EV's aren't mandated by anyone today and yet they are started every month. And most include wild ridiculous claims that are easily proven false, like ICE vehicles being more prone to fires.
Teslag said:
EV's aren't mandated by anyone today and yet they are started every month. And most include wild ridiculous claims that are easily proven false, like ICE vehicles being more prone to fires.
When you start with blatantly false information that there are no mandates.Teslag said:
EV's aren't mandated by anyone today and yet they are started every month. And most include wild ridiculous claims that are easily proven false, like ICE vehicles being more prone to fires.
Quote:
As of August 2022, fourteen states have adopted both California's ZEV program as well as the LEV standards: Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington. Delaware, Pennsylvania, and the District of Columbia are following California's LEV standards but have not adopted the ZEV program. Together, all 17 of these states and the District of Columbia are referred to as "Section 177 states."
True.Teslag said:
True or false, you purchase an ICE vehicle in all 50 states today?
Quote:
True
How many of those were the result of a serious vehicle accident?hph6203 said:
In 2019 there were 220,000 vehicle fires that resulted in $2.2 billion in damages, 2000 injuries and 655 deaths. I wouldn't call that a fire that a toddler could piss out. That's a death for every 300 fires, an injury in 1 out of 100 and $10,000 in damages per incident.
hph6203 said:
In 2019 there were 220,000 vehicle fires that resulted in $2.2 billion in damages, 2000 injuries and 655 deaths. I wouldn't call that a fire that a toddler could piss out. That's a death for every 300 fires, an injury in 1 out of 100 and $10,000 in damages per incident.
Add in 23 percent where cause is still under investigation or undetermined and your 5% is really north of 50%.hph6203 said:
Source
The estimate is about 5% of vehicle fires are a result of an accident.
[[False. From you own data... "Causes of highway vehicle fires - As shown in Figure 3, unintentional actions accounted for 38 percent of highway vehicle fires. These fires may be the result of either careless behavior or accidental actions.]]
Just to jog your short term memory for what question you asked.fka ftc said:
How many of those were the result of a serious vehicle accident?
Do EVs not use electrical wiring? Maybe they don't and its simply an ICE problem.Quote:
This category includes materials such as tires, insulation around electric wire and cables, trash, and fabric.
Specifically, insulation around the electrical wiring or other cables was the most common item to initially ignite, not only within this category but in all highway vehicle fires (29 percent). While it is often assumed that vehicle fires commonly originate with the tires of the vehicle, tires were the item first ignited in only 6 percent of all highway vehicle fires
You are right. I had assumed it would take a more serious accident to cause a fire. Evidently minor ones do too.hph6203 said:Just to jog your short term memory for what question you asked.fka ftc said:
How many of those were the result of a serious vehicle accident?
no, its really saying VEHICLES are more flammable than I thought. The data made no differentiation regarding ICE v EV but it did mention electrical wiring as a prevalent ignition source, which based on my limited brain electrical systems and wiring are typically MORE prevalent in an EV v ICE.hph6203 said:
So what you're saying is gas vehicles are more flammable than you thought?
HarryJ33tamu said:
Salute the EVs!!!!
Adverse Event has crypto covered and Grapesoda covers THC. Options are a bit limited.Jock 07 said:HarryJ33tamu said:
Salute the EVs!!!!
I often wonder what will be the next " latest thing" he'll move onto next
hph6203 said:
Source
The estimate is about 5% of vehicle fires are a result of an accident.
Teslag said:hph6203 said:
Source
The estimate is about 5% of vehicle fires are a result of an accident.
Jeez it's worse than I thought.
At some point people will need to decide what's more important, the safety of their family or their devotion to oil and outdated technology.
Also, about how the army needs more transgender folks who live in their mom's basement and less mercenaries / soldiers capable of firing weapons in the battlefield.C@LAg said:reminds me of:Teslag said:
Jeez it's worse than I thought.
At some point people will need to decide what's more important, the safety of their family or their devotion to oil and outdated technology.
at some point servicemen will have to decide what's more important: taking an unproven "vaccine" or get kicked out of the army with a dishonorable discharge while some army idiot runs to a football forum to brag about it.
fka ftc said:no, its really saying VEHICLES are more flammable than I thought. The data made no differentiation regarding ICE v EV but it did mention electrical wiring as a prevalent ignition source, which based on my limited brain electrical systems and wiring are typically MORE prevalent in an EV v ICE.hph6203 said:
So what you're saying is gas vehicles are more flammable than you thought?
Its funny how both you and Teslag don't want to answer the question regarding which type of fire is more easily extinguished. But avoiding those types of discussions is typical when people are emotional in their discussions v fact-based.
You were using recall data as if that represented ICE fires which is extremely misleading. I provided data on the Ford/Lincoln recalls showing the actual numbers of fires was vanishingly small. You ignored the irony that Ford/Lincoln recalled these SUVs for ONLY POTENTIALLY 19 fires while parked CAUSED BY THE BATTERIES.Teslag said:jt2hunt said:Teslag said:jt2hunt said:Teslag said:richardag said:Well, kind of. The difference is the sheer numbers of ICEs compared to EVs.Lone Stranger said:
An engineering expert witness I know in the battery arena said based on data from the last two years EV's are 3.2 times more likely to catch on fires than an ICE vehicle. So for every 1 ICE vehicle fire there are 3.2 EV vehicle fires. Sounds about right.
That's why the NTSB publishes the numbers in per 100,000 rates. And it overwhelmingly shows ICE bombs to be more fire prone.
This does not separate out fires on the open road versus parked in a garage. Shirley, you are intelligent enough to understand this very important distinction in this debate.
That lack of data didnt stop everyone on this thread from jumping to a conclusion now did it?
It is a legitimate debate right now, because the few data points we have seem to indicate that there's more fires inside of structures caused by electric vehicles than internal combustion engines. The data is very limited because the industry is so new on the electric vehicle side.
People on this thread aren't debating. They are speaking as if it's fact with no data to back it up other than random articles and YouTube videos of propane vehicle explosions.
No you most certainly did not. You cited recall data that was based in POTENTIALLY 19 cars involving 3 models of Ford/Lincoln, caused by a failure of the design team to install an in-line fuse to prevent a short. The recall data is meaningless in light of the fact that for ALL CARS MANUFACTURED these 19 fires represent an insignificant number of fires in all parked cars w/ ICEs, which would literally be hundreds of millions of vehicles.Teslag said:
Every article I posted on this thread involved ice vehicles burning in the driveway or garage
For Ford/Lincoln I gave you the data.Teslag said:cecil77 said:Teslag said:cecil77 said:
Because you are attempting to assert that ICE vehicles have more fires (per unit) than EVs.
It was pointed out that the ICE numbers (per 100K) aren't limited to single vehicle, garaged fires, which invalidates your implied contention.
And what data set has your side presented?
You're just not gonna answer any anything, are you?
Do you believe an ICE vehicle is more likely to catch fire sitting by itself in a garage than an EV?
Yes, I do and I've yet to see any data to indicate otherwise. Have you?