stalephish
StalePhish
stalephish

B’Gosh, I wonder if they’ll ever uncover some palm greasing that helped Oshkosh Defense win the contract.

The design is a total mess. It looks like a homemade prop for a low budget student film.

I can’t believe the outgoing vans have been in service as long as they have.

I miss the old sliding door mail jeeps with

Agreed!

Yeah, the station we charged at both times when we first got the car (before we had the home charger installed) has 16 stalls and both times there only maybe a half dozen cars there. It’s in a shopping plaza with lots of stores and restaurants. We just plugged in and walked over to get a frozen yogurt while we waited.

I know a lot of anecdotal replies but here’s another: We’ve had an Tesla since the sale/lowered price in January and we’ve used a charger 5 times (2 of those were between when we took delivery and had the home charger installed). You’re right that we don’t really use chargers unless we are going on long trips. We did

Some owners that live in apartments, condos, etc. where they don’t have a say in whether their home has an EV charger NEED to have ample access to them as well.

Daily driving? sure... longer range/road trip especially if going off of interstates? you’re gonna need all of that shit.

But you don’t need to use a public charger to use an EV in the same way that you need a public gas pump to use a gas car.

Tesla premium connectivity. ~$100 per year. A whole year. It amazes me that there are Tesla owners out there that have spent between $40K and up to $100K or even more for the plaid and consider this a rip-off.

For those rare occasions that I need iHeart radio I just stream it with bluetooth from my phone. Can control play/pause and volume from my steering wheel.

While not every place has room to add devoted charging stations in (you know property owners would love a means to get more rent), places with decent saturation reduce the problem. I worked with someone who was in an apartment and had an EV, they were able to charge everywhere they would go (office, stripmall with

Exactly, the biggest difference is that an EV doesn’t need to make deadhead trips to get more power, even if you don’t have charging at home, you will see chargers in office parks, supermarkets, etc. Stop to get your coffee in the morning, you probably can get a good chunk of power if you are at a more modern charger. 

Unless you are staying at a motel that has free to patrons level II chargers. Then overnight is fine.

I paid for my level II charger with just the money I SAVED vs gasoline in the first year. With a couple of bucks left over. And we don’t drive a lot.

I think the OP means no charge stations around town (attached to the grocery store mid-town), just along the highways.

My understanding is that the conversion is backed by dodge, but why dodge wouldn’t have made it in the first place from the factory is insulting.

Give the Miata a run for it’s money and whack the top off the Toyobaru twins.

To me the videos are proof that comprehensive state inspections are a good thing. None of the cars in those videos have Massachusetts plates and there is a reason. If I have a wheel bearing with even a little bit of wobble it’ll get an reject. Check engine light anytime in the last 100 miles? Reject. extensive rust on

Noticed this same at my local Lowe’s last week. It was just installed a few weeks ago. Home Depot is probably right behind in doing it. Sad state the retail industry is in, in relation to rampant theft. I see a Sam’s Club/Costco  model coming soon to more retailers where at the exit someone check’s receipts.  Our

RE: Volvo V90 with an EV.

Christians hate gays because they don’t manufacture more Christians. Which is ironic, because Christians keep manufacturing more gays.