Rather a one-sided 'conversation' today!
I wouldn't bother to discuss with a staunch pro-EV member, certainly one who cannot see two sides to a situation.
You have a choice, you could turn it into a 2-sided conversation...
Rather a one-sided 'conversation' today!
I wouldn't bother to discuss with a staunch pro-EV member, certainly one who cannot see two sides to a situation.
And yet they last longer than cars did in the '70s...
The biggest threat to Classics is corrosion & over the decades various factors concerning the build of the vehicle have played it's part. I have owned US built trucks that were churned out by the tens of thousands for WW2 military use & consequently no consideration was ever given to rust protection for a vehicle whose predicted combat life was measured in hours but 70 years later many are still in private hands & in original condition .. the secret(?) quality of the steel used in the construction.
Post-war the quality of steel declined & cars were falling apart after as little as 5 years, until the mid eighties when most manufacturers got to grip with the problem by introducing effective rust-proofing from the factory.
Todays' cars are far less susceptible to corrosion & will last much longer than those produced, say in the 'seventies, but will become uneconomical to repair due to their complexity & can easily become a financial write-off long before they 'wear out' in conventional terms .. also technology is used to design a car with the reliability to last for it's warranty period .. they have become disposable items, just like household white goods.
nb. the classic car industry in the UK is estimated to be worth 7 billion pounds a year.
People will be increasingly forced into EV ownership because of the people who were sold in EV dream and more of them buying new ones. This will lead to less choice for people who want ICE second, third or fourth hand vehicles. Also the people who rush headlong into buying new EVs encourage governments to accelerate bans of ICE vehicles - again reducing choice for buyers of used vehicles who may not want EVs.
Two years ago, Tesla slashed list prices of their cars - at a stroke reducing the value of all Teslas. Not a great vote of confidence in their own products.
I hope this helped with your understanding.
Where did I say they didn't?
No. As far as I'm concerned, you can carry on as much as you like, on your own.You have a choice, you could turn it into a 2-sided conversation...
No. As far as I'm concerned, you can carry on as much as you like, on your own.
You're not related to a certain 'Garibaldi' (on a quite different site), are you?
I have already mentioned it before. It's pretty much a no brainer. When the ban eventually comes, I wonder who bears the cost? The manufacturer knows the problem. Maybe they can be sued for entrapment?
I am beginning to see how EV's will work. They make them unaffordable to reduce cars on the road. Then infrastructure won't be needed any more.
I am beginning to see how EV's will work. They make them unaffordable to reduce cars on the road. Then infrastructure won't be needed any more.
I don't doubt that the powers that be would be happy that the greatly increased cost of EV ownership means that car ownership is out of reach to many. However, they've provided the impoverished mainly younger members of society with affordable EVs. They're called scooters.
Pro EV member who patiently makes reasonable and logical counter to every sensationalist BS post thrown into the fray? None of the anti EV "conversation" members show any signs of being able to see two sides either, and to a worse degreeRather a one-sided 'conversation' today!
I wouldn't bother to discuss with a staunch pro-EV member, certainly one who cannot see two sides to a situation.
People can't afford stuff nowadays. Closing down obviously takes longer. EVs being expensive makes them a dead end. No click baiting, just pure reason.those neon coloured "closing down everything must go" signs in the tat shop in town, that has been closing down for about 12 years now