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Electric Vehicle Thread


               
2025 Oct 22, 9:13am   4,065 views  1,594 comments

by MolotovCocktail   follow (4)  



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1514   MolotovCocktail   2025 Apr 12, 8:35pm  

komputodo says

Are tesla fluffers still fluffing?



1515   EBGuy   2025 Apr 13, 1:43am  

WookieMan says


EV's do not work for shipping.

Amazon uses Rivian electric vans. There are all over the place around here. A lot of the Amazon drivers really like them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJv1TCK8RQY
1516   WookieMan   2025 Apr 13, 5:47am  

EBGuy says

WookieMan says



EV's do not work for shipping.

Amazon uses Rivian electric vans. There are all over the place around here. A lot of the Amazon drivers really like them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJv1TCK8RQY

Maybe in CA or the south where the climate is temperate and doesn't freeze. Anything north of I-80 you'll lose 25% or more of your battery December to March because of cold. Maybe more than that. That's a massive chuck of the population.

Also they won't work in rural areas just delivering packages. You do massive amounts of mileage as they expect you to deliver as you're expected to do multiple zip codes. It's a city vehicle as all EV's are. Most the country is rural.
1517   socal2   2025 Apr 13, 6:48am  

EBGuy says

WookieMan says



EV's do not work for shipping.

Amazon uses Rivian electric vans. There are all over the place around here. A lot of the Amazon drivers really like them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJv1TCK8RQY


FEDEX uses a new electric delivery van in my neighborhood too. Things are fast jamming up the hill to my neighborhood not slowing down traffic like the other gas delivery trucks struggling and wheezing up the hill.

The average package delivery vehicle does about 100 miles a day. And these are stop and go local traffic routes which is great for EV’s efficiencies.
1518   MolotovCocktail   2025 Apr 13, 7:49am  

WookieMan says

Most the country is rural.


Most residence/business package deliveries are urban.
1519   WookieMan   2025 Apr 13, 11:22am  

MolotovCocktail says

WookieMan says


Most the country is rural.


Most residence/business package deliveries are urban.

Not with Amazon or FedEx. Why waste gas 30 minutes away from a suburb or city when you can order same or next day and not leave the house? You could be in Montana and your next delivery is 20 miles away and you have to get back 100 miles.

It's okay to live your little enclave and experience the country. I've already driven 100 miles or 2 hours today. I'm not a delivery driver. They would drive 4-6x that in a day. You coastal boys don't understand this country.
1520   MolotovCocktail   2025 Apr 13, 11:56am  

WookieMan says

Not with Amazon or FedEx. Why waste gas 30 minutes away from a suburb or city when you can order same or next day and not leave the house? You could be in Montana and your next delivery is 20 miles away and you have to get back 100 miles.


So? That doesn't disprove that most package deliveries are in the cities.

AGAIN: you live in this world that makes you believe everyone else does. And it simply isn't true.
1521   MolotovCocktail   2025 Apr 13, 11:59am  

WookieMan says


I've already driven 100 miles or 2 hours today. I'm not a delivery driver. They would drive 4-6x that in a day.


So fucking what?

Again, it's you who lives in the enclave you claim that I do. Or rather, your reading comprehension & logic skills are fucking lame.

You can drive 500 fucking miles per day. Has no bearing on the FACT - let alone disproves - that most residence/business package deliveries are urban.

You don't even realize how much you are embarrassing yourself right now, too. Seriously.
1522   Ceffer   2025 Apr 13, 6:41pm  

Again, EVs being part of the democide agenda makes perfect sense. Nukes your keister while you drive. Bake you on the inside, blow you up with unstoppable intense battery explosions while locking you in, drive you off a cliff, or even use a self driving car as a weapon against a person or persons (maybe with a nice C4 load on board).

1523   HeadSet   2025 Apr 13, 6:50pm  

Interesting to see what that "Electrosmog" meter would read if placed next to a smartphone.
1524   WookieMan   2025 Apr 13, 7:27pm  

MolotovCocktail says

Has no bearing on the FACT - let alone disproves - that most residence/business package deliveries are urban.

You don't even realize how much you are embarrassing yourself right now, too. Seriously.

Delivery drivers drive more in rural areas. That's fact. Indisputable. Per capita rural is higher. More miles. More deliveries because people don't want to drive 20-30 minutes to get something. EV's don't work in that environment. Again a fact.

I've literally done the job. I literally did the job as a rural carrier for USPS. City carriers were always done way earlier because they didn't drive much. You keep shitting on people about topics you know nothing about. I did the job. I know you didn't. Own your lies.
1525   EBGuy   2025 Apr 14, 1:00am  

Well, this will be interesting. Per press release, Walmart will be testing BrightDrop vans in several dense urban areas AND northwest Arkansas. Per the google:
Northwest Arkansas has a significantly lower population density compared to Austin, Texas. Northwest Arkansas has a population density of 174 people per square mile, while Austin has a density of 3,006.36 people per square mile. So I guess we'll be getting our test case...
1526   WookieMan   2025 Apr 14, 6:36am  

EBGuy says

Well, this will be interesting. Per press release, Walmart will be testing BrightDrop vans in several dense urban areas AND northwest Arkansas. Per the google:
Northwest Arkansas has a significantly lower population density compared to Austin, Texas. Northwest Arkansas has a population density of 174 people per square mile, while Austin has a density of 3,006.36 people per square mile. So I guess we'll be getting our test case...

Give it a shot, but I'm not seeing it if you do the math. We had routes that were 100 miles a day for ONE zip code. UPS, Fedex and those similar do multiple towns and zip codes in a day with sometimes 10 miles between towns. And usually the distribution warehouse is 20-30 miles from the first stop in rural areas.

As I've said in many threads, I have no issue with EV's. I just think the expectations for them are over inflated on realistic situations. I get regenerative braking, but you burn a ton of battery accelerating every 10th house to drop a package.

Basically I don't see rural delivery being realistic. Even Northern cities it's probable not realistic in the winter months. I don't think carriers delivering in cold weather or rural are willing to take a risk on probably a $100k investment per vehicle. I wouldn't want to own shares in the company.

Also the taxes are coming on these shipping companies for EV's. They're way heavier empty and now throw in the cargo. EV's have to start paying in to maintain the roads. Not an opinion, it's fact.
1527   socal2   2025 Apr 14, 4:01pm  

Tesla seems to be working out well for a local police force in Indiana.

-----------------------------------------------

"NEWS: Five years after debuting Indiana's first @Tesla police car, the Bargersville Police Department says it has saved them nearly $500,000 in maintenance and repairs.

Police chief Bertram said nothing has changed the department's commitment to their Teslas: "I couldn't even begin to say how much money the department has saved. Since 2020, I'd say we've been saving about $70,000-$80,000 a year from having our vehicles, and the more cars we get, the more savings too."

The department, which has 16 officers, started with one Tesla in 2019 and has since added another dozen.

Bertram remembers getting a monthly gas bill in June 2024 that was more than $3,100 for four Ford gas cars. That same month, he said, it cost $300 to charge all 13 electric vehicles.

The police chief also said they've never had to replace any brakes on the Teslas. That repair on gas cars can run between $1,200 and $1,500. He said the department hasn't experienced any issues or concerns with the electric cars except one that needed a battery pack changed."
https://x.com/SawyerMerritt/status/1911898087175434627
1528   WookieMan   2025 Apr 14, 7:21pm  

socal2 says

That repair on gas cars can run between $1,200 and $1,500.

Where in the flying fuck were they getting brakes done? It's a 1 hour job max and $150 in parts. It's a $300 job worst case.

socal2 says

the Bargersville Police Department says it has saved them nearly $500,000 in maintenance and repairs.

No chance these numbers are right. They aren't paying MFT on the chargers. That is coming to an end. No one has even heard of this town and 13 EV's for 16 officers that aren't all on duty at the same time? I'm calling bull shit on this one.

3 shifts, you'd maybe need 6 EV's max with 4 officers on duty. 3 cars charging, 3 officers on the road and 1 desk duty. Just not buying it. Who the hell even knows who the guy is that tweeted this.

People are gullible. This has an insane scent of bull shit.
1529   socal2   2025 Apr 14, 7:40pm  

WookieMan says

Who the hell even knows who the guy is that tweeted this.

People are gullible. This has an insane scent of bull shit.


Here is the source article from my old hometown newspaper.

https://www.indystar.com/story/news/crime/2025/04/14/five-years-later-how-indianas-first-police-teslas-holding-up-bargersville-department-todd-bertram/83083353007/
1530   WookieMan   2025 Apr 15, 1:29am  

socal2 says

Here is the source article from my old hometown newspaper.

Paywall... Still have to address why they have 13 cars with 16 officers. That was my point. 16 officers is maybe a town of 5-6k? Not all 16 are on duty at the same time.

And now that I'm thinking about it you have more gear than normal in a cop car running off electric supply. A running ICE car and alternator can run that all day. You're going to lose 10-20% of battery running equipment in a cop car. You'll have to swap cars during your shift or get yourself in a situation you can't serve and protect when the battery runs out going to a call. Less time on the streets.

There also is no $500k in savings for 3-5 years because you paid more for the car up front. For police sedans you're looking at $50k more at least for an EV. The sedan style ICE patrol car is cheap outside of added equipment. You then still have to get tires. As I said, a brake job is a trivial task at around $200-300 and could be done in house with public works mechanics. Could literally be $80/car.

Basically what I'm saying is the math is not truthful or makes sense. Also they'll eventually have to account for MFT to charge. It's coming...
1531   MolotovCocktail   2025 Apr 15, 9:03am  

socal2 says

Tesla has one of the highest brand loyalty rates in the auto industry.
https://cleantechnica.com/2024/04/11/tesla-leading-in-auto-brand-loyalty/#google_vignette


That was posted a year ago. Lot has since changed. Esp for Libtards who have overwhelmingly been buyers of Teslas.
1532   socal2   2025 Apr 15, 9:43am  

MolotovCocktail says

That was posted a year ago. Lot has since changed. Esp for Libtards who have overwhelmingly been buyers of Teslas.


Yes - I already pointed out the Leftist Commies and Trannies hate Tesla now. Good thing that most of them are too lazy to work to afford a car in the first place.

Has nothing to do with the quality of the product.
1533   GNL   2025 Apr 15, 9:46am  

I only mentioned my own personal experience.
1534   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Apr 15, 10:03am  

socal2 says

MolotovCocktail says


That was posted a year ago. Lot has since changed. Esp for Libtards who have overwhelmingly been buyers of Teslas.


Yes - I already pointed out the Leftist Commies and Trannies hate Tesla now. Good thing that most of them are too lazy to work to afford a car in the first place.

Has nothing to do with the quality of the product.


dude a lot of leftists are very well off, some very wealthy people there.
1535   WookieMan   2025 Apr 15, 11:51am  

socal2 says

Tesla has one of the highest brand loyalty rates in the auto industry.

Does that lead to sales though? I love my Nissan SUV. Driving that until it breaks. I'd buy another in a heartbeat, but if you build good cars that's 7-10 years. Nearing 250k miles and 11 years. So far I don't need to buy a new one.

I'll probably get a new(ish) one for me when the oldest is close to 16. Although in our area we let them drive alone at 15 so that might be in the next 6 months.

Brand loyalty doesn't really mean much if you build good cars. There's not much more tech that you can put in a car at this point, if you even want it. If people are trading in and selling Teslas that's not a good sign. Most are likely lower mileage. I'm not sure if that's loyalty or politics, but like I said, not a good sign for the brand.

I haven't looked at Tesla quarterlies or K10, but there will be evidence there. Not just the press piece either, the whole thing.
1537   RWSGFY   2025 Apr 17, 8:49pm  

Tesla (TSLA.O) faces a proposed class action claiming it speeds up odometers on its electric vehicles so they fall out of warranty faster, saving Elon Musk's company from having to pay for repairs.
The plaintiff Nyree Hinton alleged that Tesla odometer readings reflect energy consumption, driver behavior and "predictive algorithms" rather than actual mileage driven.
He said the odometer on the 2020 Model Y he bought in December 2022 with 36,772 miles on the clock ran at least 15% fast, based on his other vehicles and driving history, and for a while said he drove 72 miles a day when at most he drove 20.
Hinton, a Los Angeles resident, said this caused his 50,000-mile basic warranty to expire well ahead of schedule, leaving him with a $10,000 suspension repair bill that he thought Tesla should cover.
"By tying warranty limits and lease mileage caps to inflated 'odometer' readings, Tesla increases repair revenue, reduces warranty obligations, and compels consumers to purchase extended warranties prematurely," the complaint said.
1538   WookieMan   2025 Apr 18, 4:13am  

RWSGFY says

caused his 50,000-mile basic warranty to expire well ahead of schedule, leaving him with a $10,000 suspension repair bill that he thought Tesla should cover."By tying warranty limits and lease mileage caps to inflated 'odometer' readings, Tesla increases repair revenue, reduces warranty obligations, and compels consumers to purchase extended warranties prematurely," the complaint said.

How in the flying fuck do you need suspension work at 50k miles?? $10k is a full rebuild, like take the axels off and put new ones on. I just did my suspension at 220k miles and it was $800. I sniff bull shit in this story.

I dislike EV's, but if they're not getting 50k miles out of a suspension they're shit cars. And if it cost $10k, get fucked. I get the point is the odometer, but that means the suspension goes under 50k miles? Am I right? That's a shit car.
1539   HeadSet   2025 Apr 18, 2:58pm  

RWSGFY says

He said the odometer on the 2020 Model Y he bought in December 2022 with 36,772 miles on the clock ran at least 15% fast, based on his other vehicles and driving history

Too easy to check. Just take the vehicle to a measured mile. Or even easier, start at a mile marker on the interstate and drive 10 miles and see how the mileage markers compare to the odo.
1540   WookieMan   2025 Apr 18, 3:16pm  

HeadSet says

RWSGFY says
He said the odometer on the 2020 Model Y he bought in December 2022 with 36,772 miles on the clock ran at least 15% fast, based on his other vehicles and driving history

Too easy to check. Just take the vehicle to a measured mile. Or even easier, start at a mile marker on the interstate and drive 10 miles and see how the mileage markers compare to the odo.

Probably have to do 100 miles at least to prove anything. Either way everything is all digital now so an odometer being off for a warranty wouldn't shock me. I like DOGE, don't care for Tesla and am indifferent with Musk. If true he's really backing himself into a corner. He's gotta do some damage control at this point at least for shareholder (I'm not one unless it's in a fund).
1541   Eric_Holder   2025 Apr 24, 1:48pm  

EBGuy says


Well, this will be interesting. Per press release, Walmart will be testing BrightDrop vans in several dense urban areas AND northwest Arkansas. Per the google:
Northwest Arkansas has a significantly lower population density compared to Austin, Texas. Northwest Arkansas has a population density of 174 people per square mile, while Austin has a density of 3,006.36 people per square mile. So I guess we'll be getting our test case...


In other news:

General Motors has temporarily paused production of BrightDrop electric vans at its CAMI Assembly plant in Ontario, Canada. This halt is scheduled to last from May to October 2025 due to weak demand and inventory adjustments
1544   clambo   2025 Jun 5, 7:42am  

Off the subject a bit, evidently Musk is freaking out that Trump et. al want to get rid of the tax credit=subsidy for electric battery cars.
1545   RWSGFY   2025 Jun 5, 7:56am  

clambo says

Off the subject a bit, evidently Musk is freaking out that Trump et. al want to get rid of the tax credit=subsidy for electric battery cars.


Nah, he's on record saying he doesn't want these.
1546   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jun 5, 8:05am  

RWSGFY says

Nah, he's on record saying he doesn't want these.


Yup. Has he recently changed his tune, clambo ?
1547   clambo   2025 Jun 5, 8:49am  

I'm guilty of not really paying much attention to what Musk is saying about things, so if he is against tax credits (corporate welfare) for battery cars that's fine.
1548   MolotovCocktail   2025 Jun 5, 10:51am  

clambo says

I'm guilty of not really paying much attention to what Musk is saying about things, so if he is against tax credits (corporate welfare) for battery cars that's fine.


You are the one who said, "evidently Musk is freaking out that Trump et. al want to get rid of the tax credit=subsidy for electric battery cars."
1550   HeadSet   2025 Jun 15, 9:22am  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says





Not sure what your point is, or why the ODO is in kilometers. Getting a quarter million miles (402k kilometers) out of a car sounds like a good deal for the original owner.
1551   WookieMan   2025 Jun 15, 11:07am  

HeadSet says

Not sure what your point is, or why the ODO is in kilometers. Getting a quarter million miles (402k kilometers) out of a car sounds like a good deal for the original owner.

I think the point is the resale is trash. I wouldn't buy one. A new battery is due and you've essentially got a $22-25k car at least. I'd just get a new hybrid for $30k that's the same size and has similar features. If you're into acceleration and that stuff you're a common retard. You don't need that stuff.

You can also get a used hybrid for around the same amount with 60-80k miles. Full EV is stupid.
1552   HeadSet   2025 Jun 15, 12:51pm  

WookieMan says

I think the point is the resale is trash.

Yes, but the resale on any car with 250k miles on it is "trash."
1553   WookieMan   2025 Jun 16, 11:15am  

HeadSet says

WookieMan says


I think the point is the resale is trash.

Yes, but the resale on any car with 250k miles on it is "trash."

Agree and disagree. Can make an ICE vehicles run another 50-100k miles for $2-4k. Ain't doing that with an EV. It will be $10k and you still have to do tires and brakes. Manufacturers oil changes have gone way up. Might only need 2 a year unless it's a commercial vehicle. Oh the horror.

Still have to pay the electric. The MFT taxes are coming in some form in the near future. EV's I think have reached peak saturation. Factor in subsidies potentially going away, they're toast. It was never a viable option regardless of the fun to drive thing everyone is attached to. Start from A get me to B and that's a car. 0-60 in 2.5 seconds is stupid.

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