- Joined
- Nov 26, 2018
I paid just over $11k for my pre-owned manual Toyota, and it's infinitely more useful than any bike could ever be. I've gone everywhere with it at over 30mpg, and it'll last me many more years.
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Not to mention market volatility. Used cars/trucks/SUVs can be sold almost anywhere to almost anyone, the market doesn't go up and down too drastically (at least for private sales, fuck dealerships) and perhaps even more importantly the market is always there.I also bet that a used truck is worth a greater percentage of its original price than a used cargo bike.
If you buy the charging kits for those scooters (I can't remember if it's vendor dependent or if there's ones that it doesn't matter), my buddy figured out that if you charge them at your house it deactivates the speed limiter they have. Running them downhill at full throttle makes going 20mph way scarier than you would think it would.I took a ride on one of those e-scooters last night, and I'll admit it was a lot of fun; the ridiculous dollar per minute rental price wasn't, though. Zipping around was enjoyable, but was it practical? No. Do I have insane expectations about replacing my car for one? Absolutely not.
They're a fun and easy way to move yourself short distances and maybe a backpack full of stuff, but nothing more. If I had the money I'd buy one for short commutes/leisure, but beyond that they don't really have much practical use. Most places I need to be would require a 45 minute commute one way on an electric bike going 20mph, I can't justify sinking that much of my time into a commute. America is just too spread out.
It sucks urbanists are delusional about the practicality of what they're talking about. I like most people agree with their initial points, but once they start talking about "moving a 4x8 plywood sheet with a bike," 99% of people tune out after ousting themselves as someone who hasn't had much life experience.
I will, however, be using e-scooters to avoid DUIs in the future.
Bad news. Wily cops and DA's in a good number of places are starting to charge people with OWI ("Operating While Intoxicated") for running those things while they're blasted.I will, however, be using e-scooters to avoid DUIs in the future.
By their logic, cars are free because you exchanged one asset (cash) for another asset of equal value (the car).Here we have the OP comment pointing out the obvious: saved money != income, just going by the factual definition of the terms. Now that should be a fair assessment right?
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It's funny the level of whataboutism of these people is so strong that they can't even give a rational response to a question that isn't even an attack.When asked why a cargo bike is so expensive relative to a car despite not using anywhere close to as much material and needing much less engineering work, he just says that it's cheaper than a new car so price is irrelevant:
I love to bring up the ecological cost "green" things have across their lifespan. Everything from disposable batteries to LED lights are over their life more harmful to the environment than their non "eco friendly" alternatives. Sure, in the moment you are saving money/resources because they are more efficient, but the waste they produce in just a few short years is orders of magnitude higher than the supposed inefficient and wasteful things it's replacing.Not to mention that if these Ebikes are anything like electric cars (and logically they would be) then the battery pack is wasted after five to ten years and needs a full replacement anyways.
Let porky come after me, those e-scooters are 10x more fun to drive drunk than my car.Bad news. Wily cops and DA's in a good number of places are starting to charge people with OWI ("Operating While Intoxicated") for running those things while they're blasted.
You can get a dui on bicycles and horses, nothing stops them.I will, however, be using e-scooters to avoid DUIs in the future.
Redoing my kitchen and replacing the lights, half the fixtures now have irreplaceable LED bulbs built in. Yeah I'm gonna spend 50 to 100 dollars to replace it all again in a year or two when the overcharged diodes give out.. Everything from disposable batteries to LED lights are over their life more harmful to the environment than their non "eco friendly" alternatives.
Someone I know beefed it and had to get their arm reconstructed after slamming into a curb. Speed is fun but the stop never is.Let porky come after me, those e-scooters are 10x more fun to drive drunk than my car.
Can't they buy an electric rickshaw/ tuk tuk if they want to replace a car? They are actually used around the world, unlike e-cargo bikes that are more of a novelty.Urbanists are terrible with money:
If you can buy it for 1/3 of the price of what it was when it was new, then that means that it depreciated by 2/3rds. I also bet that a used truck is worth a greater percentage of its original price than a used cargo bike.
When asked why a cargo bike is so expensive relative to a car despite not using anywhere close to as much material and needing much less engineering work, he just says that it's cheaper than a new car so price is irrelevant:
Well, going by my knowledge of fuckcars I have created a chart that I feel roughly encapsulates their view points on various vehicle types,Can't they buy an electric rickshaw/ tuk tuk if they want to replace a car? They are actually used around the world, unlike e-cargo bikes that are more of a novelty.
View attachment 7211770
This one that looks better quality is like 4500
View attachment 7211762View attachment 7211783
The only reason i could see for using a cargo bike instead is that rickshaws may not be legal in some places, but they are much cheaper/ practical.
What's the 3rd one? How is it different from a tuk tuk?Well, going by my knowledge of fuckcars I have created a chart that I feel roughly encapsulates their view points on various vehicle types,
View attachment 7211983
They also don't seem to grasp the time savings a car brings over a cargo bike.difficult time grasping this concept that saved money is not a type of income.
In most places in the US? Those would require a motorcycle license (and associated tags, insurance and registration fees) at minimum to use on public roadways.rickshaws may not be legal in some places, but they are much cheaper/ practical.
I was comparing them to a cargo bike not to a car. Of course a car is more comfortable than a rickshaw.In most places in the US? Those would require a motorcycle license (and associated tags, insurance and registration fees) at minimum to use on public roadways.
And that puts you more than 50% of the way to a car, so why not just get a car?
There's a reason those kinds of vehicles have never gotten a foothold in America despite the tech being there for a good century at this point. For the buy-in costs? You could get a secondhand car with more comforts and utility. Also, those things tend to only pop up in countries without a winter that brings snow. There is zero chance they'll work in half the US for 1/4 of the year due to the cold or road conditions making them impossible to use.
Those dinky wheels will get no traction and a non-enclosed cabin is a hard no when temperatures without wind chill are already at zero or worse.
Those won't ever work where I live. Our winters get frigid and blizzards would take them out.Can't they buy an electric rickshaw/ tuk tuk if they want to replace a car? They are actually used around the world, unlike e-cargo bikes that are more of a novelty.
View attachment 7211770
This one that looks better quality is like 4500
View attachment 7211762View attachment 7211783
The only reason i could see for using a cargo bike instead is that rickshaws may not be legal in some places, but they are much cheaper/ practical.
It was that 4 wheeled Amazon delivery "bike" they complained was blocking up the bike lane.What's the 3rd one? How is it different from a tuk tuk?
Knowing the r/FuckCars Community any money saved on cars is money to fuel their booze habits. I imagine many of them walk around drunker than Lahey every day.Urbanists are terrible with money:
Bad news. Wily cops and DA's in a good number of places are starting to charge people with OWI ("Operating While Intoxicated") for running those things while they're blasted.
It's a bit of a bizarre legal situation now that I think about it. "Public intoxication" is a crime, so just being out in public while you're drunk (i.e. you're trying to walk home) is technically a criminal act. I've seen police bodycam videos where they feel perfectly justified arresting someone who just tries to walk home because they think they're "too drunk" to make it home safely. Obviously you can't drive a car -- that's illegal too. But really you can't operate any kind of conveyance while drunk because they can slap you with a felony for that as well.
Hiring a cab or Uber or Lyft isn't a guarantee either -- they can refuse you service if they think you're too drunk, leaving you stuck walking and back at square one again.
Funny how the urban setting is underhandedly making "prohibition" the de-facto condition again now.
They also don't seem to grasp the time savings a car brings over a cargo bike.