Yes, you’re alone in defending a technology that after a century of intensifying development has 40% efficiency (whereas the tech you’re moaning about has 20 years of intense development and has already hit over 80%), consumes a limited, nonrenewable resource, and has significant responsibility for potentially human-extinction-causing climate change.
Look Ive been a petrolhead for 30 years and Ive driven a few EVs and even if they are faster and more efficient they lack personality, they are less fun and engaging to drive and that is the ONLY point I will defend them on. The vroom vroom makes me happy.
Everything else… yeah they dont make sense going forward.
I agree with that. It’s the imperfection of the engine and transmission - and the proper feedback from mechanical steering and brakes that gives the Ice cars personality and I miss that. EVs are appliances. I think they’ll be like horses. Hobbyist specialties.
I don’t love my EV like some of my previous cars but i haven’t had or made time to properly work on my cars so I do appreciate not needing to do work on the EV - so far.
There’s something to this. EVs might be a little too easy. At least at first.
I hope once we start wrecking them up and getting access to low cost parts and such, people will start getting inventive.
Right now, they’re too good and too expensive. Suppliers, supply chains, therefore competition is all on the other side of the planet.
We’ve already seen some stripped down and supped up Tesla’s, and I saw someone who bolted a motor to an old Toyota by just cramming it to the transmission with half a clutch welded on.
I’m quite hopeful that there’s a resurgence of tinkering in the EV world - primarily because this whole situation wherein the unavailability of a single board for a car made in 1993 simply bricks it, and EVs are just a collection of “modules”. We need people to rebuild batteries and inverters and all that.
The Fisker bankruptcy is a small scale example where owners have gotten some stuff working again.
Yes, you’re alone in defending a technology that after a century of intensifying development has 40% efficiency (whereas the tech you’re moaning about has 20 years of intense development and has already hit over 80%), consumes a limited, nonrenewable resource, and has significant responsibility for potentially human-extinction-causing climate change.
You feckless idiot!
Look Ive been a petrolhead for 30 years and Ive driven a few EVs and even if they are faster and more efficient they lack personality, they are less fun and engaging to drive and that is the ONLY point I will defend them on. The vroom vroom makes me happy.
Everything else… yeah they dont make sense going forward.
“My feelings are more important than your life” kinda vibe. Sure, let’s kill the planet because loud noises are fun.
I agree with that. It’s the imperfection of the engine and transmission - and the proper feedback from mechanical steering and brakes that gives the Ice cars personality and I miss that. EVs are appliances. I think they’ll be like horses. Hobbyist specialties.
I don’t love my EV like some of my previous cars but i haven’t had or made time to properly work on my cars so I do appreciate not needing to do work on the EV - so far.
There’s something to this. EVs might be a little too easy. At least at first.
I hope once we start wrecking them up and getting access to low cost parts and such, people will start getting inventive.
Right now, they’re too good and too expensive. Suppliers, supply chains, therefore competition is all on the other side of the planet.
We’ve already seen some stripped down and supped up Tesla’s, and I saw someone who bolted a motor to an old Toyota by just cramming it to the transmission with half a clutch welded on.
Too good? Tesla makes the worst cars you can buy right now.
Well, as far as speed. They’re limited by the tires right now and that’s been the driving force behind a lot of motorheads here for a while.
I’m quite hopeful that there’s a resurgence of tinkering in the EV world - primarily because this whole situation wherein the unavailability of a single board for a car made in 1993 simply bricks it, and EVs are just a collection of “modules”. We need people to rebuild batteries and inverters and all that.
The Fisker bankruptcy is a small scale example where owners have gotten some stuff working again.
I think you might have missed the exhaust killing hundreds of millions of people. No biggie I suppose.