Apart from the batteries taking up a lot more transport capacity
Apart from the batteries taking up a lot more transport capacity
The track map is giving off serious Buriram vibes, which means it would be infinitely more entertaining to send David Attenborough into the forest.
I love that they are still using the old Ginetta instead of their fancy specially built chassis.
One of the advantages of virtual fuses is that they can be reset with the push of a button, or can be programmed to auto-reset after a set amount of time or a power cycle. I’d expect the auto industry to find a way to make money off it anyway.
Whether empty accessory fuses exist is completely independent from what type of fusing the car uses. If the manufacturer decides to not include empty slots(most decide that it is cheaper to keep the empty slots if the customer doesn’t order the stuff that could be connected there), it would be the same with melting…
Meanwhile, I’m sitting here wondering when production cars will abandon fuse boxes at all in favor of virtual fuses.
You have either an additional fuse box you didn’t check, or a serious wiring problem. No electrical component is supposed to work fuseless, as unfused wires are a serious fire hazard, especially so in older cars with 70s isolation materials.
The pictures were also taken by someone with track access, as Paul Ricard is fenced off quite generously to prevent spy shots. These are the first “spy shots” from there that are not a maximum zoom grainy mess taken from a km away.
The overall shape and design looks very similar to the other known designs and the car is running on racing tires, so it could be possible.
The current F1 rules limit the maximum fuel flow into the engine, so it is already about fuel econnomy. If everyone has exactly the same amount of fuel to burn, the engine with the lowest specific consumption(grams of fuel/kWh crankshaft work) will have the most power.
And the cars on-track emissions are about 0,7% of the total emissions. The fuel they use over a season is not even enough to fuel an Airbus 350. By going hybrid they just downgraded from a 777ER to something a bit more modern.
From what I know about Burger King, even with an uncensored picture the actual contents of the sandwich would still be a mystery
Or Mugen-Honda
I have never seen anything about the Camry’s battery, so I have no idea
It was just a minor electrical problem, a conrod knocked the alternator off.
Meanwhile, while everyone was giggling about Model S pricing, nobody remembered to pay the water bill, so the construction in Brandenburg had to be suspended because they had their water turned off.
Electric cars here are also not cost competitive. The electric Opel Corsa has a list price 13k higher than the IC one. That means most Corsa buyers can buy a gas one and drive 10 years at 2019 fuel prices, before the electric car catches up on total cost. The Renault Zoe and the Honda E are similarly expensive.
Looking at the line-up, Buick is selling a lot of compact cars, as does VW, as chinese buyers are more price-sensitive and practical to buy US-market SUVs, and those with cash primarily go for german cars. However, the Buick roster contains a worrying amount of Opel-based designs, and with the only GM car I see…
And Lewis has more races per season than Schumacher, and Schumacher had rule changes tailored specifically against him.
The only versions of the G that made sense are the millitary specs, shame they stopped selling those as civilian versions long ago.