Quote from: fgngfngfn on August 01, 2024, 22:05:58I don't see any marketing articles on every corner about how ICE vehicles are good. So try guessing again, who has the conflict of interest.What a naive way to look at things. The status quo doesn't need to market how much better they are, all they need to do is do negative marketing to make people stick with the status quo. Or you are going to tell me you've never seen anti-EV marketing?
QuoteThat's cherry-picking of data and inflated cost of ICE car maintenance plus huge EV subsidies that will go away. So basically a lie.It isn't cherry picking inflated cost of ICE cars, these are the costs quoted by the police departments themselves. The problem which you fail to understand is HOW police cars are used. Most of them sit around most of the time idling, followed by mostly local city driving.
Quote from: A on July 31, 2024, 22:01:32You mean the fossil fuel industry who goes to any length to attack EVs with misinformation?I don't see any marketing articles on every corner about how ICE vehicles are good. So try guessing again, who has the conflict of interest.
Quote from: A on August 01, 2024, 21:11:42The cost of fuel and maintenance of an ICE police car is 5k-10k a year compared to under 1k for an EVThat's cherry-picking of data and inflated cost of ICE car maintenance plus huge EV subsidies that will go away. So basically a lie.
Quote from: Real NikoB (old name bl) on August 01, 2024, 14:18:35I bet that it doesn't, considering that the prices are much higher than for an internal combustion engine car?
QuoteThe only strong advantage is a quick start from a standstill, at the level of sports cars, but the overall weight of the car is much higher, which affects worse controllability - the car, due to its wild weight, stupidly reacts more slowly to control commands, and this can be decisive in sharp turns and situations relative to a lightweight car with an internal combustion engine.
In terms of danger - bullets hitting the battery block are just as dangerous as hitting the gas tank. In a collision, it is still unknown where there will be more damage to the car and people, given the obviously greater weight of the car with batteries.
What is easier to protect from bullets - the gas tank or the battery block?
Quote from: A on July 31, 2024, 22:01:32This puts huge maintenance costs on them and makes the payback of an EV fairly quickI bet that it doesn't, considering that the prices are much higher than for an internal combustion engine car?
Quote from: fgngfngfn on July 31, 2024, 09:14:12*"It has succeeded multiple times" if you believe data coming from people with conflict of interest
Quote from: A on July 31, 2024, 02:32:01*"It has succeeded multiple times" if you believe data coming from people with conflict of interestQuote from: Bizarro_NikoB on July 30, 2024, 18:01:25Lol. This will fail. Greenies never learn.It has succeeded multiple times before, why would it fail now?
Quote from: Bizarro_NikoB on July 30, 2024, 18:01:25Lol. This will fail. Greenies never learn.It has succeeded multiple times before, why would it fail now?