Maybe you’re being attacked because you’re an complete asswipe.
I bet he’s added a coal roller so he can pollute even more.
Maybe you’re being attacked because you’re an complete asswipe.
I bet he’s added a coal roller so he can pollute even more.
It’s soon to be a factory installed option for the Cybertruck! Add a pair of bumper nuts and a huge Gadsden flag, and I could see them selling in my neck of the woods! That would be a real truck!
[nitpick]
Since that would imply that the average car lasts 25 years, which I very sincerely doubt, my WAG is that you were trying to say the average lifespan of a car on the road in the U.S. is about 12.5 years.
[/nitpick]
ETA: If you meant what you said, I would definitely appreciate a cite.
He’s right, it’s the average age, not the lifespan. There are many cites available, but here’s one with more details.
Something a little more official:
I don’t see any sort of breakdown for real cars vs imaginary. Got a better cite?
Have you tried squaring it? It’ll be negative, but at least it’ll be real.
The topic is much too complex for that.
i would agree with you.
NERD ALERT! And just in time for pie day!
Should that be hijack?
My discussion of real vs imaginary cars? 100% on topic as OP doesn’t see EV vehicles as real. Pie day? We are in the pit…
What the fuckityfuck? I thought you lived in some add-backwards part of the country with your claims about apartment charging.
In California, apartment landlords are legally obligated to approve EV charger installation, assuming you have any parking spots at all.
California state law (Civil Code section 1947.6) requires landlords to approve tenant requests to install EV charging stations in their dedicated parking spaces so long as the tenant is willing to pay for the charging station and associated costs, including installation and utility costs.
So “no realistic possibility of having one installed” as you said above is a total falsehood. You’ll have to front the costs, but they’re relatively small compared to the price of the EV.
I got a pi tattoo back when I was in college.
Bob seems to think that we must respect his “opinions”, even when his opinions turn out to be blatant lies.
Have you even known a bigot who wasn’t an intellectually bereft liar?
So Trump is on this board, using the name Bob…
Addressed by others, nm
The majority of police (urban & suburban) aren’t driving that far on a shift. On the rare times they get into a long chase, remember, you can’t outrun Motorola - they’d simply have one many of the other officers on the chase take over while they go refuel, same as in an ICE car today but that probably doesn’t happen very often It’s policy in many/most first responder depts today to refill the vehicle well before the general public does; like if it’s below 3/4 of a tank at the start of your shift.
The bigger issue, & this goes for anyone with fleets is how they do all of their charging. Many depts have their one gas/diesel pumps that can fill any vehicle in a few mins. They’re going to need 220 221 at their building, which might mean electrical upgrades to be able to charge so many vehicles in a relatively short time, which, of course, comes with a cost so they might not have their own refueling anymore & just go to the local charging station.
Anyone know how much it degrades the battery to do supercharging all of the time instead of just occassionally?
I don’t think fast charging degrades the batteries. Of course, if you read EV forums, how to keep you batteries in tip-top shape is a hot topic with lots of opinions.