[Ovmsdev] Gas vs. battery metric?

Shaun Jurrens shamziman at gmail.com
Tue Jun 16 03:20:47 HKT 2020


Hey,

I appreciate the wisdom in Mark’s approach and his and others’ work on this project and, in this matter, his opinion.  No solution is ever used just for what it was intended. Even if he wanted to, the project could easily be forked and massed produced in countries with few IP laws.  It’s already “out there”.

Secondly, purists and absolutists rarely serve projects’s benefit very long as their growing impatience with the world’s imperfections tend to kill their motivation sooner rather than later.  Indeed, if perfect environmental requirements were necessary, then no one in NL, for example, would be allowed to drive at all, EV or ICE, as well over 90% of NL’s energy production isn’t from renewables.  Life is more complex than what we can easily see.

I own an Ampera and am glad for the functionality that has been developed in OVMS and hope to be able to contribute some day soon. The car is a utilitarian compromise from its day in 2013, and it gets me through the year with 90% of my travel on battery.  It’s not perfect, but it’s much better than nothing, and that is where most of us (and the world) need to start. 

The old saying is “Perfection is the enemy of progress” (or as Voltaire phrased it, “the best is the enemy of the good”), fits rather aptly here.

Cheers,
Shaun
(via the iPad thingamajigg)

> On 15 Jun 2020, at 10:39, Chris van der Meijden <chris at arachnon.de> wrote:
> 
> 
> Hey Mark
> 
> I think it is a difference telling someone what to do or actively enabling what someone can do. If you enable something for someone you are ethicaly responsible for that something.
> 
> All in all, we are all on the same side of the river. Driving EV's brought a deeper understanding for the climate issues to me and I'm sure to most of us. Good to read that you are active in a charity in HK. Working together for a cleaner future. Just like the development of OVMS :-)
> 
> Regards
> 
> Chris
> 
> Am Montag, den 15.06.2020, 15:56 +0800 schrieb Mark Webb-Johnson:
>> Hmmm...
>> 
>> It is hard to decouple ‘open’ from ‘free’, particularly given the roots of the open source movement. But at it’s core is the concept of openness and freedom in that I (or we) should not be telling anyone what they can or cannot do with this project. The user is free to do with it what they will, and our license explicitly states that.
>> 
>> So, given that we cannot control what is done with the project, or what type of vehicle it is used in, the decision is whether we allow the ‘v.b’ battery namespace to be ’trampled on’ with ICE metrics? I think that the suggested v.ice namespace is a reasonable compromise.
>> 
>> Regards, Mark.
>> 
>> P.S. My personal opinion is that I drive electric cars, prefer them, and advocate for them every day. I even co-founded a charity here in HK to support and promote them.
>> 
>>> On 15 Jun 2020, at 3:13 PM, Chris van der Meijden <chris at arachnon.de> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Sorry, I disagree.
>>> 
>>> I think "Open" stands for open source and open source should also mean being open to discussions. And discussions involve personal opinions.
>>> 
>>> IMHO supporting internal combustion engines in OVMS is a bad idea in times of climate change. It is the wrong signal if we do so.
>>> 
>>> I do not want to "over discuss" this, but it is important enough for me suggest not to implement support for ICE engines.
>>> 
>>> Greetinx
>>> 
>>> Chris
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Am Montag, den 15.06.2020, 10:27 +0800 schrieb Mark Webb-Johnson:
>>>> 
>>>> I think the core principle of the “Open” in “Open Vehicle Monitoring System” is that we should not restrict any uses, no matter our personal opinions.
>>>> 
>>>> Regarding the metrics themselves, I agree with Michael. The v.b namespace is intended for vehicle battery metrics. Perhaps we can simply add another namespace “v.ice” for internal combustion engine fuels?
>>>> 
>>>> Note that OBDII defines standard fuel type codings (service 01 PID 51):
>>>> 
>>>> Value	Description
>>>> 0	Not available
>>>> 1	Gasoline
>>>> 2	Methanol
>>>> 3	Ethanol
>>>> 4	Diesel
>>>> 5	LPG
>>>> 6	CNG
>>>> 7	Propane
>>>> 8	Electric
>>>> 9	Bifuel running Gasoline
>>>> 10	Bifuel running Methanol
>>>> 11	Bifuel running Ethanol
>>>> 12	Bifuel running LPG
>>>> 13	Bifuel running CNG
>>>> 14	Bifuel running Propane
>>>> 15	Bifuel running Electricity
>>>> 16	Bifuel running electric and combustion engine
>>>> 17	Hybrid gasoline
>>>> 18	Hybrid Ethanol
>>>> 19	Hybrid Diesel
>>>> 20	Hybrid Electric
>>>> 21	Hybrid running electric and combustion engine
>>>> 22	Hybrid Regenerative
>>>> 23	Bifuel running diesel
>>>> 
>>>> A ‘v.fueltype’ metric makes sense for this. Perhaps just use the full OBDII list (which supports hybrids). For ICE vehicles, keeping to standard OBDII PIDs is probably the simplest and most standardised approach. So, “v.ice.tank.level”, or something like that (OBDII PID 0x2f).
>>>> 
>>>> Regarding the Apps support for this (and other things), that is something I am working on and trying to prototype. I will eMail separately regarding this.
>>>> 
>>>> Regards, Mark.
>>>> 
>>>>> On 15 Jun 2020, at 2:46 AM, Michael Balzer <dexter at expeedo.de> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Craig,
>>>>> 
>>>>> I strictly vote against re-interpretation of the SOC metric. Where metrics have clear semantics we should not make them dependent on some context.
>>>>> 
>>>>> A battery is not a fuel tank, and vehicles may have both. "v.b." is the namespace "vehicle battery" and shall not be populated with non-battery metrics.
>>>>> 
>>>>> That's what I meant by adding technology specific metrics: if the vehicle has a fuel tank, additional standard metrics describing that fuel tank shall be present.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Fuel tank specific metrics might e.g. get the namespace "v.ft.", ICE engine specific metrics might get "v.ice.", fuel cell metrics "v.fc.", rocket thruster metrics "v.rt." … you get the idea.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Make a proposition for the metrics sets you need. Try to define them as generalized as possible.
>>>>> 
>>>>> That will probably include duplicates of some metrics, like the ranges & consumption. That's necessary to be able to describe a hybrid, and some units among those will also need to be different (e.g. consumption in litres / m³ per km).
>>>>> 
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>> Michael
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Am 14.06.20 um 18:59 schrieb Chris van der Meijden:
>>>>>> Thank you for considering my thoughts.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I believe it is a good idea to use a v.tech variable and not using gas or gazoline. That gives OVMS enough flexibility and is also a (little) statement.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I'm also looking forward to rocket propulsion add ons :-))
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Greetinx
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Chris
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Am Sonntag, den 14.06.2020, 08:21 -0700 schrieb Craig Leres:
>>>>>>>> On 2020-06-13 08:31, Michael Balzer wrote:
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> How about adding an array or set metric like "v.ext" or "v.tech", for
>>>>>>>> defined technology codes. A tag present in the metric means the
>>>>>>>> additional metrics, commands & configs for that technology are available.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> My goal is to make it possible for the app to depict soc with something
>>>>>>> other than a battery graphic when the energy source is not a battery.
>>>>>>> How about v.tech with "battery" and "other" as the initial two possible
>>>>>>> values?
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 		Craig
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>>>>> 
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