Had to double check this wasn't four seasons landscaping.
I have a side business painting houses.nortex97 said:
Had to double check this wasn't four seasons landscaping.
Hint; this is the plan, long term, for BEV's. Limit the mobility of the masses.Quote:
AEG founder Patrick Anderson stated, "The run-up in gas prices made EVs look like a bargain during much of 2021 and 2022. With electric prices going up and gas prices declining, drivers of traditional ICE vehicles saved a little bit of money in the last quarter of 2022."
There were several factors AEG used in determining that owning an electric vehicle was more expensive, like home charging equipment costs, road taxes and deadhead miles. ICE-powered car owners have gas purchases taxed to fund road construction and maintenance. While EV owners don't pay a gas tax, some states have introduced an additional EV registration fee to compensate.
The massive increase in the report for charging station users versus home chargers is accounted for by the deadhead miles to reach stations and the opportunity cost of waiting for vehicles to charge at stations. The difference highlights the lackluster coverage for electric vehicle charging infrastructure across the United States.
Not that you will listen, but I pay less than 10 cents per kilowatt hour to charge my car at home. About $8 to fully charge my car that has a 290 mile range. The cost of $11 per 100 miles of driving listed in that article is ridiculous.nortex97 said:
Driving an EV 100 miles is now more expensive than an ICE.
No, not an internal evil Exxon Mobil memo, a headline at jalopnik.Hint; this is the plan, long term, for BEV's. Limit the mobility of the masses.Quote:
AEG founder Patrick Anderson stated, "The run-up in gas prices made EVs look like a bargain during much of 2021 and 2022. With electric prices going up and gas prices declining, drivers of traditional ICE vehicles saved a little bit of money in the last quarter of 2022."
There were several factors AEG used in determining that owning an electric vehicle was more expensive, like home charging equipment costs, road taxes and deadhead miles. ICE-powered car owners have gas purchases taxed to fund road construction and maintenance. While EV owners don't pay a gas tax, some states have introduced an additional EV registration fee to compensate.
The massive increase in the report for charging station users versus home chargers is accounted for by the deadhead miles to reach stations and the opportunity cost of waiting for vehicles to charge at stations. The difference highlights the lackluster coverage for electric vehicle charging infrastructure across the United States.
fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
Great, First good ag that lexicutes himself is on you.Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
You pull a permit?Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Quote:
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
.
TXAGGIE10 said:You pull a permit?Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
cecil77 said:
LOL, some of us live outside municipalities...
Permits? We don't need no stinking permits!
10-4, Living outside a municipality.Teslag said:cecil77 said:
LOL, some of us live outside municipalities...
Permits? We don't need no stinking permits!
Yep, I live in the county. My permit is my comfort level.
The irony of the PSA posted is that more people on F16 are more likely to shoot themselves by accident than kill themselves from an electrical accident. I'd wager people are much more aware of their electrical skill limitations than their ability to safely handle a fire armManhattan said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
lol.Quote:
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
.
This is in direct contradiction to your first two paragraphs. Your likelihood of killing yourself or burning down your house is is the same, well probably greater for a fan as that involves a ladder.
many jurisdictions require a permit for all of those things you listed.
Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
Quite possibly the most non researched, mentally competent post I have seen in long time.Manhattan said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
lol.Quote:
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
.
This is in direct contradiction to your first two paragraphs. Your likelihood of killing yourself or burning down your house is is the same, well probably greater for a fan as that involves a ladder.
many jurisdictions require a permit for all of those things you listed.
He lives in the woods, no cityTXAGGIE10 said:You pull a permit?Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
Insurance companies don't make laws. They only decide when they won't pay.Quote:
Read the fine print on your Home Owners policy possibly being your own electrician is not allowed
Sq 17 said:Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
Read the fine print on your Home Owners policy possibly being your own electrician is not allowed
Teslag does not care. He would rather measure his electrical willy then admit having a licensed electrician to install a battery charge would be a good idea.Sq 17 said:Teslag said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
And I will admit to flagging Teslags post for violating the law. Whilst maybe not technically against the law in his Hundred Acre Woods, it is in most all jurisdictions.
I have violated no law by installing my own 240v / 60 amp breaker and associated circuit in my own. And many other people wouldn't either, basically any of the millions of people living in rural areas or smaller towns in America. There are also numerous threads on the Texags home improvement board where advice is given to do many DIY things that would otherwise violate a city ordinance.
Read the fine print on your Home Owners policy possibly being your own electrician is not allowed
BluHorseShu said:The irony of the PSA posted is that more people on F16 are more likely to shoot themselves by accident than kill themselves from an electrical accident. I'd wager people are much more aware of their electrical skill limitations than their ability to safely handle a fire armManhattan said:fka ftc said:
When people post like this on a public forum, I think there should be direct legal liability for the poster giving incredibly bad and dangerous advice.
There is a reason there are codes, standards, licensing, training, permitting etc when doing such work.
lol.Quote:
Swapping a receptacle, switch, ceiling fan etc is drastically different then messing with high voltages and amperages and working on your own service panel is monumentally dumb unless properly trained.
.
This is in direct contradiction to your first two paragraphs. Your likelihood of killing yourself or burning down your house is is the same, well probably greater for a fan as that involves a ladder.
many jurisdictions require a permit for all of those things you listed.
fka ftc said:
Kids, don't play with electricity.
It specifically excludes fixed appliances and replacement of outlets. How do I know, well I read the code and I've probably managed more electrical work in the city of Houston then your cute little head could imagine.Manhattan said:
In the city of Houston, if you replace a receptacle, they want you to pull a permit and bring the entire circuit up to code including arc fault.
GAC06 said:
But the good news is no one is forcing you to buy an EV.
Burnsey said:GAC06 said:
But the good news is no one is forcing you to buy an EV.
GAC thinks he's a good spouse because he doesn't beat his husband and and kids.
cecil77 said:Insurance companies don't make laws. They only decide when they won't pay.Quote:
Read the fine print on your Home Owners policy possibly being your own electrician is not allowed