I don’t think that’s as guaranteed as either of us would like that to be.Yeah they're guaranteed to work as opposed to quitting about half way through the intended task like their electric counterparts.
I don’t think that’s as guaranteed as either of us would like that to be.Yeah they're guaranteed to work as opposed to quitting about half way through the intended task like their electric counterparts.
It’s an attack on public taxpayer funds/budgetsI think a lot of people are taking the EV thing too personally and just want to complain when something doesn't test out. Who cares, they'll do what's best. At least they tried a thing instead of jumping in head first.
Some of ya'll really need to calm down about it. It's not a personal attack on you that we have battery powered vehicles.
I mean that would be an option regardless of whether I agree with it. Self control with power comes every time one gets behind the wheel. I don't know of a single new vehicle on sale now that isn't capable of exceeding the speed limit. Self control with weight of the vehicle happens with initial purchase and no matter how careful a driver is the laws of physics don't change. Mass is mass.It’s an attack on public taxpayer funds/budgets
By the way, I don’t know which thread our discussion was in but I told you as you complained about heavy trucks on the road compared to a small EV. I mentioned the high horsepower of the small cars are useless and dangerous. I suggested they should be speed limited to the GPS systems on the EV itself, well guess what talk about timing
https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets...s-mandate-technology-reduce-speeding-new-cars
Self control is out the window.I mean that would be an option regardless of whether I agree with it. Self control with power comes every time one gets behind the wheel. I don't know of a single new vehicle on sale now that isn't capable of exceeding the speed limit. Self control with weight of the vehicle happens with initial purchase and no matter how careful a driver is the laws of physics don't change. Mass is mass.
The fact is we're all losing the battle of self choice. I'm just very surprised the way it has materialized. Safety seems to be the main goal and technology has certain ways of intervening if enabled. Some seem to throw self control out the window which is why ideas such as this come about.
Maybe we can work on the weight of them while we're at it.Self control is out the window.
It's only a matter of time. The technology is 100% already here and the first whisperings are coming out of Washington.
There is absolutely no reason for your Tesla or maybe any EV to be allowed to exceed the speed limit. Maybe is should be as long as USA taxpayer funds are used to build them? (just having fun with that statement)
But no kidding around, why allow cars to exceed the speed limit? There isnt one good reason. A simple little program and they will not longer be able to. I bet Tesla can do an over the air update tomorrow if it was required.
It may take a decade or two but it will happen. There is no reason for the amount of horsepower being put in some of these EVs.
This will be the solution and then it wont matter, not only that, it will save energy. They will be able to downsize power and associated components which I would think would help lower weight and increase the eMPG
https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets...s-mandate-technology-reduce-speeding-new-cars
I dont think the NTSB mentions any particular powered vehicle type, it's both gas and EV.Maybe we can work on the weight of them while we're at it.
I'm not sure where EV specifically shouldn't be able to exceed the speed limit comes from. That's always said. It's like everyone forgot that this technology has been in every GM vehicle for around 20 years with OnStar. OnStar is a bit more of an on/off switch though in early cars. The way Tesla knows what the speed limit is by reading signs and some of it by GPS information is exactly what nearly every other manufacturer is doing. Many cars can adjust their cruise control off of map data, so it's already being done at a somewhat voluntary rate, though this is still adjustable for now. Short of having a car that predates this tech, I don't see a way anyone will get out of that.
Fun is leaving the building. I don't think any of us agree with the methods to get where the end goal likely is. The thing is that safety ends up being one thing touted and fun on any amount of wheels will have to be an older collector's item. I'm actually fine with that at this point only because I can't say or do anything to change it. Just remember, the beatings will continue until morale improves.
By that logic, there's absolutely no reason people should be able to defend themselves. Remove the capability if there is potential for abuse, Big Brother will keep you safe, right?Self control is out the window.
It's only a matter of time. The technology is 100% already here and the first whisperings are coming out of Washington.
There is absolutely no reason for your Tesla or maybe any EV to be allowed to exceed the speed limit.
If I may be allowed the leeway to isolate your post to this fragment, I would like to say some drivers, not all of course, in Silicon Valley have become so freakin' dangerous with their high speed tailgating, flying across freeway lanes and more, that it is freakin' terrifying.Personal transport is the wild west of non-compliance.
I'm pretty sure these are all AI generated articles. Most of these that are linked to MSN and Microsoft Start pages make no sense and are click bait.Little confused. Article refers to it as a test. Sounds like they tried something on a small scale, found it didn’t work, and are calling it quits (for now at least).
Isn’t this how to is supposed to work?
And then we have this: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/michigan-gov-whitmer-orders-state-government-fleet-100-electric
Apparently someone will wave a magic wand and then all of the shortcomings of EVs for heavy duty vehicles will be elliminated by 2040. The UAW is probably behind this because they know the state will need to quadruple their heavy duty vehicle fleet without some mind blowing technological advancement between now and 2040. Sixteen years is a long time though, so never say never. My bet is that these goalposts will get moved as do many lefty looney green schemes.
The thing is that it is actually illegal. I just have never seen it enforced to the point that any of these vehicles go away. The lighting would be the easiest thing to enforce. Squatting a truck affects lights. Too big a lift throws off the height of the light itself which has a limit. I rarely see one that doesn't have a football stadium's worth of lights on them. It is rare these days that I see someone on the road actually using them, so maybe that has been enforced.By that logic, there's absolutely no reason people should be able to defend themselves. Remove the capability if there is potential for abuse, Big Brother will keep you safe, right?
Vehicles hold the unique position of allowing flagrant disregard of numerous legalities, typically without penalty, either within some undefined "reasonable range" like with speed limits, or with modifications not sanctioned by the NHTSA like lift kits, HID/LED retrofits, the Carolina Squat, "Stance", coal rolling...etc.
Personal transport is the wild west of non-compliance. Worrying about whether a car is going faster than the posted limit on the 401 seems ridiculous when Kyle with 4 monsters into him is driving his 2' lifted Broderado like it's a race car. Bumpers at teeth level, retina-remover 9000's shoehorned into the reflector housings rolling on only the highest quality non-DOT approved China-casts wrapped in premium plastic replica mudders from Bangladesh.
The thing is that it is actually illegal. I just have never seen it enforced to the point that any of these vehicles go away.
OVERKILL said:Vehicles hold the unique position of allowing flagrant disregard of numerous legalities, typically without penalty, either within some undefined "reasonable range" like with speed limits, or with modifications not sanctioned by the NHTSA like lift kits, HID/LED retrofits, the Carolina Squat, "Stance", coal rolling...etc.
At least when your EV snow plow catches on fire, it should melt some of the snow.
Sure but very preventable. An extinguisher system would put that fire out. Nothing puts out thermal runaway Li ion battery fires.For reference, so do conventional snowplows. A former employer lost a $250 k (in 2010 dollars) snowplow due to a broken hydraulic hose and hot exhaust...
Advantage: Neither.
Sure but very preventable. An extinguisher system would put that fire out. Nothing puts out thermal runaway Li ion battery fires.