I see you totally missed her point.Sea Speed said:
So now you can't be considered fast unless you have won Lemans?
Reading comprehension on this site sucks...
I see you totally missed her point.Sea Speed said:
So now you can't be considered fast unless you have won Lemans?
Teslag said:IslanderAg04 said:Manhattan said:
https://www.autoevolution.com/news/confirmed-tesla-model-s-plaid-with-carbon-ceramic-brake-kit-reaches-205-mph-top-speed-211756.html
Someone claimed these were slow...
Yawn.
So a heavily modified $120,000 POS Camaro is only 5 mph faster and slower in the 1/4 mile than a stock Tesla family Sedan with upgraded brakes?
Last I checked, Lemans was a race, too.Sea Speed said:
Teslag was talking about how they are fast and could whoop other cars in a race and she went off and talked about Lemans and how they don't have the ability to win endurance races. Sounds like she completely missed the point teslagwas making. Then she accused someone of not knowing who Shelby was because he disagreed with her. She started an argument about a point that absolutely no one was making ans you have been goal tending for her since she went on one of her increasingly more frequent tirades about something completely off the rails.
So no one else is allowed to make any points in a thread about EVs.Quote:
Teslag was talking about how they are fast and could whoop other cars in a race and she went off and talked about Lemans and how they don't have the ability to win endurance races. Sounds like she completely missed the point teslagwas making.
There are a lot of thread police in here it seems...aggiehawg said:So no one else is allowed to make any points in a thread about EVs.Quote:
Teslag was talking about how they are fast and could whoop other cars in a race and she went off and talked about Lemans and how they don't have the ability to win endurance races. Sounds like she completely missed the point teslagwas making.
I am not the one who missed a point, seems to me.
10thYrSr said:Teslag said:
Formula 1. Red Bull Racing. And it's a V6 with electric hybrid drive.
To be fair, it isn't made by Red Bull. It is sponsored by them. Who makes it and what engine is it based off of?
tk for tu juan said:
Last I looked there is not a single consumer car (ICE or EV) that can take the overall win at LeMans.
Sea Speed said:
So now you can't be considered fast unless you have won Lemans?
IslanderAg04 said:Sea Speed said:
So now you can't be considered fast unless you have won Lemans?
The point is, both can be "fast". One however, dominates all forms of competition racing. Le Mans, F1, Super 8, Nascar, NHRA, IHRA, motoGP, Grand Prix, GT3 and etc
Ever watched Formula E? It's super ****ing boring.
Theres just this constant need for Tesla nutbags to prove how much better ev's are then ICE. Then when you show them a 130k Tesla getting smoked by an ICE driven car with similar hp they get super butt hurt then start magazine racing.
It's super frustrating to car enthusiasts who actually work, mod, and race their cars when most tesla drivers dont even know how to rotate their tires.
Manhattan said:
Many Teslas have staggered setups and directional tires.
Manhattan said:
So show me how to rotate the tires then, you are the one throwing stones.
IslanderAg04 said:Manhattan said:
Many Teslas have staggered setups and directional tires.
Thats not a Tesla thing dude. They've made directional tires for the past 30 years. Also didnt realize "some Teslas are the only cars in the entire ****ing world to have staggered setups.
bmks270 said:IslanderAg04 said:Manhattan said:
Many Teslas have staggered setups and directional tires.
Thats not a Tesla thing dude. They've made directional tires for the past 30 years. Also didnt realize "some Teslas are the only cars in the entire ****ing world to have staggered setups.
The point isn't the staggered and directional tires, the point is they can't be rotated.
techno-ag said:
Yeah but every time something is pointed out to the fanboys (this time it was yes they can go fast but they can't win endurance races), someone always wants to move the goalposts and say "that's not what we're talking about" or "Strawman!"
Right….
Why?Quote:
The introduction of winning an endurance race into the discussion was the actual "moving the goalposts" in this case.
Manhattan said:
Neither article mentions if you have both, do you have a tire machine at home?
Manhattan said:
Or I could get it done at Discount for free, way faster than with a manual tire iron.
Well, duh.hph6203 said:
Endurance races were designed to demonstrate durability for combustion vehicles. The causes of wear and failure of combustion vehicles is not the same as the causes of wear and failure of electric vehicles. Heat is the primary concern for combustion vehicles, and running an engine hot for 24 hours straight demonstrates how well a manufacturer understands dealing with the causes and consequences of that problem.
That is not remotely the primary concern for electric vehicles. An electric drivetrain is going to outlast every fuel burning engine, and it's going to do it without maintenance.
The primary durability concern for an electric vehicle is their battery management, which is simply not demonstrable in a 24 hour race. You're talking about thousands of charge/discharge cycles and done in an environment dramatically different than trying to rapidly refuel in a single day. Racing is fun, it is not a real world analogue for daily drivers.
That said the durability of an electric vehicle as a whole is extremely low on the real concerns surrounding electric vehicles. An electric drivetrain is going to last 500,000 miles or more (Tesla claims theirs is engineered to last in excess of a million miles), and the longevity of the battery is also not the primary concern. Tesla released a report last year that stated their high mileage vehicles, on an older battery chemistry, retains 90% of its original capacity at 200,000 miles.
The primary concerns around EVs are charge rate, range and price, which are problems that are improving, and any one improving reduces the concerns of the others. In 2012 a Tesla Model S had a range of 230ish miles with the same size battery pack, today it has a range of 405 miles. That vehicle costs less today than it did in 2012. That vehicle took an hour to go from 0-80% charge at its fastest charging rate, now it's around 30 minutes.
EVs aren't for everyone, but they're improving at a rate far faster than their combustion counterparts and the proportion of people they won't work for is shrinking over time.
Exactly. Wake me when they get there. And the electric grid can support them.Quote:
You're taking new tech vs long established tech. With ICE, it's about small improvements now - the big problems were worked out over 100+ years...EVs are where ICE was much earlier its evolution so it has much more room for improvement.
And the batteries can hold longer charges with shorter recharge times. And the rare earth materials to make the batteries don't require razing the earth to obtain them. And batteries are more available. And cheaper.aggiehawg said:Exactly. Wake me when they get there. And the electric grid can support them.Quote:
You're taking new tech vs long established tech. With ICE, it's about small improvements now - the big problems were worked out over 100+ years...EVs are where ICE was much earlier its evolution so it has much more room for improvement.
This is the biggest issue IMHO...aggiehawg said:Exactly. Wake me when they get there. And the electric grid can support them.Quote:
You're taking new tech vs long established tech. With ICE, it's about small improvements now - the big problems were worked out over 100+ years...EVs are where ICE was much earlier its evolution so it has much more room for improvement.
It is not just one thing that inventers can improve upon with engine design, or aerodynamics, for instance in making the comparison to the evolution of ICE vehicles, although the interstate highway system helped a lot in that respect. The government assisted there.Quote:
This is the biggest issue IMHO...
Especially with the enviros and their anti-fossil fuel views. It will make it hard to build out the necessary grid power...
Ag with kids said:This is the biggest issue IMHO...aggiehawg said:Exactly. Wake me when they get there. And the electric grid can support them.Quote:
You're taking new tech vs long established tech. With ICE, it's about small improvements now - the big problems were worked out over 100+ years...EVs are where ICE was much earlier its evolution so it has much more room for improvement.
Especially with the enviros and their anti-fossil fuel views. It will make it hard to build out the necessary grid power...
Manhattan said:Ag with kids said:This is the biggest issue IMHO...aggiehawg said:Exactly. Wake me when they get there. And the electric grid can support them.Quote:
You're taking new tech vs long established tech. With ICE, it's about small improvements now - the big problems were worked out over 100+ years...EVs are where ICE was much earlier its evolution so it has much more room for improvement.
Especially with the enviros and their anti-fossil fuel views. It will make it hard to build out the necessary grid power...
EVs will strengthen the electric grid when everyone has an 80kWh grid buffer in their driveway or people plugged in and charging can sign up for demand response programs.
The average American drives 39 miles a day, at 300Wh a mile (worse efficiency than my car) they only need 8 hours of charging per day at 120V 12A, otherwise known as a regular wall plug.