Rhyunbear wrote: Back in the mid 1800's an electric car could go 50-60 miles and then would require 10 hours or so to recharge.
Really?
And what exactly did electric cars plug into in the mid-1800s?
lightning bolts?

Rhyunbear wrote: Back in the mid 1800's an electric car could go 50-60 miles and then would require 10 hours or so to recharge.


Rhyunbear wrote:Political will has nothing to do with technology. Political posturing and lending of money to push technology is a recipe for disaster as we see time and again. Just because someone wants something to work does not mean it will. People that are willing to give up having a mode of transportation that is properly suited to our needs as a country will drive EV's so they can feel good about something. The rest of us, the thinking ones, will wait until the battery technology and popularity of said cars reaches a point that they can be used as daily transport for more than a 5 mile trip to the 7-11. Point in fact. Nissan Leaf, 60-80 miles on one charge and 10 or more hours to recharge. Back in the mid 1800's an electric car could go 50-60 miles and then would require 10 hours or so to recharge. Yes you can?? Can what? Brag about old technology rather than smart technology? Smart technology is a diesel generator powering a battery pack that drives electric motors and goes 268 miles on one gallon of diesel. THAT is a Yes we can moment. Sheesh.




Rhyunbear wrote:Who invented the very first EV is uncertain and several inventors have been given credit. In 1828, Hungarian, Ányos Jedlik invented a small-scale model car powered by an electric motor that he designed. Between 1832 and 1839 (the exact year is uncertain), Robert Anderson of Scotland invented a crude electric-powered carriage. In 1835, another small-scale electric car was designed by Professor Stratingh of Groningen, Holland, and built by his assistant Christopher Becker. In 1835, Thomas Davenport, a blacksmith from Brandon, Vermont, built a small-scale electric car. Davenport was also the inventor of the first of the first American-built DC electric motor.









Logic wrote:Reading your article, it appears the battery pack was not being charged, is still intact, and was not the source of the fire.
I have no problem with people skeptical of EVs. But you seem to have an irrational axe to grind. Your arguments and implications are I'll formed.


Logic wrote:
I have no problem with people skeptical of EVs.




Timo wrote:Plant, just to add a little perspective to your argument regarding the Karma, and EVs in general (without questioning your particular viewpoint), one step at a time. I'm not endorsing the Karma or discounting the problems, potential or valid, with its batery systems. However, from my point of view, again -right or wrong, i look at the hundreds, if not thousands of actual lives lost in the battles over oil, and the inevitable disasters that stem from its delivery. The Deepwater Horizon was far more catastrophic than any fire caused by any EV, anywhere. The wars in Nigeria, the spills and leaks in Michigan, refinery fires, and on and on, are much more detrimental to life and property than the fires of the Karma, or the Volt, for that matter.






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