Front boot. So … froot.hph6203 said:
Those commies probably translate it to boot instead of frunk.
Front boot. So … froot.hph6203 said:
Those commies probably translate it to boot instead of frunk.
JayM said:I live in East Texas and I don't have a Tesla. But I do have a certain Ford Truck. I don't have vanity plates. And if I'm first in line at a light with a reasonable speed limit, I accelerate fast. I enjoy it and I can assume those behind me are rightly confused. If I had to find affirmation as an EV owner from the ICE public, I get that when I pop the frunk to put groceries in. That amazes some people.WestAustinAg said:Teslag said:
Is it? The "cultish" EV owners aren't the ones who keep starting these threads. Or that post daily updates about them. Generally, EV owners enjoy their vehicles and will happily share experiences if asked. Were there some obnoxious Tesla owners in the early days when it was an expensive niche vehicle? Of course. But now it's the most popular car in the country and I can't remember the last time I saw one with a vanity plate.
These obnoxious types are everywhere in west Austin. 25% of them have vanity plates reminding us of their electric vehicles. 50% of them insist on taking off at lights in aggressive fashion. I get it. It's fun. But they love to show off.
BREAKING: Tesla expects production at its Lithium refinery in Texas to start sooner than expected, according to Tesla Sr. Manager of Operations Jason Bevan.
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) October 5, 2023
"We will begin commissioning the assets, roughly the first of next year, and that will continue, in earnest, over the… pic.twitter.com/uEY1VDOpY6
But you should still swop your boiler for a heat pump to save the planet. https://t.co/j0rHgybvEB
— Andrew Neil (@afneil) October 5, 2023
so what? I think it's been established that 99.9% of the people that own Tesla's on this thread aren't tree huggers ....but keep copying and pasting....you almost have me convinced my Tesla is bad LOL!nortex97 said:
The city/region powered by plants supplied by this coal line is what is used to refine the vast majority of lithium used by EV's.But you should still swop your boiler for a heat pump to save the planet. https://t.co/j0rHgybvEB
— Andrew Neil (@afneil) October 5, 2023
Steve Harvey type delivery. He really chose the wrong career smh pic.twitter.com/ud7n3hEa0x
— james 🦕 (uncle of 4) (@JimboExotic) October 2, 2023
Quote:
But a new report in the New York Times lays bays exactly how much of an advantage Chinese firms have when it comes to pricing their cars. The standout stat in the article is that Nio loses $35,000 on every car it makes. No wonder European automakers and regulators are worried.
American automakers are already protected to some degree in their home market from Chinese competition by import tariffs. But if China's car companies like Nio can sustain those kind of losses and still keep powering forward, at least for now, then America should be every bit as concerned as its allies in Europe.
The Times reports that backing from the Chinese government enables firms like Nio to keep growing, despite losing money. It says that when Nio came close to running out of cash in 2020, the local government pumped in $1 billion for a 24 percent stake in the firm, which was topped up by a further $1.6 billion from a group led by a state-controlled bank. Not all Chinese automakers are losing money though; BYD tripled profit to $1.5 billion in the first half of this year, the [url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/05/business/nio-china-electric-vehicles.html]NYT[ reports[/url].
Companies like Nio are also able to build cars for far less outlay than Western brands require. The average worker at a Chinese car factory earns $30,000, which is close to a quarter of what unionized American auto workers receive in pay and benefits, and when researchers performed a teardown on a BYD Seal EV they estimated it cost at least 35 percent less to make than a Europe-built VW ID.3. Chinese firms are also at the cutting edge of battery technology.
Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
nortex97 said:
Despite what some might want, I don't consider this about 'EV owners on this thread.' In fact, it's funny that would even be asserted, frankly.
Anyway, Nio loses $30K/car sold.Quote:
But a new report in the New York Times lays bays exactly how much of an advantage Chinese firms have when it comes to pricing their cars. The standout stat in the article is that Nio loses $35,000 on every car it makes. No wonder European automakers and regulators are worried.
American automakers are already protected to some degree in their home market from Chinese competition by import tariffs. But if China's car companies like Nio can sustain those kind of losses and still keep powering forward, at least for now, then America should be every bit as concerned as its allies in Europe.
The Times reports that backing from the Chinese government enables firms like Nio to keep growing, despite losing money. It says that when Nio came close to running out of cash in 2020, the local government pumped in $1 billion for a 24 percent stake in the firm, which was topped up by a further $1.6 billion from a group led by a state-controlled bank. Not all Chinese automakers are losing money though; BYD tripled profit to $1.5 billion in the first half of this year, the [url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/05/business/nio-china-electric-vehicles.html]NYT[ reports[/url].
Companies like Nio are also able to build cars for far less outlay than Western brands require. The average worker at a Chinese car factory earns $30,000, which is close to a quarter of what unionized American auto workers receive in pay and benefits, and when researchers performed a teardown on a BYD Seal EV they estimated it cost at least 35 percent less to make than a Europe-built VW ID.3. Chinese firms are also at the cutting edge of battery technology.
This is a political issue.
Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
And, they have partnered tremendously with the CCP, of course. Xi Jinping himself has seen Musk's company and himself personally as a key.bmks270 said:Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
Without unions, and without dealerships, and with huge government subsidies.
Again, the politics, policy, trade, environmental, and human impacts of this 'transition' (back) to BEV vehicles for power matters. These reasons are why I strive to never buy such a vehicle.Quote:
"Mr. Xi viewed the South African-born entrepreneur as a technology utopian... and saw his Tesla Inc. as a spearhead that could make China a power in new-energy cars. Mr. Xi rewrote the rulebook to allow foreign companies sole ownership of auto ventures so Mr. Musk would open an electric-vehicle factory in Shanghai," reports WSJ.
Furthermore, "Authorities showered him with cheap land, low-interest loans and tax incentives, expecting in return that Tesla would groom local suppliers and bolster lagging Chinese electric-vehicle players, say people with knowledge of the talks between Beijing and the company."
It's reported that, "Chinese leaders had grown frustrated with domestic electric-vehicle companies' performance and saw Tesla as an opportunity to reset the country's auto industry."
In turn, "Tesla's arrival whetted people's interest in electric vehicles. The 2019 launch of the made-in-China Tesla Model 3 helped convince consumers such vehicles were a viable alternative to gasoline cars."
My understanding is that Tesla does not receive any U.S. Government subsidies. The tax credit goes direct to eligible buyers.bmks270 said:Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
Without unions, and without dealerships, and with huge government subsidies.
JamesE4 said:My understanding is that Tesla does not receive any U.S. Government subsidies. The tax credit goes direct to eligible buyers.bmks270 said:Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
Without unions, and without dealerships, and with huge government subsidies.
JamesE4 said:My understanding is that Tesla does not receive any U.S. Government subsidies. The tax credit goes direct to eligible buyers.bmks270 said:Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
Without unions, and without dealerships, and with huge government subsidies.
JamesE4 said:My understanding is that Tesla does not receive any U.S. Government subsidies. The tax credit goes direct to eligible buyers.bmks270 said:Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
Without unions, and without dealerships, and with huge government subsidies.
JamesE4 said:My understanding is that Tesla does not receive any U.S. Government subsidies. The tax credit goes direct to eligible buyers.bmks270 said:Manhattan said:
Tesla has proven it is possible to build profitable EVs.
Without unions, and without dealerships, and with huge government subsidies.
Oh look at the electric bus on fire in London; smack in the center of the ‘clean air zone.’ pic.twitter.com/brAzvHIGuf
— 🇺🇸ProudArmyBrat (@leslibless) October 10, 2023
So a hybrid diesel bus catches on fire well outside of London in a city with no ULEZ zones.nortex97 said:Oh look at the electric bus on fire in London; smack in the center of the ‘clean air zone.’ https://t.co/brAzvHIGuf
— 🇺🇸ProudArmyBrat (@leslibless) October 10, 2023
It'd be a shame if that huge BEV fire took out a few of their ULEZ cameras.
Haha, that is funny. Ah well, the humor of the tweet before the correction still made me laugh.hph6203 said:
That turned out…. Poorly for you.
Li ion and Li polymer battery fires burn hotter & take 5-6 times longer to extinguish. 29 minutes for ICE vs 2 hours for EV.
— END2008 (@END2008) October 6, 2022
But a bigger problem that no one talks about is charging fires & the exposure problems.
Here, one EV bus in China catches fire and 54 more go up in flames. pic.twitter.com/5rzlcpr0YI
Another Tata Electric Bus catches fire in Mumbai... This is the second incident of the Tata EV bus catching fire in 2 months... @kkorde01 @Pritesh7994https://t.co/OTTbboaGu3
— G Force 🇮🇳 (@gau_dab) September 1, 2023
EV Buses can cost lives ... the US is being too quick to convert public transportation to EV Buses when they do not have adequately trained First Responders and Equipment to handle a crash https://t.co/ibV2v6KYco
— Suzanne Arundale (@ArundaleSuzanne) October 6, 2023
Yes to the frunk. Yes to the acceleration. I charge at home. No anxiety at all. I couldn't give two ***ts about the resale. I bought it with cash. No truck notes. I will buy the next one with cash. Just an expenditure for a tool. I'm not worried about the environmental issues with the mining for lithium, cobalt or nickle anymore than you are concerned about impact from extraction of hydrocarbons and the emissions that combustion causes. Or for that matter mining for the stuff in your cell phone and cordless drill. We all live with tradeoffs. We don't do horse and buggies anymore. Oh, I don't worry about hydrocarbon emissions either. I just don't have as many hydrocarbon emissions as you do.oh no said:
I'm sure having a frunk to store your groceries and beating other drivers off the line more than make up for the fiery death risk, and the shorter life/poor resale/expensive battery replacement, and the long lines to charge, long times to charge, and driving around with range anxiety. That's all before you even consider the green zero emissions climate saving virtue signaling you get to do if you ignore the child labor and china dependency mining lithium and cobalt and charging on a grid fueled by coal and natural gas fired power plants.
So you don't have fun. You are responding in the middle of the day so I assume you are either old (and bitter) or a young worker incapable of concentrating on the task. I am retired, financially secure and happy!oh no said:
i just said i'm sure it more than makes up for it.
Quote:
and the long lines to charge,
Quote:
child labor and china dependency mining lithium