Apologies to those discussing EVs…I am way off topic, here…
Honestly, I'm hoping that a little bit of indulgence after a discussion like this one can take some of the edge off.
Apologies to those discussing EVs…I am way off topic, here…
Well, don’t use heat.
He never had any weakness on any car when he owns them. Once he dropes them, he finds issues.Ws6 you do not want to admit any weaknesses with EVs…
They certainly are present and are troublesome at times.
You are not being realistic about that.
Again… Not saying that it does not work..
Especially given your limited use range of it…
It does what you need it to do. Which is good.
However… It’s not a perfect answer to longer trips and the cold or heat WILL limit a EV ability to perform or accept a high power charge.
Just like cars from the 1920s, 1930s and well into the 1949s …
This is still quite early in its use and application.
Goodyear tires yuck. Some of the best tires I ever owned came from them. Michelin Tires yuck, well the word I'd use for them rhymes with it.*Also of note, they are Goodyear tires. Yuck.* Goodyear Territory RT tire in 285/65R20, custom spec'ed by Tesla, only available to Tesla. I think you will find this item to be the source of the CT's woes.
He never had any weakness on any car when he owns them. Once he dropes them, he finds issues.
I mean his Mazda and RAV4 were at one point in competition with AMG.
Current one is in competition with Koenigsegg. It just needs to finish that lap.
EVs have some weaknesses.
Range in the cold or heat ?
yeah they come up shorter and shorter the hotter it is or colder it is.
C rate charging taking longer and longer if it’s cold or hot ? Absolutely…. they will take quite a bit longer in either circumstance.
Those same exact weaknesses troubled regular combustion motors as well way back in the 1920s 1930s and into the 1940s.
They are issues there that affect their performance.
Do they work ?
Yes.
With limitations…
Which may not matter to people who use them based upon their regular routine usage patterns.
That does not mean that can’t or won’t change going forward.
Changes in heat / cooling management systems in them will assist them a whole lot as that gets better. Battery chemistry changes will make them better and more capable going forward.
Power charging will get better as that network grows and grows moving forward.
Just like gasoline powered vehicles had issues before gas stations became much more plentiful as time went for from the 1920s and 1930s and into the 1940s.
My GT was about 5% off in its estimation over 85mi today in 0f.At moderate temperatures, most current EVs are practially appliances that are very good at providing estimated range. However, at temperature extremes, it takes a bit of planning, but it's not insurmountable. And that's with current technology.
While doing that comparison don’t forget to add up emissions from oil discovery, extraction, shipping, refinery and then shipping fuel to fuel stations. People seem to forget about it and take it for granted…Consider the emissions to mine, produce, ship the batteries, and produce the electricity for these vehicles and compare that to regular vehicle’s emissions over a given average length of ownership. I know that study was done for hybrid vehicles early on and it didn’t look too enticing (hybrid vs regular) from an emissions perspective….
This is some design issue early cars aren't designed for. I think after this kind of incident they will update some software to change some algorithm to make it "just charge and get out of the way if you can't precondition anyways" override. I'm sure the first gasoline car was no match for horses that have evolved over thousands of years after being domesticated by humans.Remember the original content of the thread. These EV's wouldn't move, and they wouldn't charge. You guys are back to arguing about charging cost, and all this other nonsense.
These people invested heavily in EV's. And when it got cold they were useless to them. They basically paid tens of thousands of dollars to become pedestrians on the coldest of days.
In the grand scheme of things, gasoline cars are not horses and will not completely replace horses because some people live where only horses could reach. Towns changed and people moved, some places become more populated and less populated to match cars and trains and we build roads and bridges.This is incorrect. Lithium battery powered cars will never replace gasoline.
You have to think into the future and it’s not a lithium battery.
Current technology will be antiquated in 15 years if that long
All the owners I know have an ICE vehicle as well.
Regardless, the hatred for EVs is pretty closed minded. The reality is most EV owners love their cars and Teslas have very high customer satisfaction, which is the #1 indicator of another purchase. Count me in that group.
At moderate temperatures, most current EVs are practially appliances that are very good at providing estimated range. However, at temperature extremes, it takes a bit of planning, but it's not insurmountable. And that's with current technology.
Going to such extremes to own an EV...... This comes to mind.There is also no law saying that you cannot tow a diesel generator around in cold climate, or home owners cannot buy industrial vehicles and use it for commutes.
Detached non heated garage, but it does offer a bit of buffer from temperature. It’s been staying 10-15 degrees warmer than outside temp during current weather.You have a garage right ?
Is that heated ?
Or attached to a home that is heated ?
Whether anyone likes it or not … EVs right now are the cars of the 1930s… It is very, very, very early in their use and application.
Does not mean that it’s bad or wrong. Just quite early still.
It’s just by default in my house because my job has me gone 2-3 days at a time with about 12 hours between that where I’m home. For safety reasons we need two cars. I’d do it with an EV, but my wife specifically picked out that car and her short tripping is the perfect fit. I just like cars so it’s more about the variety of experience more than it is about having an EV and an ICE car. I could do it with either.This. You would be crazy to not have a backup plan and go all in with only EV in a household. You buy home owner insurance and health insurance you will use it less often than your backup ICE car when your EV is not going to work that day.
Most people who complains that EV won't work assume that you ONLY have an EV, but the reality is most people will have a gas vehicle or the ability to RENT one as needed, or just fly if they need to. You can't plan everything with just one vehicle and assume it will be the best. If you want a jack of all trade you will get a master of none, just like people buying a pickup to tow a boat they never really use, and say EV cannot do that and it is not a good car.
Its just the opposite. Most EV buyers want to believe the best about their purchase regardless of its flaws and issues, because if they don't, it illustrates they made a mistake.Regardless, the hatred for EVs is pretty closed minded. The reality is most EV owners love their cars and Teslas have very high customer satisfaction, which is the #1 indicator of another purchase. Count me in that group.