Dutch46 wrote:The vast majority of large diesels are electromechanical. That is, the diesel drives a generator which in turn drives the motors that turn the wheels or the propeller.
I'd quibble about "the vast majority" but we'd run into the problem of defining "large diesels" -- I consider 18 wheelers as "large diesels," for example, and I suspect you don't.
Dutch46 wrote:Pure electric propulsion has drawbacks similar to those of steam propulsion, lack of range, load carrying capacity and the need for frequent and lengthy stops to recharge the batteries.
I wouldn't judge what is possible for Safehold by what the real world has managed to accomplish against the economic pressure of the auto industry and Big Oil's influence. Most countries around the world don't have the USA's fetish for independent personal transport and have vastly more extensive mass transit systems powered in large part by Electricity.
Safehold has the opportunity to bypass dependence on ICEs, personal transport, and fossil fuels, with the advantage of OWL and Merlin's databases they can go directly from Steam to advanced batteries and transmitted power without fouling the atmosphere with ICE exhaust.
Dutch46 wrote:Handwaivium power is a rather long way off and would be a hard sell to a population that will be in shock when they see the first diesel truck coming down the road.
Not if they skip over the Diesel truck to an Electric Truck running off a catenary overhead powerline shared with the public transport trams.
I have no idea what is required for "handwavium power" and it may seem simple and obvious when MWW gets around to describing it -- it might be "Mr. Fusion" a la
Back To The Future; It might be broadcast power a la Nicola Tesla.
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Answers! I got lots of answers!
(Now if I could just find the right questions.)