Just Some Other Guy
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- Mar 25, 2018
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Note that the next scene is him doing the exact same thing to an F-150 and the door trim also falls off.View attachment 6270351
If you slam the doors on the cyber truck they seperate and trying to open the door will rip it apart
The frame snapped while towing only after he drove it off a ledge and it landed on the exact area spot that later broke. Maybe a steel frame could have handled that, but that's not anything close to normal use.
I have no opinion on the video except it was slightly amusing. A steel frame objectively would have handled that better, though.Note that the next scene is him doing the exact same thing to an F-150 and the door trim also falls off.
The frame snapped while towing only after he drove it off a ledge and it landed on the exact area spot that later broke. Maybe a steel frame could have handled that, but that's not anything close to normal use.
Using a WhistlinDiesel video for evidence of flaws is incredibly dumb.
If modern manufacturers could lock your car while you are driving 80 MPH with your entire family in it, due to a missed payment on some DLC, they would do it in a heartbeat.
Is it some anti right to repair shit where the car is made from a literal jigsaw of parts so disassembling is impossible after any damage? I swear that shit is getting worse and worse, and nobody gives a shit.I'm pretty sure that BHPH dealers already use this technology to killswitch cars once a buyer misses a car payment.
During Car and Driver's Long-Term test of the BMW i4 EV, they hit a deer with it, and the repair cost was ~$17000, which is how much a base trim Nissan Versa costs. And extremely high repair costs are not just for EVs too, as had this accident occurred in an ICE BMW, the repair cost would have been almost the same.
It's going to be some nightmare-ish times in the future, when newer cars with minor damage (and not just EVs) get deemed as totaled, because of the extremely high repair costs, and insurance premiums are skyrocketing as well.
Is it some anti right to repair shit where the car is made from a literal jigsaw of parts so disassembling is impossible after any damage? I swear that shit is getting worse and worse, and nobody gives a shit.
You would be right. I think the issue is this:I feel like it wouldn't be that hard to make a bare bones overbuilt car that takes in a profit because it's cheap and easy to repair, even if it doesn't have all the whizzbang fiddly bits.
You would have until you reach max market penetration, after which you can willingly downsize your company and focus on maintaining your currently sold cars with the few new purchases. If you didn't massively scale your company up initially then the decline wouldn't be so significant and it would take a long time to reach max saturation.You could probably slam out a modern 1980's vehicle for $10K while still having ABS and airbags and then go bankrupt because your car doesn't have much planned obsolescence so just keeps going and the yuppies that replace their cars every 2 years would shun you not being cool.
Isn't that a plug in hybrid (albeit usually with petrol), which works well? Toyota are emphasising that with the current Prius.I still hold that electric cars ought to have a fairly small battery for everyday use, and a tiny diesel powerplant to keep it going when that battery runs out.
Nah, those still connect the engine to the wheels through a gearbox. It’s an inefficient mess and requires you to scale the engine up such that it could do an uphill start fully loaded. What I’m describing is a small generator to recharge the battery. It’s significantly more efficient, and you save a tonne of weight making it even more efficient. The total power in the battery would sink during exertions such as climbing hills or accelerating, but would then slowly build back up during normal driving.Isn't that a plug in hybrid (albeit usually with petrol), which works well? Toyota are emphasising that with the current Prius.
This cunt is really annoying. Would be better if he actually put the cars through stress tests instead of bullshit-for-'entertainment' rubbish.Ran across this post elsewhere:
CHAMBERS COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) -- A driver is dead after a Tesla Cybertruck crashed and burst into flames in Chambers County overnight, authorities said.
The fatal crash happened along Fisher Road near Cedar Port Parkway, not far from Beach City.
Texas Department of Public Safety officials said a Tesla Cybertruck left the roadway and struck a culvert before catching fire.
Video from the scene shows the Cybertruck was just a burned-out shell after the flames were extinguished.
Investigators said it was unclear why the driver lost control. The investigation is ongoing.
The driver was pronounced dead at the scene. Authorities did not immediately release his name.
The Cybertruck is the latest electric vehicle from Tesla. The company first started delivering the electric pickup trucks to customers in late 2023.
The truck first made headlines because of its unique look with flat, stainless steel sheet panels. It has continued to spark controversy due to ongoing safety concerns and an accelerator pedal pad recall.