El Dobro
Top Post Dawg
Even for what it is, it didn't do too bad in this test.Same reason the Hummer H3 weighs less than 5k lbs compared to the new Hummer EV clearing 9k lbs. Batteries are heavy, and weight requires energy to move.
Even for what it is, it didn't do too bad in this test.Same reason the Hummer H3 weighs less than 5k lbs compared to the new Hummer EV clearing 9k lbs. Batteries are heavy, and weight requires energy to move.
I'll go look at it and probably test drive it but my days of wanting/needing a minivan are long behind me. Even thinking about coast to coast travel, I don't want to do that in a minivan.
I like the looks of the SUVs but will wait a few years to let the VW bugs show themselves.VW Group's Scout operation was wise to add the option of an on board IC engine to charge their batteries- A small IC engine capable of 100KW can weight less than 100KG and eliminate the need for hundreds of KGs of batteries!
Be careful, you may be tempted to the dark side.I'll go look at it and probably test drive it but my days of wanting/needing a minivan are long behind me. Even thinking about coast to coast travel, I don't want to do that in a minivan.
I like the looks of the SUVs but will wait a few years to let the VW bugs show themselves.
I've been tempted but just can't figure out how to make a 2500 round trip work with an electric only vehicle. Thinking of the early days when diesel was not as widely available. There were a few pucker moments!Be careful, you may be tempted to the dark side.
Just about ran out of diesel in San Diego on a Sunday in 1979- CA tax on fuel was high so most over the road truckers bought out of state, local truckers didn't work weekends so the couple stations with diesel were closed. Stayed overnight with a friend and fueled up Monday morn before heading back to Minnesota.I've been tempted but just can't figure out how to make a 2500 round trip work with an electric only vehicle. Thinking of the early days when diesel was not as widely available. There were a few pucker moments!
I had a similar experience in 1978 in San Francisco. Drove up there from LA for the weekend, and Sunday morning there were no diesel stations open in the city. My Rabbit was well into the red on the fuel gauge. I ended up depending on my girlfriend's charms (later my wife) to ask a local dairy to give us a few gallons of diesel so we could get to the interstate.Just about ran out of diesel in San Diego on a Sunday in 1979- CA tax on fuel was high so most over the road truckers bought out of state, local truckers didn't work weekends so the couple stations with diesel were closed. Stayed overnight with a friend and fueled up Monday morn before heading back to Minnesota.
Maybe they can make a plant that burns windmill blades.Hehe:
Missouri battery plant fire, explosion in Fredericktown | ksdk.com
We're also now BURNING wind turbine blades here.
Rural Missouri is becoming the dumping grounds for "clean energy" fallouts. Luckily our coal fired power plants keep it all humming along.
I got a surprise back in '05 when I pulled into a service station and none of the diesel pumps had the restricted nozzle. I had to borrow a funnel and splash some diesel in to make it back to the highway.I've been tempted but just can't figure out how to make a 2500 round trip work with an electric only vehicle. Thinking of the early days when diesel was not as widely available. There were a few pucker moments!
Still doesn't top oil rigs going up.Hehe:
Missouri battery plant fire, explosion in Fredericktown | ksdk.com
We're also now BURNING wind turbine blades here.
Rural Missouri is becoming the dumping grounds for "clean energy" fallouts. Luckily our coal fired power plants keep it all humming along.
Commercial going for the nostalgia side.I've been tempted but just can't figure out how to make a 2500 round trip work with an electric only vehicle. Thinking of the early days when diesel was not as widely available. There were a few pucker moments!
Pro move right there: Find a significant other who is charming and non-threatening to strangers.I ended up depending on my girlfriend's charms (later my wife) to ask a local dairy to give us a few gallons of diesel so we could get to the interstate.
The other manufacturers will have to trim the fat to get their costs down.So, stopping the incentives will only slightly hurt Musk but cripple his competition. Reason enough to double down on them.
After leasing 3 different electrics. The cars themselves are on parity to compete with Gas & diesel vehicles. The incentives are to line the pockets of the companies at this point, honestly. Get your processes in order, bring parts in house like tesla which significantly trims your overall cost, they're trying to operate via tons of middlemen and it is hurting their bottom lines, supply chain, and etc...The other manufacturers will have to trim the fat to get their costs down.
Looks like Tesla had repairs already in mind when they came up with the gigacastings.Been driving electric for nearly 4 years. I wouldn't endorse all of Tesla's cost cutting measures. The gigacasting basically means that a Tesla is totaled after a car crash, and trying for camera only FSD and traffic alerts is begging for trouble.But I would endorse bringing parts supply in house.
oh for sure. I mostly meant bringing it inhouse which brings the processes inhouse.Been driving electric for nearly 4 years. I wouldn't endorse all of Tesla's cost cutting measures. The gigacasting basically means that a Tesla is totaled after a car crash, and trying for camera only FSD and traffic alerts is begging for trouble.But I would endorse bringing parts supply in house.
Doesn't matter if tesla decided it was made to fix or not, matters if the body shops and insurance company says it is worth fixing. Time amd time again we see the electric vehicles just arnt worth the cost of repair let alone the risk taken on by the repair shop for doing the repair. Can't hardly even get them to fix a dent without replacing a complete panel.Looks like Tesla had repairs already in mind when they came up with the gigacastings.
I agree with your comment about middlemen, but auto parts supply, especially body parts, aren't the same as a generic door switch. They're made by one, or a very few, manufacturers for a specific application, and often the auto manufacturer controls supply and distribution. Need a DPF for your VW? Although you may buy it from different retailers, there's only one source. And they set the price.idk maybe i don't understand enough about supply logistics, but the basics that i DO know about business is that middlemen = higher for the consumer, and often less profit for the manufacturer. Example my pellet stove had the door switch go out, to get it from quadrafire $45, finding the generic US version from a furnace $20, finding the part supplier, and buying it direct? $4 -- I bought 4 of these switches, current one has been working since last season no issue - Just saying.