why don’t you drive an EV?

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mine is more like 45 miles battery but is fuckin heavy alright

close encounters of the third knid (darraghmac), Tuesday, 27 February 2024 16:49 (two months ago) link

They're physically bad for the road, too, right? Thanks to the weight? I think I saw people talking about that when Tesla debuted/touted/lied about its EV 18-wheelers, where they were being predictably cagey about the weight, not just because of the range or restriction of range and load, but because of the impact to roads.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 27 February 2024 17:43 (two months ago) link

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/27/opinion/gm-ford-electric-vehicles.html

Guest essayist in the Times thinks cheap Chinese EVs will upend the market, barring some kind of protectionist policy move. If they can seriously end up selling EVs here for less than the cost of a Kia Soul, I'm almost more interested in how that would upend perceptions -- presumably the image of EVs would flip rapidly away from "high-tech status object" and toward "poky budget buy," the equivalent of little imports during the energy crisis. Given where the cost of cars has gone relative to the wages of a lot of the jobs people need cars to get to ... being the cheapest thing on the market would definitely be a hell of an inflection point in mass adoption.

ን (nabisco), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 16:47 (two months ago) link

i was in beijing over the winter and felt like 1/3 to half of the cars on the road were EVs (in china, EVs have a green license plate vs the standard blue). beyond the big brands of BYD, xpeng and NIO there were also a ton of other brands on the road.

not an engineer but given how much simpler EVs are than ICE cars (just a battery and a motor) feels like the barrier-to-entry is lower in china where the soup factories and the nut factories and the everything in between factories are right there.

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 16:56 (two months ago) link

def into the idea of cheap utility chinese evs, yeah xp would be a good contrast to the current baroque car era

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 16:59 (two months ago) link

idk if americans really want them but its worth a shot

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 17:00 (two months ago) link

thinking about small electric pick up now

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 17:01 (two months ago) link

i would happily replace my car with a cheap electric kei truck

gbx, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 17:04 (two months ago) link

not that small lol

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 17:08 (two months ago) link

https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0457/6008/6166/files/Honda-N-Van-EV-Yamato_480x480.jpg?v=1684468355

actually this is the dream right here

gbx, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:01 (two months ago) link

Is that cat eating a charging plug?

Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:04 (two months ago) link

is that a cat delivery truck

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:04 (two months ago) link

Renault 5 for £25-30k

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68419695

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:06 (two months ago) link

all cars have such huge wheels now

https://i.imgur.com/JPDBeu4.png

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:09 (two months ago) link

idk why they say it's "retro".. i guess because there are a few boxy edges on it? looks like crap, the OG looks absolutely iconic. it's crazy how bad cars have looked, and for how long

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:11 (two months ago) link

larger wheels = less rolling resistance and so better fuel economy xp

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:13 (two months ago) link

battery prices coming down seems like a huge deal in ev adoption, im sure till happen maybe sooner than people think idk, moving on to some new tech rather than the expensive and environmentally damaging to mine and process lithium would be good, seems like theres things in the pipeline but of course you never know if rosy reports are going to translate to actual production at scale

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:13 (two months ago) link

that is the famous yamato shipping cat https://www.yamatoamerica.com/

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:14 (two months ago) link

talk about iconic

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:15 (two months ago) link

larger wheels = less rolling resistance and so better fuel economy

― 龜, Wednesday, February 28, 2024 1:13 PM (nineteen seconds ago) bookmarkflaglink

its the size of the tires that matter, what were seeing now is huge wheels and thin tires which is just an aesthetic thing and makes for a worse ride and iirc a lil worse fuel economy than if you had more tire and less wheel

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:17 (two months ago) link

every car now

https://i.imgur.com/BBfXuoQ.png

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:18 (two months ago) link

tho obvs the tires on that new renault are bigger than the old one, but still its gone too far, looks dumb imho

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 18:20 (two months ago) link

its the size of the tires that matter, what were seeing now is huge wheels and thin tires which is just an aesthetic thing and makes for a worse ride and iirc a lil worse fuel economy than if you had more tire and less wheel

― lag∞n, Wednesday, February 28, 2024 1:17 PM (forty-six minutes ago)

stiffness improves rolling resistance, larger wheels + rubber band tires at a higher inflation PSI = overall stiffer wheel and better rolling resistance

https://www.tirereview.com/science-behind-rolling-resistance-passenger-tires/

Rim Width
Typically, an increase of rim width can improve rolling resistance by creating a stiffer tire leading to less deflation. For every 1-in. increase on rim diameter, 2% of rolling resistance improvement can be achieved. However, rim width is a function of tire size which cannot easily be changed.

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:04 (two months ago) link

car tires usually have a 30 psi spec but not uncommon to see 40 or even 50 psi recommendations for really skinny tires

it's also easy to observe on your own car, increasing the psi of your tires past recommended spec will improve your gas mileage due to the lower rolling resistance but will also lead to more uneven wear patterns on your tires

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:06 (two months ago) link

you ever try to push a flat hoop with a stick, does not compare to pushing a stiff hoop with a stick

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:07 (two months ago) link

no normal car is suggesting you do 500psi because its uncomfortable, but they do have big silly wheels on there because people like how it looks

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:18 (two months ago) link

Delurking on ILX for the first time in forever. Basically because I’ve been workshopping this speech on how fucked the car industry is - my product team has had an earful of it and the audience at Kryten’s electrification boondoggle got a version of it is well. So here’s a version of it.

And hey, tonight I called the head of marketing for the Victorian equivalent of AAA a weirdo so let’s get this off my chest.

I’ve been working in the car industry for 5 years now and it is nuts that any of these companies are still in business.

Normal people don’t buy new cars and the car industry has backed itself into a corner because of this and made electrification really hard. What do I mean by this - down here in Australia 51% of new cars are bought by enterprise customers with more than 20 vehicles, another 20-30% are small businesses, sole readers and novated leaves (company cars) - only the remaining 20% or so are bought by individual and they and fucking weirdos. Normal people buy second hand cars. US and UK are a bit different because of the way US leases and UK PCPs work - using rubes to buy cars they can’t and shouldn’t afford in a shell game based on low interest rates and high residual values - still the weirdos

Basically car design and car choice is based on what you can market and sell to the the weirdos who treat car ownership as a game of top trumps. It works like this - It takes 5 years to bring a car product to market - you design it for the weirdos, market it to the weirdos. What’s great is failure is covered because what you don’t sell you can flog at a discount to fleet operators. Hertz and Avis were, if not created by, bought and grown by GM and ford to buy the crap they couldn’t sell so as not to publicly disclose falling prices and bad sale. They still perform this function today.

20 years of low interest rate means that the weirdos have been convinced to buy ever more expensive and stupid vehicles. Marketing created the SUV, the myths about better safety, the arms race in size. When I was a child BMW sold 3 cars, the 3,5 &7 a few different engines and maybe an estate version. I have no idea how many different models they do now, all satisfying some niche that the industry has created.

All the while they have squandered the efficiency gains of the the lean burn revolution. The petrol engine today is an absolute marvel in terms of of raw energy extracted from fuel, but you’d never know it because cars have got bigger, heavier and stupider. But also along the way, most western OEMs abandoned the idea of selling cheap basic mobility to normal people. The weirdos are buying cars at higher and higher average selling prices every year.

The car industry is even really bad at catering to the weirdos. It takes 5 years to develop a car product and car people barely even read the weirdest of the weirdos who make car media let alone the weirdos that buy the car. Connected vehicles have been a revelation to car makers. ford came along a couple of weeks ago and basically said ’ we’ve wasted billions on developing features we can now see that people don’t use’ (I saw the CEO of Peugeot Citroen basically say the same thing at a conference last year). Ford will also tell you they can’t hire good devs, ‘they all want to go and work for Apple, Google and Tesla’. And yet this company that ‘can’t hire good devs’ is trying to build autonomous vehicles.

(Incidentally the feature ford named that they were canning because no-one uses is ‘auto park’)

You’d think the model would break at some point - and yet it doesn’t, ‘good’ car companies get bailed out as strategic assets, ‘bad’ car companies fall into the black hole of doom that is Stellantis, and yet still do not die.

So then electrification comes along. Nissan gets a flying start with the first mass market electric car, nice simple family hatchback, but in a market where they and everyone else are destroying the demand for family hatchback. Tesla does its thing (more on that later) and everyone else freaks because they have nothing electric. So what do they do - they look at the market and go what do the weirdos want and how do we make the most out of EVs - well we start at the top with the most expensive cars and work down. And it works, for a short while, not only are there a few weirdos who will bring their top trumps logic to EVs but there’s also the early adopter crowd - I have met so many people who have told me ‘I have never spent so much on a car but I did it to get an EV’ or ‘I’ve never bought a new car before but I did it to get an EV’.

Thing is though, as anyone who has read Geoff Moore will know, that early adopter pool is limited. They are great though because they are problem solvers, they will accept a certain degree of inconvenience some discomfort. There is an intersect between the weirdos and the early adopters but it’s not total. There are weirdos that have top trumps categories that EVs can’t do (and are often ludicrous) - like not being able to do 1000km on a single charge - who needs this, people are either driving with a bucket between their feet, have a bladder the size of a baseball, driving ludicrously unsafe stages between stops or are playing top trumps. A lot of EVs on sale today can charge up a couple more hours of driving in the time it takes you to take a leak and buy a coffee.

So what’s the problem - the car industry is running out of early adopters and can’t satisfy all the weirdos to sell cars. It also hasn’t done anything to satisfy cheap basic mobility needs that would encourage normal people to buy new cars, rather than wait for cars they don’t really want to trickle down to the used market.

Tesla are fucking remarkable because they persuaded early adopters to buy up to EVs, they persuaded American weirdos to buy sedan cars which the big 3 US manufactures had abandoned as something that weirdos would not buy. Even they screwed it up, whilst the rest of the product pushes high tech and sparta comfort to people buying cars at ‘luxury’ prices.

Tesla is one phenomenon, the Chinese manufacturers are another. Down here in Australia, with no auto manufacturing to protect, the top 7-8 EV models (including Tesla) are made in China. The first EV I ever drove (a JAC in Hefei back in 2016) was already a high quality product. BYD beat Tesla in global BEV sales Q4 last year. The Chinese automakers know how to build a quality car down to a price. Of course the zombie first world automakers are calling for protectionism.

We need to transition transportation to zero carbon modes, but its is hard, there is a fundamental disconnect from the utility in terms of mobility, that most people need, and what gets sold. It’s not just the car industry, because there is a symbiotic relationship with shit urban planning, edge cities, living beyond the human scale.

However, densifying sprawl is hard, even if that’s what people, especially gen z increasingly want. Electrification doesn’t solve congestion, autonomy could take us further down the occupancy curve, in the 70s cars, on average, carried more than 2 passengers, now it is close to one and autonomy takes it below one. More people asking for more mobility, bigger and stupider cars and poor substitutes - need more infrastructure - the misallocation of resources is egregious. Greater Sydney is 13,000 square km, greater Tokyo is 13,500 sq km - Tokyo packs in 38 million into slightly more space than Sydney accommodates 5.5million. This is why we can’t have nice things.

Electrification needs to be a moment where we reevaluate how we access and allocate mobility. The utilitarian answer is not personal car ownership. Personal Cars sit idle 95% of the time - it’s a stupid waste - even worse with EVs, which are more expensive to buy but cheaper to run. The solutions are transit, active transport (walking and bike), micro mobility, shared mobility (carshare and rideshare).

Tax the hell out of parking and anything bigger than a Nissan Sakura.

Ed, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:23 (two months ago) link

think a lot of EVs recommend 40-50 PSI, like the lucid recommends 49 PSI and teslas are at like 40-45 PSI xp to lagz

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:25 (two months ago) link

ed, i look forward to reading this

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:25 (two months ago) link

Probably needs some work.

Also the tyre thing is a complete fucking furphy. There might be an argument if cars were small and light and we were adding batteries to them, but cars got big and heavy before we made them into EVs. Weight does matter but no one was complaining about increased particulate pollution from tyre wear and brakes as everyone got conned into buying monster trucks.

(See also the BS about having to reengineer parking structures to accommodate the extra weight of EVs, EV fire risk and a whole bunch of other unscientific crap)

Ed, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:27 (two months ago) link

think a lot of EVs recommend 40-50 PSI, like the lucid recommends 49 PSI and teslas are at like 40-45 PSI xp to lagz

― 龜, Wednesday, February 28, 2024 2:25 PM (fifty-four seconds ago) bookmarkflaglink

juicin the stats

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:31 (two months ago) link

thanks, Ed!

I painted my teeth (sleeve), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:39 (two months ago) link

ed whats yr car job just out of curiosity if you dont mind sharing cool to get the inside info

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:46 (two months ago) link

booming post, ed

polyamerie "it's more than this 1 thing" (m bison), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 19:49 (two months ago) link

I build electric car fast charging stations, or at least cause them to be built. My actual role is sort of amorphous, trying to work out how the industry is going to grow and develop, what drivers want etc. so we end up building the right things in the right places, put the right products and services around them etc.

Ed, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 20:09 (two months ago) link

way xpost but seriously that is the thing, if BYD models ever arrive on US shores as the literal cheapest things on the entire market, it may cease to matter whether people WANT 'em or not! I assume it'd also point toward more people seeing EVs in general as cheap and mockable, or whatever, but that was the case for little Hondas in the 70s, too. If they work and other automakers can't hustle up a better proposition...

Nice to see a delurked Ed!

ን (nabisco), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 20:11 (two months ago) link

thing is people arent rushing out to buy the cheapest cars available currently, americans seem to want big nice cars, tho there is another aspect where automakers put less effort into the cheap cars cause theyre less profitable so theyre worse than they prob need be and in fact many companies have stopped producing lil shitboxes altogether, but still the rav4 way outsells the civic

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 20:44 (two months ago) link

cool thank you ed xp so are the industry dysfunctions you described making it hard for you to forecast what to build or are you just disgusted by them on principle

lag∞n, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 20:52 (two months ago) link

way xpost but seriously that is the thing, if BYD models ever arrive on US shores as the literal cheapest things on the entire market, it may cease to matter whether people WANT 'em or not! I assume it'd also point toward more people seeing EVs in general as cheap and mockable, or whatever, but that was the case for little Hondas in the 70s, too. If they work and other automakers can't hustle up a better proposition...

Nice to see a delurked Ed!

― ን (nabisco), Wednesday, February 28, 2024 3:11 PM (one hour ago)

hmm the BYD cars i saw were pretty freakin advanced (i visited a showroom and sat in a few via rideshare), if they came to the US they'd def want to compete with tesla and lucid at those price points they'd probably go for the premium strategy

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 21:23 (two months ago) link

there are companies that make the rinky dinky EVs with only 80 miles of range, i think there's gonna be a fiat 500e that's aimed at city folks that's gonna be like, that would be the model to undercut the current EV market but unfortunately it would trigger massive range anxiety among murricans

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 21:24 (two months ago) link

The petrol engine today is an absolute marvel in terms of of raw energy extracted from fuel

mazda has a really neat engine called the skyactiv-x that achieved some sort of holy grail of engine design and can get 44 mpg from a 2 liter 4-banger which is crazy, unfortunately they said it's "not powerful" enough for the american market because of all the big heavy tanks murricans want so to be seen whether we get to enjoy any of the magic of that design

https://www.motor1.com/features/708538/mazda-skyactiv-engine-what-happened/

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 21:28 (two months ago) link

anyway i totally agree with your post ed, i would love to see what a modern day kei car / geo metro could do fuel efficiency wise esp with some of this advanced tech like mazda's skyactiv-x but unfortunately we're stuck with tanks b/c of the obama era light truck exception

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 21:29 (two months ago) link

booming post, ed

― polyamerie "it's more than this 1 thing" (m bison), Wednesday, February 28, 2024 12:49 PM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

hey Ed!

gbx, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 22:06 (two months ago) link

i bought a new car ed ;_;

close encounters of the third knid (darraghmac), Wednesday, 28 February 2024 22:12 (two months ago) link

wow what a weirdo

, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 22:22 (two months ago) link

i had a beloved high school social studies teacher who everyone considered very wise/philosophical, and a bunch of us sought him out on the last day of our senior year to get some sage advice. that advice? "never have a car payment." i was a little disappointed at the time but i've lived by it ever since

gbx, Wednesday, 28 February 2024 22:32 (two months ago) link

that really isn’t a terrible looking car

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 7 March 2024 21:34 (one month ago) link

vintage hot hatch aesthetics

lag∞n, Thursday, 7 March 2024 21:37 (one month ago) link


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