stopcrazypp
stopcrazypp
stopcrazypp

Actually they can release any video. NTSB is the one that expects cooperating participants to withhold information from the public until they finish their report (consequences for not doing so simply means they kick you out of participating, like what happened to Tesla). There is no such convention with NHTSA. Note

So if someone is not in a union they aren’t American in your book?

That was a stupid change, but they’ve added it back in a recent update.

But oil subsidies go to the disproportionately to the rich and people seem to have no problem with that as long as they get a cut. I think people supporting policies like this is mostly selfishness speaking.

FYI they already pay for road tax via an annual EV fee, with the equivalent amount they pay being higher than a ICE vehicle of similar efficiency. A lot of states have already adopted this including North Carolina.

If you drive under the daily range, it’s a solar powered car. If it’s above, you have the option of charging it.

It gives them a bargaining chip and they probably save a boatload of taxes anyways that more than makes up for the lost incentives discussed here. I doubt they are losing money on the decision.

If it’s Tesla people here are guaranteed to hate on it much more. People even harp on Tesla for panel gaps which have no practical safety consequences (while an engine failure certainly does). You seriously think 50 motors randomly failing in less than 5k miles for a newly released model no one would care?

If you are buying buses for 1.5 mil each, then the hydrogen bus will only cost even more. And $1 million is for a bare minimum station for cars, one for buses will cost a lot more (see below).

For things like cars and trucks, it costs a minimum of a million dollars to build a hydrogen station (even a small 100kg/day one). You can build a lot of charging infrastructure for the same cost. Hydrogen works ok for smaller fleets like forklifts where you can built a small electrolyzer to generate hydrogen to power

That’s what I mean, hydrogen is even more of a risk because everything about it costs more money (from making the fuel itself, building the stations, to the storage). For an interim solution, things like biodiesel or natural gas is much easier. You also get a lot more power out of it for the same size engine than if

Hydrogen is a horrible transition solution due to high fueling costs and not being able to use existing liquid fuel infrastructure. For short haul, battery solutions today are already better than the hydrogen solutions, so it’s quite irrelevant that it might be “obsolete” in 10 years if it’s already better. That’s

You are just extremely lucky or you never park in public areas (where meter maids can easily give you one).

The impression I get is whatever testing they are doing with Nikola Two is largely insignificant. The testing mentioned in the article is talking about testing Tre trucks (the chassis I linked) with fuel cells. That appears to be the only product making any progress.

Yes, it supports bluetooth, which basically covers most audio app demands (also syncs with phonebook and calendar). There are people that want higher quality audio so want aux or usb audio support, but for most people bluetooth is good enough quality.

The BEV Tre truck they are delivering in small numbers basically is a conversion of an existing IVECO S-way diesel truck. It was first contract manufactured by the original manufacturer in Germany, but now they are saying they are building them in AZ (whatever that means, could simply just be putting in EV components

Yep, I suggested the same before. The current system rewards foot dragging.

Gives better view of the screen. Basically preparing for when L3+ driving becomes more common. When it reaches L4, presumably they may make those retractable steering wheels or maybe even remove it completely (presuming the law allows it by then). However, for now, yoke accomplishes the same thing in terms of getting

It’s possible to patent something as straightforward as this? Just from the title and knowing it has dual motors, I guessed that they would spin the wheels in opposite directions and use the brakes to lock the others, and sure enough that is exactly how they did it. A similar thing is done for traction control (in

Yeah, besides from leaning on GM (does anyone truly believe Saturn had to start from scratch and didn’t use any of the existing supplier relations that GM already had) I struggle to think was new and complex tech Saturn introduced. The only thing new I remember is the plastic panels for the bodies, but nothing else