He will have liaised closely with the police. Clearly he was told not to name the brand of car.
Clearly the fire service said it was a diesel.
He will have liaised closely with the police. Clearly he was told not to name the brand of car.
He will have liaised closely with the police. Clearly he was told not to name the brand of car.
<snip> logical fallacy ad hominem.
Disconnecting the load from a lithium-ion battery that is or about to experience thermal runaway does absolutely nothing to prevent it. The reaction you fear in that kind of battery is a chemical reaction inside the cell, not a problem with the load circuit. And you can still have problems with the load circuits with the battery in perfectly good condition and indicating no failure. Then you'd have the same scenario as with any other car's non-propulsive electrical system.
Very interesting case.
The vehicle which started that fire was a Range Rover.
If sprinklers had been installed, Kings Dock fire 'could have been contained'
‘Lessons not learnt’ from multi-storey car park fires
No, the reason the engine cuts off...
No, it's not ad hominem to point out that you think you're making a statistical argument without being able to demonstrate any understanding of statistics.
Yes, you just repeated what I said, only with more words. The scenario you're proposing for the hypothetical electric or hybrid vehicle as the cause for the Luton fire is a thermal runaway of a lithium-ion battery. Pointing out that the load circuits are disconnected for safety doesn't have anything to do with it.
BBCThe car park that caught fire at Luton Airport will have to be "fully demolished", the airport confirmed.
The fire broke out on level three of Terminal Car Park 2 on 10 October and was thought to have started in a diesel car before spreading rapidly.
The airport said any cars parked on levels ground to three "are not recoverable".
However a process is still "ongoing" to remove around 100 vehicles from the top deck.
Stop spreading unpleasant lies about me. I am well qualified in statistics. Sorry if that sticks in your craw.
Sorry, but hybrid vehicles do have disconnection management systems.
I told you what was wrong with your "statistics" argument. You have no response. That's typical from you every time you try some new way of claiming you're better and smarter than everyone else. Sorry if that sticks in your craw.
Irrelevant. The car in question was diesel-fueled, not hybrid.
Sorry but I was explaining why it is near meaningless to cite statistics showing that 'most car fires are petrol' or whatever.
It really does not prove anything about the car in question.
The thing is, when Andrew Hopkinson chief fire officer of Beds said, "“We don’t believe it was an electric vehicle,” Andrew Hopkinson, chief fire officer for Bedfordshire Fire and Rescue Service, said.
“It’s believed to be diesel-powered, at this stage all subject to verification. And then that fire has quickly and rapidly spread.”
He was not lying.
A picture was circulated of the suspect car, which the public were supposed to work out for themselves was a Range Rover. As Range Rover are not bringing out a full EV until 2024, then Hopkinson can say it is not believed to be an EV with full confidence. Likewise, there is nothing to prevent a diesel car from also being a mild hybrid or a plug-in hybrid as the diesel will be the majority power of the car. So he is not lying there, either.
In the Liverpool Fire the make and model of the originating vehicle was named immediately (Range Rover) but on this occasion the fire brigade has not actually uttered those words, so your number one surmise that legal advise is what has come into play here. This could be because:
- There is a trheat of legal action against the car brand which could backfire if wrongly named.
- Political pressure from high up due to the recent investment in a Jaguar Land Rover gigfactory to make Car Batteries via Tata, the owners of JLR.
- There may be a polcie investigation ongoing. That will be a gag.
- The Fire Brigade works closely with the police to draw up its Fire Report, so it would be unethical to announce a cause before the investigation has been completed.
- A man has been arrested 'as a precaution' on suspicion of Criminal Damage. The police might not want to alert other suspects, so he is effectively also gagged and stopped from leaving the country.
- The press are gagged from identifying this guy or discussing him due to the police arrest.
So you see, there is no conspiracy or 'lie' per se.
If as expected it is revealed to be a q-lithium battery fault then there is no loss of face for the fire brigade as they did say subject to verification and it was diesel as they believed.
As with the Liverpool car park fire, no-one was killed or seriously hurt so I expect that by the time the report comes out it'll be yesterday's news hidden on page 5 which most people will have forgotten about already. But there has been a lot of public interest in this particular case so it will be interesting to see how it is handled if it turns out it was indeed a lithium battery issue initially. They may never know for sure.
The thing is, when Andrew Hopkinson chief fire officer of Beds said, "“We don’t believe it was an electric vehicle,” Andrew Hopkinson, chief fire officer for Bedfordshire Fire and Rescue Service, said.
“It’s believed to be diesel-powered, at this stage all subject to verification. And then that fire has quickly and rapidly spread.”
He was not lying.
A picture was circulated of the suspect car, which the public were supposed to work out for themselves was a Range Rover. As Range Rover are not bringing out a full EV until 2024, then Hopkinson can say it is not believed to be an EV with full confidence. Likewise, there is nothing to prevent a diesel car from also being a mild hybrid or a plug-in hybrid as the diesel will be the majority power of the car. So he is not lying there, either.
In the Liverpool Fire the make and model of the originating vehicle was named immediately (Range Rover) but on this occasion the fire brigade has not actually uttered those words, so your number one surmise that legal advise is what has come into play here. This could be because:
- There is a trheat of legal action against the car brand which could backfire if wrongly named.
- Political pressure from high up due to the recent investment in a Jaguar Land Rover gigfactory to make Car Batteries via Tata, the owners of JLR.
- There may be a polcie investigation ongoing. That will be a gag.
- The Fire Brigade works closely with the police to draw up its Fire Report, so it would be unethical to announce a cause before the investigation has been completed.
- A man has been arrested 'as a precaution' on suspicion of Criminal Damage. The police might not want to alert other suspects, so he is effectively also gagged and stopped from leaving the country.
- The press are gagged from identifying this guy or discussing him due to the police arrest.
So you see, there is no conspiracy or 'lie' per se.
If as expected it is revealed to be a q-lithium battery fault then there is no loss of face for the fire brigade as they did say subject to verification and it was diesel as they believed.
As with the Liverpool car park fire, no-one was killed or seriously hurt so I expect that by the time the report comes out it'll be yesterday's news hidden on page 5 which most people will have forgotten about already. But there has been a lot of public interest in this particular case so it will be interesting to see how it is handled if it turns out it was indeed a lithium battery issue initially. They may never know for sure.
He will have liaised closely with the police. Clearly he was told not to name the brand of car.
Stop spreading unpleasant lies about me. I am well qualified in statistics. Sorry if that sticks in your craw.
Sorry, but hybrid vehicles do have disconnection management systems. Hence the debate on the meaning of the 'culprit' car's tail lights being on because if a hybrid, that doesn't necessarily mean the driver left the engine on.
Update today: Luton Car Park to be demolished.
Sorry but I was explaining why it is near meaningless to cite statistics showing that 'most car fires are petrol' or whatever. It really does not prove anything about the car in question.