I would never own an EV if I couldn't charge at home. I think it's actually the biggest hurdle to any idea that EV's will have 50% market share in 5 years.
Anyone who owns a Tesla/EV without home charging without easy access to superchargers or charging at work would be insane.Teslag said:
I would never own an EV if I couldn't charge at home. I think it's actually the biggest hurdle to any idea that EV's will have 50% market share in 5 years.
techno-ag said:That's a little harder to get away with now that dealers and service providers record the mileage each time a car's in the shop.hph6203 said:
Self driving will be "holy **** I don't want a car without it" good by next summer.
Update for the people worried about battery health.Odometer fraud is shooting up:
— Car Dealership Guy (@GuyDealership) December 13, 2024
According to the latest data from CARFAX — 2.14 million cars may have had odometer rollbacks in 2024 — up 82,000 from last year and 18% since 2021.
The reasons?
Technology has made rolling back an odometer easier than ever — and is often done to…
Quote:
A Cybertruck recently got stuck in a parking spot on the snowy streets of Quebec and quickly went viral on TikTok, Reddit, and likely other social media platforms I don't have the emotional bandwidth to check. As expected, it's become an internet punching bag for not being able to leave a parking spot that a Corolla would likely tackle with ease. Admittedly, it is fun to laugh at an $80,000+ pickup with at least 600 horsepower getting stuck in what seems to be just a few inches of snow. It's even funnier because the Cybertruck was touted as an indestructible, unstoppable, bulletproof truck of the future.
However, I'm going to defend the Cybertruck here, as much as it pains me to do so. It's impossible to know exactly which tires this Cybertruck has, but judging by their lack of knobby tread, they seem to be the factory Goodyear all-seasons. Typically, such tires would be decent enough in the snow to get the big Tesla out. Unfortunately, Cybertruck owners have already reported that their tires are barely lasting 6,000 miles before becoming completely worn. Not surprising when you're talking about a 7,000-pound vehicle putting down immense power and torque. It's more likely that the rubber on this Cybertruck is so spent that it couldn't find traction. We also don't know what the ambient temperature was, and it may have been well below what most all-season tires can handle.
Unless I'm not seeing things correctly…. Why are you comparing an all wheel drive cyber truck to a 2 WD pickup with no apparent load in the bed to provide weight over rear wheels?hph6203 said:
Both drivers are still stuck in those same places today, begging for food to survive because they can't make it to work. Tragic.
Or the camera got shut off and they eventually got out and it's a reality of life that sometimes trucks get stuck in snow, and the time they spend stuck there is proportionate to how dumb the driver is in understanding how to get out. Most people that get stuck in snow are stupid, because they come from a population dumb enough to live where it snows enough to get stuck in it.
Tire wear is a function of how a person drives a vehicle more than anything. If you have a 0-60 in 2.4s truck, the frequency with which you're going to launch it is high. Just as a good ol' boy that likes to burn rubber on his F-150 is going to burn through tires quickly too.
If you're worried about tire life with an EV you're more than welcome to buy a $35,000 Chevy Equinox EV with a 0-60 of 7.7 seconds. Your tires will live forever, but your soul will die in 5.2 seconds.
My apologies if I mis-read your post. I assumed that when you mentioned "both vehicles would be stuck in snow" you meant that the cyber truck and 2 WD pickup were the 2 vehicles you were referring to. If not those 2 vehicles..which 2 vehicles were you were referring to? Again, sorry if I mis-read post..hph6203 said:
Point to where I compared the vehicles.
Agree with any vehicle can get stuck in snow. Was just pointing out that a comparing a 2 WD vehicle, particularly with a light ass rear end to an AWD. Isn't apples/0ranges…regardless of tire tread.hph6203 said:
Comparison would suggest that I was differentiating the vehicles. The point I was making is there isn't a consumer vehicle that won't get stuck in the snow and the fact that a Cybertruck is on video spinning its wheels in the snow is not suggestive that it is notably prone to getting stuck in snow, just that it has the capacity to.
Google CEO on who is the leader in self-driving space: "I think obviously @Tesla is the leader in the space. It looks to me like Tesla and Waymo are the top two." pic.twitter.com/iMT2Mapf8C
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) December 15, 2024
Will all EV owners be given a pardon by Joe Biden?WolfCall said:
Will all EV owners be fined and given suspended sentences when Trump is elected?
FSD 13.2 drives garage to parking spot with 0 interventions pic.twitter.com/ptKemgncLd
— Dirty Tesla (@DirtyTesLa) December 15, 2024
For a company that doesn't do anything but make a crappy car that no one wants requiring government mandates/subsidies, kind of strange that it has the 8th largest market cap in the world.hph6203 said:
Remember that you posted this in 5 years when Tesla is the most valuable company in the world.
"wait, is this legal??"
— ΛI DRIVR (@AIDRIVR) December 17, 2024
"yeah, welcome to San Francisco"
featuring FSD 13 & @jamesdouma pic.twitter.com/cLXpSdNjbL
EV makers really seem to have an affinity for electrical door handles.Quote:A Florida woman had a scary experience behind the wheel of a Rivian R1S as the model reportedly suffered from an electrical problem that left her 'trapped' inside the vehicle. If that wasn't bad enough, smoke was entering the cabin.
- A Florida woman is speaking out after an electrical short left her stuck in a smoking
Rivian R1S.- After approximately 45 minutes, responders learned about a manual door release and were able to free her from the vehicle.
- Rivian reportedly offered the customer $1,000 but, after a local television station got involved, they decided to offer a refund.
Jen Pereira shared her story with WFTV 9 and said things went south after about a month and a half of ownership. As Pereira explained, the R1S "started braking very rapidly" in November. The dashboard then began flashing and the vehicle eventually rolled to a stop.
No thanks. Still, everyone should frankly have a window breaker in the center armrest, anyway.Quote:
Pereira said she then saw and smelled smoke, which eventually resulted in her calling 911 as the doors wouldn't open. Responders reportedly didn't see smoke, but "demobilized" the SUV and began looking for ways to get her out of the vehicle. After about 45 minutes, they discovered a manual door handle release.
Rivian looked into the issue and told the station, "Our investigation … indicates a short in an electrical system caused the contained smoke issue the customer experienced. We have also confirmed that the interior manual door handle was working properly at the time" and "all Rivian vehicles are equipped with front row manual release handles, which allow occupants a means to exit the vehicle, even in the event of power loss."
nortex97 said:
Florida (of course) woman trapped in smoking Rivian:EV makers really seem to have an affinity for electrical door handles.Quote:A Florida woman had a scary experience behind the wheel of a Rivian R1S as the model reportedly suffered from an electrical problem that left her 'trapped' inside the vehicle. If that wasn't bad enough, smoke was entering the cabin.
- A Florida woman is speaking out after an electrical short left her stuck in a smoking
Rivian R1S.- After approximately 45 minutes, responders learned about a manual door release and were able to free her from the vehicle.
- Rivian reportedly offered the customer $1,000 but, after a local television station got involved, they decided to offer a refund.
Jen Pereira shared her story with WFTV 9 and said things went south after about a month and a half of ownership. As Pereira explained, the R1S "started braking very rapidly" in November. The dashboard then began flashing and the vehicle eventually rolled to a stop.
It's easy to point at her culpability for not knowing the emergency procedure/release, but even the first responders took 45 minutes to get her out.No thanks. Still, everyone should frankly have a window breaker in the center armrest, anyway.Quote:
Pereira said she then saw and smelled smoke, which eventually resulted in her calling 911 as the doors wouldn't open. Responders reportedly didn't see smoke, but "demobilized" the SUV and began looking for ways to get her out of the vehicle. After about 45 minutes, they discovered a manual door handle release.
Rivian looked into the issue and told the station, "Our investigation … indicates a short in an electrical system caused the contained smoke issue the customer experienced. We have also confirmed that the interior manual door handle was working properly at the time" and "all Rivian vehicles are equipped with front row manual release handles, which allow occupants a means to exit the vehicle, even in the event of power loss."
Tesla is not a car company.Medaggie said:For a company that doesn't do anything but make a crappy car that no one wants requiring government mandates/subsidies, kind of strange that it has the 8th largest market cap in the world.hph6203 said:
Remember that you posted this in 5 years when Tesla is the most valuable company in the world.
Really strange how people with money and willing to put their $$ into a "crappy" company knows less than keyboard warriors who just watch tick tock.
Amazing the lack of knowledge and arrogance on here. If people really had conviction that Tesla sucks, they would be millionaires just trading Options.