I don't get it. It's Oregon.
Why don't they just give everyone free roads?
I don't get it. It's Oregon.
So true. The degree of the innumeracy in govt is astounding. Not only the elected officials, but all of the policy wonks that they surround themselves with. Yet much of the legislation they enact is about numbers at the end of the day.It is never the guys that know how to run the numbers (or what they really mean in the end) that get to make the significant decisions. It's always about politics, and seldom about science.
They need more money to give 'free' tents and drug pipes to the homeless.I don't get it. It's Oregon.
Why don't they just give everyone free roads?
Having driven over the hundreds of miles of open scrub land out west , I'm amazed at the lack of solar panels and storage. Therse enough out west to power all of the States and some.I 100% agree The "market" (the market forces of horrible pollution in the Nixon era decreasing the value of living in the smog caused the switch to unleaded gas and lower-emission ICE cars) is not always the best choice but switching to EV's today is not really a matter of saving planet earth (or the humans on it) when we are just shifting the pollution from the tail pipe to somewhere else in a large number of cases.
Driving an EV makes the neighborhood around it cleaner, the neighborhood that generates electricity for that EV gets dirtier. I don't know if it's a net win today.
My 2008 car with ultra low "dept paid" emissions vs a new “in debt” EV. It will take maybe 5-6 years for that EV pay the debt in my case. When my current car needs to be replaced, then it's time to reevaluate.
I'll likely buy a used EV, with the emissions debt already paid, not new.
You mean you drive safe after 6 or so hours at the wheel ,and you drive whilst eating and drinking !Depending on just how much past 800 miles I go, I would need as little as one fill for my Outback. That’s maybe 3 minutes plus another 5 to hit a drive-thru. A thirty minute break would be nice but not when it’s making the day longer, and especially not if you need more than one.
For truckers and tourbus drivers etc. Not for average Joe's in private cars.In Europe we have laws that limit length of time driving without a decent break
Of course. That'll just get you the 455 miles across Nebraska on I-80. On a 1,000 mile trip from Chicago to Denver, that'd be the mid-day shift after the morning in Iowa and before the last, sunset Colorado leg into Denver.You mean you drive safe after 6 or so hours at the wheel ...
Even on a sixteen hour trip I never came close to falling asleep at the wheel, because the trip was planned and prepared for. If I even started feeling like I was losing focus I could pull over and get a twenty or thirty minute nap, which I did a couple of times.You mean you drive safe after 6 or so hours at the wheel ,and you drive whilst eating and drinking !
Wow. Please remember to put that on any accident claim forms !
In Europe we have laws that limit length of time driving without a decent break , and laws about dangerous driving
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Ford’s F-150 Lightning production line has fallen silent, and its employees are now building more gas and hybrid trucks. The automaker continues to retreat from the big bet it made on Americans embracing full-size battery electric pickup trucks, and will focus instead on cheaper vehicles, hybrids, and range-extended electric vehicles—or EREVs—instead, it announced today.
One of those EREVs will be the Lighting’s replacement. With a gasoline generator that just charges the battery—series hybrid fans rejoice—the next Lightning comes with the towing ability that Ford says its customers consider “non-negotiable,” and up to 700 miles (1,126 km) of range.
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All of this will impact Ford’s bottom line, to the tune of $19.5 billion over the next few years, $5.5 billion of which will be in cash. Most of that will hit in the final quarter of 2025, but will extend until 2027, Ford said.
This is actually a case where the EV potentially has the advantage.Another issue I have with owning an EV is that, at the end of a long drive to Colorado, what do I do then? I drive up a mountain to camp for a week. That's maybe 5,000 feet of pure vertical gain. The last 6 miles takes about 2 hours as we creep over rocks, thru streams, picking a line that will do the least damage to the car. I suppose the EV would do as well, better maybe, than an ICE. Not sure what state of charge it would be.
But then the vehicle is the base of camp operations for the week. Doors open and close. In a weather emergency everyone piles in to stay dry and/or warm up. The car has to sit there and still start reliably and get everyone back down the mountain at the end of the week. I'll start the ICE every other day or so to make sure the battery gets a refresh and to keep the engine 'fresh'.
The obvious solution is to leave the EV at home and rent something more suited to this duty. That's fine, since I only do this every other year or so. It's just one more ding against owning an EV as your sole vehicle.
The Australian outback comes to mind as the perfect place for that sort of backup gadget.But with an EV it wouldn't take a very large solar panel to recharge the EV, at least to a point of being able to make it out, since that panel has days of time to do it. A quick search shows that such portable units are available and typically provide between 10 and 30 miles of range a day.
And there are LOTS of places in the U.S. that are very remote, both mountainous terrain and desert. Plus, it doesn't have to be just a backup gadget, but it can also be your source of a modest amount of electrical power for general camp use, be it device recharging or lights or whatever. I don't know if they could provide enough energy for a small stove, used sparingly, in places where open flames are not permitted. I'd have to run the numbers.The Australian outback comes to mind as the perfect place for that sort of backup gadget.
the horse had many advantages for camping up mountains and rough ground . very manuverable, easy to feed, keeps you warm , take you places cars cant.Another issue I have with owning an EV is that, at the end of a long drive to Colorado, what do I do then? I drive up a mountain to camp for a week. That's maybe 5,000 feet of pure vertical gain. The last 6 miles takes about 2 hours as we creep over rocks, thru streams, picking a line that will do the least damage to the car. I suppose the EV would do as well, better maybe, than an ICE. Not sure what state of charge it would be.
But then the vehicle is the base of camp operations for the week. Doors open and close. In a weather emergency everyone piles in to stay dry and/or warm up. The car has to sit there and still start reliably and get everyone back down the mountain at the end of the week. I'll start the ICE every other day or so to make sure the battery gets a refresh and to keep the engine 'fresh'.
The obvious solution is to leave the EV at home and rent something more suited to this duty. That's fine, since I only do this every other year or so. It's just one more ding against owning an EV as your sole vehicle.
if your driving tired, and you are in an accident, then its driving without due care and attention as a minimum,For truckers and tourbus drivers etc. Not for average Joe's in private cars.
If you are in an accident and it is determined that your drowsiness was a factor, you can be cited for impaired driving (using whatever terminology is applicable) regardless of whether you were behind the wheel for fifteen hours or fifteen minutes.if your driving tired, and you are in an accident, then its driving without due care and attention as a minimum,
many other laws about not being capable due to many reasons ,
Consider the hair well split.If you are in an accident and it is determined that your drowsiness was a factor, you can be cited for impaired driving (using whatever terminology is applicable) regardless of whether you were behind the wheel for fifteen hours or fifteen minutes.
He wasn't saying that there weren't laws that covered this, only that "laws that limit length of time driving without a decent break" do not apply to most non-commercial drivers. I suppose that some country somewhere has them for everyone, but they are going to be unenforceable in any practical sense. I highly doubt that every driver is going to be required to maintain a detailed log of every time they operate the vehicle (which is what long-haul commercial drivers generally have to do).
When I was flying small planes, I got real comfortable with the adage, "Time to spare? Go by air!" In that context, it wasn't fuel, but weather that could strand you someplace for hours or even days. But that reality made it so that flying for trips was only an option when those kinds of delays were acceptable, which they usually were not. The same would be the case for most trips by car -- I can't tolerate a day's delay in most cases, so using an EV would not be a viable option for me. Even leaving aside the added hassle of having to check charger availability all long the route, there's the risk that a charging station that was indicated as available won't be when I get there. With gas, that's seldom a concern. Of course, this is an issue that, eventually, should go away as charging stations become more common, though it will take longer out in the western U.S. than back east just due to the distances and population densities involved.Just finished out first long distance trip to LA and back from Denver in our Ioniq 5.
We went I-70 and I_15 to LA, but then took I-10 and I-25 back to avoid bad weather further north.
In general the trip was normal except from a few extra stops to refuel as compared to a gas car, but I don't mind stopping every couple hours or so for a break.
There were charging stations about every 100 miles, so range anxiety was not an issue (except see below).
Well, I did run into a little glitch.
I stupidly didn't check charging station availability, so didn't know that the charging station in Wagon Mound, NM (the only one within about 40 miles) was down for an upgrade of the charging modules, and I arrived with about 30 miles of range left on the battery.
Wagon Mound has about 550 people with no motels, but the gas station there was kind enough to let me charge at their 120V output.
After a few hours charge (at about 3 miles of range per hour) I had enough charge margin to get to Springer, NM about 25 miles away, where we got a motel.
The motel nicely let me charge at an outside outlet overnight, so by about 10AM the next morning I had enough charge to get to the fast charger at Trinidad, CO, 60 miles away (with about 15 miles of range margin).
So we had a day's delay in our trip, but fortunately found some 120V outlets that gave me enough charge to continue our journey.
Lesson learned -- Check charger availability on a long trip.