ddrueding
Fixture
Want to lose your next election by a landslide? Take away 50% of people's drivers licenses.
Indeed. +1 to monarchy/dictatorship (minus a bazillion for other stuff, but here they have the win).
Want to lose your next election by a landslide? Take away 50% of people's drivers licenses.
Thankfully the electorate is gradually shifting away from that perspective. My guess is once gas goes over $5 per gallon and stays there support for public transit will be a winning platform. Also, a fair number of younger people see driving as wasted time. They would rather take public transit so they can stay connected traveling. And then salaries are dropping in terms of real dollars. Eventually a significant portion of the population won't be able to afford to drive. My take is it took us over 50 years to get to sprawl and auto dependency. It might take that long to completely erase any vestiges of it.Another way to lose your next election in most states is to support spending money on public transportation. I think this is incredibly shortsighted by the electorate.
Thankfully the electorate is gradually shifting away from that perspective. My guess is once gas goes over $5 per gallon and stays there support for public transit will be a winning platform. Also, a fair number of younger people see driving as wasted time. They would rather take public transit so they can stay connected traveling. And then salaries are dropping in terms of real dollars. Eventually a significant portion of the population won't be able to afford to drive. My take is it took us over 50 years to get to sprawl and auto dependency. It might take that long to completely erase any vestiges of it.
But it's fascinating that even the official statistics from USA lies to us and say that more people die in car accidents in rural areas rather than in urban areas.
Another way to lose your next election in most states is to support spending money on public transportation. I think this is incredibly shortsighted by the electorate.
Over here, that would disqualify 99.999999% of present and aspiring drivers. And that would be a good thing. Heck, if current US practices were applied, that would still disqualify 99.999% of present drivers (there's a couple of nines less there).A lot of this. I think we would be better off if the bar was raised to the point where only 50% of current license holders could qualify.
Absolutely. And that is something that is not communicated to current drivers and aspirants in many other countries.ddrueding said:It is very much a privilege and carries significant responsibility. It should be treated as such.
That is why it is sometimes called democrazy. Pandering has become huge in the last few decades. Businesses pandering to Wall Street, politicians pandering to the public at large or to special interest groups, etc.timwhit said:Another way to lose your next election in most states is to support spending money on public transportation. I think this is incredibly shortsighted by the electorate.
I believe that 1 km/h higher speed means 2-3% more deaths. At least that's what the scientists say.I already acknowledged the potentially higher energy involved with higher speeds, but hitting a tree at 90km/h instead of 100km/h doesn't affect the outcome for the people involved.
Perhaps you should compare statistics on high-speed freeways (eg autobahns), if you still believe there is an exponential link between speed and accident rate?
km/h mph m/s kJ
---------------------------------
70 44 19.4 293 017
90 56 25.0 484 375
100 62 27.8 597 994
130 81 36.1 1 010 610
160 99 44.4 1 530 864
200 124 55.6 2 391 975
Very good performance, indeed. Lot's of things are possible from a performance and quality perspective when you have a $70,000+ starting price, only one assembly plant & body style and very low volume production. When they come out with a car that's actually profitable at less than $35,000 & produced in volume, I'll be more impressed. Otherwise the performance you are seeing there is a result of over-engineering by a body team that knew they had to go over the top with performance and that they didn't have a budget to even think about.
I have been contacted by Tesla a couple times now relative to working at their Fremont facility but decided to pass. They're aggressively looking for people that actually know how to do automobiles in volume and are recruiting a lot here in in Detroit. I have no idea why they decided to locate their facility in CA. I guess they got a deal on the land and the the old GM/Toyota plant they could not pass up on.
Approximately apropos:I'm waiting for the cheaper Tesla before I buy a new car. It's not a rush my 10 year old car only has ~60k miles.
I'm waiting for the cheaper Tesla before I buy a new car. It's not a rush my 10 year old car only has ~60k miles.
You're barking up the wrong tree. They ain't competing with GM or Ford or Chrysler. They're competing with MBZ, BMW and Audi in the upper segment, and with Volvo on safety.When they come out with a car that's actually profitable at less than $35,000 & produced in volume, I'll be more impressed. Otherwise the performance you are seeing there is a result of over-engineering by a body team that knew they had to go over the top with performance and that they didn't have a budget to even think about.
You're quite right, but it'll do nothing for you when a drunk hits you from out of nowhere. That's when the car can save you.Bozo said:If you would like to improve your chances at avoiding an accident and possible injury, get driving instructions from one of the road racing schools. There they teach car control, not how to parallel park so you can get your drivers license.
You're barking up the wrong tree. They ain't competing with GM or Ford or Chrysler. They're competing with MBZ, BMW and Audi in the upper segment, and with Volvo on safety.
Even
Even so, their volume is so low and the price is so high that I would not call their performance surprising, at all. It also helps, being pure EV, that they don't have to contort the front structure around a powertrain.
Even so, their volume is so low and the price is so high that I would not call their performance surprising, at all. It also helps, being pure EV, that they don't have to contort the front structure around a powertrain.
Companies earn those credits by making and selling zero emission vehicles.
“So if a manufacturer has sales in California of, let’s say, 100,000 vehicles, and the obligation is credits equal to one percent of their sales, they have to come up with 1,000 credits,” Bevan said.
If a company comes up short, it has to pay a penalty of up to $5,000 per credit. Or it can buy credits from a company like Tesla, which happens to earn a lot of credits on every car it makes.Tesla has sold enough credits to post its first profit.
The Goldwing is an incredible highway tourer which can easily carry a slab or two of beer in its luggage ...
If Dubstep is the lawful evil of electronic music, does that make Jungle chaotic good?
Picking up a mid 90s Honda VFR750F tomorrow. The Goldwing is an incredible highway tourer which can easily carry a slab or two of beer in its luggage, but I miss the feel of the wind and looking forward to the feel and sound of the V-4 engine. Trimming 200-300 pounds of weight will also help when riding in the city.
Speaking of almost-babysitters... Ladyfriend wants me to go out to drunken college parties this weekend. I haven't actually said no yet but since I'm technically old enough to be the father of college aged human beings it's weird to even contemplate.