тому +1

    Interesting, this experiment is comparable to ignition differences between petro and batteries (with a good quality battery of course), however is not as comparable to an entire package of batteries lighting each other up via domino effect, so it would be nice to see an entire array of batteries react to an impact in a car crash via simulation - it would make a good test video:
    Also just to note: There is literally videos on youtube of random e-v cars, trucks and busses catching on fire , some are almost instant and violent while others catch on fire over a timeframe.
    Sometimes this is on a case by case scenario when it comes to batteries, there is a lot of factors that has to be considered, the manufacturing quality of the battery, the age of the battery, the Maintenance and care of the battery, the environmental conditions, the power demand conditions, how the driver treats the car.
    So many factors, which can result in some batteries exploding and catching fire, or slowly catching fire and hissing out fumes, or not blowing up and catching fire at all.
    If the right conditions are met; quality of the production of battery, age, maintenance, and proper regulations if all goes well there is a lower chance of a car battery igniting like petro and putting life in danger..
    Thanks for sharing this video.

  • @whocares264
    @whocares264 11 місяців тому +2

    The truth about electric car fires is that they are very rare...

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  11 місяців тому

      Yep. EVs are 20 times less likely to catch fire than ICE cars. thedriven.io/2023/05/16/petrol-and-diesel-cars-20-times-more-likely-to-catch-fire-than-evs/

  • @bellofbelmont
    @bellofbelmont Рік тому +1

    Thanks. Jim Bell (Australia)

  • @robtmcL12
    @robtmcL12 Рік тому +1

    Try that with a fully charged pack and you'll see the Energy released due to Electricity and not just the miniscule amounts of Lithium.
    Imagine having 75Kwhr stored in a pack being able to store enough energy for a 10 bar electric fire for an hour ( 1 bar electric fire was often 750 watts ).
    Now release that Energy in a shorter time, like say 10 minutes. That would be equivalent to 60 bars on the electric fire.
    It isn't "just" the energy release of Lithium burning. That Electrical Energy is also released as a massive "Arc" or "Plasma".

  • @bruceyoung1343
    @bruceyoung1343 Рік тому +2

    I got a kick out of your reaction

  • @ChasingDifferentAdventures
    @ChasingDifferentAdventures 7 місяців тому +1

    You forgot to add the cooling systems fluid mixing with the Rupture battery 🔋 packs.
    Mix it with water 💧

  • @ramblerandy2397
    @ramblerandy2397 Рік тому +2

    I've actually been involved in an ICE fire. However, we were extremely lucky in that we discovered it immediately when we [4 in the car] stopped because we were front on, close to some newly gloss painted green wooden gates which reflected the fire glow from under our bonnet. Calmly, I said. "We're on fire, get out of the car." "What?", came the reply. "GET OUT", I shouted. They got out. 😊 We were able to extinguish the fire too by acting very quickly. That happened some 40 years ago. We laugh at the comedy of it these days, but were it not for us parking the way we did we could have gone up like a Roman candle.
    For the last few years I've owned a BEV. As Richard says, it is the mainstream media, badly informing the general public, which promotes these topsy-turvy viewpoints. Only yesterday I spoke to a passer-by who was curious about my ID3. He said, "Of course, we'll all end up driving Hydrogen cars." My Tesla owning friend and I looked at each other, and he said, "is it your turn or mine to explain to someone about Hydrogen?" "Yours", I said. But before my friend started, I turned to the guy and asked him where he got his information from? "From the [mainstream] news", he said. It took my friend something like a full 10 minutes to put to bed all the misinformation this guy had received. He walked away promising to dig deeper than the mainstream.

    • @spudproductions7606
      @spudproductions7606 Рік тому +1

      Well said 👍😀

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      I bet things would have been very different if your ICEV had been an EV, once it starts it's too late to do anything but run away.

    • @ramblerandy2397
      @ramblerandy2397 4 місяці тому

      @@stevemawer848 But the thing is, they don't start. Practically all the big fires last year for example attributed to BEVs turned out to be diesels. The car carrier - a diesel. All the ICEVs were destroyed. The BEVs on another deck were all driven off in port.
      Luton Airport car park - a diesel.
      And there are a couple more I can't remember the details of. All in 2023.

  • @SinisterBlackShadow
    @SinisterBlackShadow Рік тому +1

    How are batteries prevented from over charging. I know they have a BMS I believe but that may fail? Could that be possible? Thanks for the video guys!

    • @Veeger
      @Veeger Рік тому

      Any component has a possibility of failure. Ask NASA

  • @miguelangelsimonfernandez5498
    @miguelangelsimonfernandez5498 Рік тому +1

    you need to puncture the cell and expose it to ambient air to set it on fire by penetrating it

  • @vwbeetle001
    @vwbeetle001 Рік тому +1

    I am all for electric classic car conversion but as a lot of commenters have mentioned, this video doesn’t really address the root cause of lithium battery fires and also the issue of putting the lithium fire 🔥 out. The Author should address this in relation to a converted classic car tucked away in my garage beneath me charging while I sleep. The risks and what we can do to mitigate (so I can sleep 🛌 soundly 😅)

  • @stevenkostamo1279
    @stevenkostamo1279 10 місяців тому +1

    where the batteries charged? i have done the same tests many times and yes I got fireworks out of the new fully charged batteries, but nothing out of a dead battery.

  • @ewaf88
    @ewaf88 Рік тому

    Its a pity he wasn't able to lift Thor's hammer.

  • @mrmawson2438
    @mrmawson2438 Рік тому +5

    Hello mate fuel combusts 😀

  • @Ka0sNite
    @Ka0sNite Рік тому +1

    was the 18650 fully charged? try wacking a nail through it and also over charging it.

  • @polizovski
    @polizovski Рік тому +2

    It is not a proper test for the battery. Since it is one batter and no connection to other batteries. So when an impact is applied to multiple connected batteries it is different.

    • @ElectricClassicCars
      @ElectricClassicCars  Рік тому +1

      We also didn't use a full tank of petrol.

    • @polizovski
      @polizovski Рік тому

      @@ElectricClassicCars true, but the fire from the battery would be harder to put off. Especially on a business where the battery is on the rooftop. Not so safe for busses. Maybe safer for cars with nice protection of the batteries and probably Li Phosphate. Anyway any accident no matter of the type of car is a potential fire hazard. Both equally dangerous to me. All do i love your classic conversations. Keep up the great work of making the oldies run better and have a second life.

    • @polizovski
      @polizovski Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/video/8nz5ijXcckI/v-deo.html

  • @theunknownunknowns5168
    @theunknownunknowns5168 Рік тому +2

    Richard what's your thoughts of electric stock cars? I'm close to a stockcar race track in a inner city (very small city, we named our rubbish dump Mt Cleese because John Cleese once said bad thing about us decades ago). Stockcars are very noisy and you can smell the intense pollutants if the wind is coming your way. Anyway. Isn't that race style prime for electric conversion? Short, high speed, weight down low???

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      Be prepared to run if anything crashes into you.

  • @laurieharper1526
    @laurieharper1526 Рік тому +1

    I wouldn't imagine that impact itself would be the main cause of electric vehicle fires. However, if, as a result of an impact, the batteries were shorted (by metal that is damaged/deformed by the impact, for example), that could be very dangerous, especially if the battery pack is holding a hefty charge. Probably not as likely as a fuel tank being ignited (which isn't that common, when viewed against the number of road accidents, unless you drive something like an old Ford Pinto - the Regs controlling placement of fuel tanks and protecting them in the event of an crash are pretty strict these days), but a lot more serious if it does happen.

  • @mikedx2706
    @mikedx2706 Рік тому +1

    I don't think it's question of which type of vehicle catches fire easiest, but which type of vehicle fire the local fire departments can actually extinguish versus will the vehicle have to just burn itself out. Gasoline fires can be rather easily extinguished these days by anyone's fire department. EV fires, on the other hand, almost always have to be allowed to simply burn themselves out while the fire department stands around watching the EV burn and simply trying to prevent the EV fire from spreading to other combustible materials in the vicinity.

  • @bertbroadley7056
    @bertbroadley7056 Рік тому +1

    The most dangerous thing in this video is putting damaged Lithium cells in a bucket of water.

  • @Aschoolbusandsimulatorfan2219
    @Aschoolbusandsimulatorfan2219 Рік тому +2

    This video help me. I'm your new sub bro.

  • @robertm1459
    @robertm1459 Рік тому +1

    I'd like to know if the EVs being crash safety tested have a full charge & if it's in an operational state. Same as an ICE vehicle should be at full temperature & engine running when it's crash safety tested, & of course a full fuel load.

  • @johndoyle4723
    @johndoyle4723 10 місяців тому +2

    I worked on a chemical site handling low flash point solvents, just the same as petrol, we took enormous precautions with our electrical installations which cars do not.
    We banned all petrol vehicles from the entire site, this is common procedure in the UK, we also banned mobile phones for similar reasons.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 4 місяці тому

      I trust you also banned EVs from your site?

    • @johndoyle4723
      @johndoyle4723 4 місяці тому

      @@stevemawer848 Yes of course, I did not allow any non conforming devices on site,this included EVs, this is common practice on sites like mine.