fekme they can even fix pot holes at present it will be a lot longer than a while before charging pads become even slightly common in roads in the ukUnlikely we'll all be wirelessly charging from pads in the road, for a while yet....
fekme they can even fix pot holes at present it will be a lot longer than a while before charging pads become even slightly common in roads in the ukUnlikely we'll all be wirelessly charging from pads in the road, for a while yet....


I couldn't give a flying feck about sustainability, at most I've got ~30 years left. Let the whining 'we blame everything on older generation' young folk sort it out. I'm sure as they get older, many of them will come to realise life is rarely straightforward black and white.Of course; sustain is the keyword - trying to find a way for ever more humans to live of the limited capacity for resource (re)generation is an increasingly pressing problem
I couldn't give a flying feck about sustainability, at most I've got ~30 years left. Let the whining 'we blame everything on older generation' young folk sort it out. I'm sure as they get older, many of them will come to realise life is rarely straightforward black and white.
Yea but people only did all that because hey had no choice, nothing whatsoever to do with trying to be sustainable and I think at least a few of those are still continued nowadays by most people.People didn't give a feck about sustainability years ago. They didn't do things like:
Buy juice and milk in glass bottles that were handed back to be washed and used again multiple times.
Use cloth nappies that were washed and used again multiple times.
Drink water from a tap instead of buying it in plastic bottles.
Buy clothes and mend them to keep them wearable for another x years.
Hand clothes down to younger siblings.
Share bath water (ok that one's a bit yuck!)
Nah, the older generations never did anything in a sustainable way.
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Buy juice and milk in glass bottles that were handed back to be washed and used again multiple times.
Use cloth nappies that were washed and used again multiple times.
Drink water from a tap instead of buying it in plastic bottles.
Buy clothes and mend them to keep them wearable for another x years.
Hand clothes down to younger siblings.
Share bath water (ok that one's a bit yuck!)
It's almost irrelevant. The basic point stands, decades back whether through choice or not, many things older generations did were sustainable in nature, even if that wasn't the intended outcome.Yea but people only did all that because hey had no choice, nothing whatsoever to do with trying to be sustainable and I think at least a few of those are still continued nowadays by most people.
Removable batteries do make sense. But with a model 3 pack costing £15k the risk of Fraud and crime is high.
What happens if you are fitted with a dud pack or if someone removes some of the cells?
there can be anything up to 7000 cells in a pack and they are worth a 5er each on ebay.
Battery swapping is used by taxi's in Beijing in China.Isn't the simplest solution - in the absence of hydrogen replacing fossil fuels, which I've always thought was the logical ultimate goal - to have "filling" stations that don't charge cars up, but swap a new (full-charged) battery in for your flat one?
Equivalent to taking out your empty petrol tank, and slotting a full one in?
Many things are standardised nowadays, so why not a standard battery and connector?
You forgot, no double glazing or roof insulation, rickets, polio and TB.You forgot the squares of newspaper on the nail. The lack of Mc D's, sandwich and coffee shop multiples, washing done in one lot of water, with a posser, the very limited nighttime street lighting, the one coal-fired fire, instead of CH and no running HW on tap.
One day in the future, we'll probably laugh mockingly at the thought of pumping many litres of highly flammable liquid into a missile.Battery swapping is used by taxi's in Beijing in China.
Its an obvious solution to having to wait for your car with its fitted battery to be charged.
The problem of battery theft can be solved also, if there is a will to do so.
My mate used to have a car which ran on propane gas, when the gas ran out, he simply exchanged the empty cylinder fir a full one.