Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods
kamakazi wrote:Ignoring 88sins interpretation of the laws of thermodynamics.
I recall an electric supercharger system by Thomas knight, advertised in car magazines, which used a modified starter motor to turn a compressor. Supposed to function in short bursts similar to a small shot of nitrous. Nothing to do with efficiency, more to do with power.
Biggest challenges with EVs locally is initial buy in price, unknown resale value and who is fixing it when it eventually needs parts (not just the battery). Cause the technology is still being developed at a fairly decent rate, by the time you are ready to sell, what you have could be outdated
Should do a like for like comparison on similar/same vehicles
MG gas engined vs full electric
Hyundai ioniq hybrid vs electric etc
My personal fear is how connected some EVs are. Leaving control of the vehicle up to the manufacturer, no thanks. They can shut down features when they want, take away or give you more range if they feel like it,bAsk you to pay a subscription to get it back; and they only asking now... Give it a couple of years and they will force it.
kamakazi wrote:Ignoring 88sins interpretation of the laws of thermodynamics.
I recall an electric supercharger system by Thomas knight, advertised in car magazines, which used a modified starter motor to turn a compressor. Supposed to function in short bursts similar to a small shot of nitrous. Nothing to do with efficiency, more to do with power.
Biggest challenges with EVs locally is initial buy in price, unknown resale value and who is fixing it when it eventually needs parts (not just the battery). Cause the technology is still being developed at a fairly decent rate, by the time you are ready to sell, what you have could be outdated
Should do a like for like comparison on similar/same vehicles
MG gas engined vs full electric
Hyundai ioniq hybrid vs electric etc
My personal fear is how connected some EVs are. Leaving control of the vehicle up to the manufacturer, no thanks. They can shut down features when they want, take away or give you more range if they feel like it,bAsk you to pay a subscription to get it back; and they only asking now... Give it a couple of years and they will force it.
kamakazi wrote:My personal fear is how connected some EVs are. Leaving control of the vehicle up to the manufacturer, no thanks. They can shut down features when they want, take away or give you more range if they feel like it,bAsk you to pay a subscription to get it back; and they only asking now... Give it a couple of years and they will force it.
kamakazi wrote:Ignoring 88sins interpretation of the laws of thermodynamics.
I recall an electric supercharger system by Thomas knight, advertised in car magazines, which used a modified starter motor to turn a compressor. Supposed to function in short bursts similar to a small shot of nitrous. Nothing to do with efficiency, more to do with power.
Biggest challenges with EVs locally is initial buy in price, unknown resale value and who is fixing it when it eventually needs parts (not just the battery). Cause the technology is still being developed at a fairly decent rate, by the time you are ready to sell, what you have could be outdated
Should do a like for like comparison on similar/same vehicles
MG gas engined vs full electric
Hyundai ioniq hybrid vs electric etc
My personal fear is how connected some EVs are. Leaving control of the vehicle up to the manufacturer, no thanks. They can shut down features when they want, take away or give you more range if they feel like it,bAsk you to pay a subscription to get it back; and they only asking now... Give it a couple of years and they will force it.
I don't have the info yet on any local dealerships...I am just observing the worrying trend/s in foreign marketsDuane 3NE 2NR wrote:kamakazi wrote:My personal fear is how connected some EVs are. Leaving control of the vehicle up to the manufacturer, no thanks. They can shut down features when they want, take away or give you more range if they feel like it,bAsk you to pay a subscription to get it back; and they only asking now... Give it a couple of years and they will force it.
Which dealerships in T&T are using over-the-air updates and controls?
kamakazi wrote:@Habit
Not afraid of computer controlled. I'm afraid of over the air connected computer controlled, that can update itself without your permission.
Habit7 wrote:kamakazi wrote:@Habit
Not afraid of computer controlled. I'm afraid of over the air connected computer controlled, that can update itself without your permission.
Yea but I am trying to say that it is not EV-specific
Habit7 wrote:kamakazi wrote:@Habit
Not afraid of computer controlled. I'm afraid of over the air connected computer controlled, that can update itself without your permission.
Yea but I am trying to say that it is not EV-specific
kamakazi wrote:Habit7 wrote:kamakazi wrote:@Habit
Not afraid of computer controlled. I'm afraid of over the air connected computer controlled, that can update itself without your permission.
Yea but I am trying to say that it is not EV-specific
It appears to be more strongly pushed in EVs though, and more encompassing in control over the vehicle.
Unlikely but the fuel saving is a major factor to consider depending on your mileageChimera wrote:Then could always sell back the vezel in a 4 years for probably the same price it cost me to bring it in.
Chimera wrote:a play selling for 250-280k and sometimes more currently
lewwe say a 180k in 4 years then
True thatj.o.e wrote:Chimera wrote:a play selling for 250-280k and sometimes more currently
lewwe say a 180k in 4 years then
Nah the amount of Vezels out there the price will drop significantly. Just use the previous model as a gauge. They don’t hold so much value but if you get 120-130k for a vehicle you drive heavily for 4 years that’s still very good.
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:I thnk that might be because more tech, self driving etc are being used on EVs than ICE or hybrid vehicles because of the capabilities of the EV platform.
Remember when Tesla pushed out a free update to their vehicles in Florida increasing range during the evacuation for Hurricane Irma?
https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/09/tesla ... e-evacuate
kamakazi wrote:Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:I thnk that might be because more tech, self driving etc are being used on EVs than ICE or hybrid vehicles because of the capabilities of the EV platform.
Remember when Tesla pushed out a free update to their vehicles in Florida increasing range during the evacuation for Hurricane Irma?
https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/09/tesla ... e-evacuate
I remember trying to figure out how they suddenly got additional range. My theory of the system misreporting the 0 to 100% state of the battery was right. What I got wrong was the reason. I thought it was artificially limited to protect the battery (preventing the user from fully charging or discharging the battery which would cause damage to the cells). What I have now learnt is that it was done for market segmentation.
So what is the purpose of carrying around this dead weight everywhere you go, negatively affecting acceleration, deceleration and more importantly, range, all the time...and only if the manufacturer deems it so, to give you a bligh.
An OTA update wouldn't be necessary if they were given full use of the hardware that was already installed on the vehicle from day one.
Ukrainian hackers have gotten around Tesla soft locks and the possibility of disabling OTA updates or enabling modes that the vehicle didn't initially come with, but this shouldn't have to be the go-to solution.
OTA updates give manufacturers too much control.
Habit7 wrote:Don't hold your breath for Tesla Trinidad. Their only presence in the Caribbean is in Puerto Rico, a US territory. And they are only in Chile in South America. They are not in Brazil, one of the biggest car markets in the world.
Les Bain wrote:Habit7 wrote:Don't hold your breath for Tesla Trinidad. Their only presence in the Caribbean is in Puerto Rico, a US territory. And they are only in Chile in South America. They are not in Brazil, one of the biggest car markets in the world.
How do the local Tesla owners fix dey business though?
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:The subscription model is coming to everything - eventually.
kamakazi wrote:So what is the purpose of carrying around this dead weight everywhere you go, negatively affecting acceleration, deceleration and more importantly, range, all the time...and only if the manufacturer deems it so, to give you a bligh. .
Return to “Ole talk and more Ole talk”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 501 guests