Top reasons to buy an electric car instead of a gas vehicle. MAGA wets panties.

Elon Musk is taking too long to release that ugly Cybertruck. I want one, it is hideous and I want it. LOL

For real though. I am thinking of buying one of the new EV Ram Trucks when they come out.

Our two vehicles are a 2015 Subaru Forester and a 2016 Mazda 6. Both have low mileage and are excellent vehicles. Even so we are considering an EV for our next replacement. Teslas are beautiful vehicles but it's gonna have to be something winter-hardy and driveable in harsh climates. If you get that Ram, maybe start a discussion about EVs and your experience with 'em.
 
Elon Musk is taking too long to release that ugly Cybertruck. I want one, it is hideous and I want it. LOL

For real though. I am thinking of buying one of the new EV Ram Trucks when they come out.

When tested towing, Ford's new truck managed to make it 96 miles before needing a recharge.
 
I see part of the problem was Musk popped the bubble. The young people with money thought Musk was cool and looking to the future. With Tesla and space X, he was seen as a genius by many. Then he way overpaid for Twitter and managed it crudely and poorly. He appeared to be abusive to employees and very disrespectful. Now he dropped a few levels and buyers decided to look at other electric cars.
 
I see part of the problem was Musk popped the bubble. The young people with money thought Musk was cool and looking to the future. With Tesla and space X, he was seen as a genius by many. Then he way overpaid for Twitter and managed it crudely and poorly. He appeared to be abusive to employees and very disrespectful. Now he dropped a few levels and buyers decided to look at other electric cars.

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I see part of the problem was Musk popped the bubble. The young people with money thought Musk was cool and looking to the future. With Tesla and space X, he was seen as a genius by many. Then he way overpaid for Twitter and managed it crudely and poorly. He appeared to be abusive to employees and very disrespectful. Now he dropped a few levels and buyers decided to look at other electric cars.

Of course he was abusive to employees. They were lazy fucks that spent their time censoring people. So he fired them.
 
I see part of the problem was Musk popped the bubble. The young people with money thought Musk was cool and looking to the future. With Tesla and space X, he was seen as a genius by many. Then he way overpaid for Twitter and managed it crudely and poorly. He appeared to be abusive to employees and very disrespectful. Now he dropped a few levels and buyers decided to look at other electric cars.

Twitter was dying on its arse ffs, Jack Dorsey even apologised to the staff for growing the company too quickly and losing the plot. Musk has fired over half the staff and it's still carrying on as normal, don't you even think to wonder why?
 
Your analogy is nonsense, Walter.

Most convenience stores are not multi-billion dollar operations, Walter.

Admit it, Walter, you hate Musk because he has stopped the censorship of conservatives at one of the social media platforms, Twitter.

Poor Walter.

You Reichwingers hated Musk because of Tesla and how much you fear and hate EVs, esp. since the vast majority of you can't afford one. Now he's your darling because he restored your ability to be public racists, morons, and purveyors of bullshit on Twitter.
 
I have a Toyota Hilux Revo, I love it.

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Your next truck will be electric, serendipshit.

Which Ford F-150 Lightning Model Should You Buy?
The F-150 Lightning electric truck is available in four different trims, but for most buyers, the XLT model makes the most sense. Here's why.
JANUARY 21, 2023 03:00 PM EST
The Ford F-150 Lightning is a powerful electric truck that can power homes during outages — but which trim should buyers opt for? With electric mobility gaining momentum across the world, it was no surprise that Ford unveiled an electrified version of its best-selling F-150 series. Electric trucks are a slow-growing category, but buyers will soon have more options to choose from. The most anticipated new electric trucks include the Chevrolet Silverado EV, Ram 1500 Revolution, GMC Sierra 1500 Denali, and Tesla Cybertruck.
The Ford F-150 Lightning is available in four variants – Pro ($55,947), XLT ($63,474 for standard range and $80,974 for extended range), Lariat ($74,474 for standard range and $85,974 for extended range), and Platinum ($85,974). Of all the available options, the XLT trim is the one that will appeal to most buyers. The XLT trim offers 240 miles using the standard-range battery, but equipping the truck with an extended-range battery should give the driver an additional 80 miles. The truck can deliver up to 462 horsepower and 775 lb-ft of torque with the standard-range battery. The long-range model boosts the output to 580 hp.
 
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You're next truck will be electric, serendipshit.

Which Ford F-150 Lightning Model Should You Buy?
The F-150 Lightning electric truck is available in four different trims, but for most buyers, the XLT model makes the most sense. Here's why.
JANUARY 21, 2023 03:00 PM EST
The Ford F-150 Lightning is a powerful electric truck that can power homes during outages — but which trim should buyers opt for? With electric mobility gaining momentum across the world, it was no surprise that Ford unveiled an electrified version of its best-selling F-150 series. Electric trucks are a slow-growing category, but buyers will soon have more options to choose from. The most anticipated new electric trucks include the Chevrolet Silverado EV, Ram 1500 Revolution, GMC Sierra 1500 Denali, and Tesla Cybertruck.
The Ford F-150 Lightning is available in four variants – Pro ($55,947), XLT ($63,474 for standard range and $80,974 for extended range), Lariat ($74,474 for standard range and $85,974 for extended range), and Platinum ($85,974). Of all the available options, the XLT trim is the one that will appeal to most buyers. The XLT trim offers 240 miles using the standard-range battery, but equipping the truck with an extended-range battery should give the driver an additional 80 miles. The truck can deliver up to 462 horsepower and 775 lb-ft of torque with the standard-range battery. The long-range model boosts the output to 580 hp.

A full 96 mile range when towing its rated capacity. No problem, a three-hour charge and you're back on the road. Joey wets panties

Complete and Total Disaster:’ Ford Electric Truck Utterly Fails YouTuber’s Towing Test

'A YouTuber with 1.4 million followers attempted to tow a 1930 Ford Model A truck with his brand new 2023 Ford F-150 Lightning electric pickup truck, but it ended in “a complete and total disaster.” “If a truck towing 3,500 pounds can’t even go 100 miles — that is ridiculously stupid,” Tyler “Hoovie” Hoover says in his video. “This truck can’t do normal truck things. You would be stopping every hour to recharge, which would take about 45 minutes a pop, and that is absolutely not practical.”
 
That's a sobering thought and one I hadn't thought about before.

It makes you think: how stupid are people who live in an area that is in the path of hurricanes pretty much every single year?

Makes me think people are really just too stupid.

There’s no evidence electric vehicles fare worse than gas-powered cars in long traffic jams

https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2022/jan/07/facebook-posts/theres-no-evidence-electric-vehicles-fare-worse-ga/

Extreme cold can reduce the range of a moving electric vehicle by as much as half.

However, when those vehicles are idling in a long traffic jam, their motors aren’t running, unlike gas-powered cars. So, in severe cold, the only draw on the EV battery would be the heating system and other electrical accessories.

Cars with internal combustion engines are at risk of running out of gas or having their batteries die in a situation like the Virginia snowstorm.

A major snowstorm in Virginia this week left hundreds of motorists stranded in freezing conditions on Interstate 95, some of them for more than 24 hours.

That led a social media user to warn of what would have happened if more of those cars had been electric vehicles.

"Imagine if half the cars in the traffic jam on I-95 in Virginia last night were electric vehicles. And half of those were to run out of battery power," A Facebook post on Jan. 4 said. "All those people would be stuck in freezing temperatures without a heated vehicle. And all the cars would be stuck unable to move because you can’t bring a charging station to them. In effect all those electric cars would become roadblocks to the gasoline powered vehicles. Just something to think about when you hear politicians pushing electric vehicles over gasoline and diesel."

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

The post suggests electric vehicles would have been more prone to failure in such conditions than gasoline-powered cars and trucks. Others raised similar concerns, including a Washington Post columnist, who shared a tweet from a trucker who recounted his experience with a Tesla driver who was worried about running out of power.

But are such worries grounded in reality?

Many variables affect how a given electric vehicle would fare in such a situation, including the type of battery it has, the heating system it uses and whether the vehicle was fully charged before the trip. But there’s no evidence that EVs generally would be more prone to failure in a traffic jam like the one that happened in Virginia.

The range of an electric vehicle varies widely by model, from 110 miles in the Mini Cooper Electric to up to 373 miles in the Tesla Model S. And cold weather can diminish the range of an EV, according to automakers and tests by Consumer Reports.

But when idling, as in a standstill traffic jam, an EV behaves differently from a gas-powered vehicle. An electric vehicle’s motor doesn’t run when the car is stationary, so the only draw on the battery is for the heating system and other electrical accessories. Drivers idling in a gas-powered vehicle would need to keep the engine running, and gasoline burning, to keep the heat on.

In December, PolitiFact examined a similar claim that said electric vehicles are more likely to fail in traffic jams in cold weather. We found that to be false because the vehicles don’t use much power while at a standstill or in their climate settings.


To understand the energy capacity of an EV’s battery, Peter Wells, director of the Centre for Automotive Industry Research at Cardiff Business School in Wales, told PolitiFact that the average U.S. house uses 30 kilowatt-hours of power per day, so a fully charged 62 kilowatt-hour battery in an electric car could power a house for two days.

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You Reichwingers hated Musk because of Tesla and how much you fear and hate EVs, esp. since the vast majority of you can't afford one. Now he's your darling because he restored your ability to be public racists, morons, and purveyors of bullshit on Twitter.

I don't hate Elon Musk because he developed the Tesla company. You're an idiot.
 
You're next truck will be electric, serendipshit.

Which Ford F-150 Lightning Model Should You Buy?
The F-150 Lightning electric truck is available in four different trims, but for most buyers, the XLT model makes the most sense. Here's why.
JANUARY 21, 2023 03:00 PM EST
The Ford F-150 Lightning is a powerful electric truck that can power homes during outages — but which trim should buyers opt for? With electric mobility gaining momentum across the world, it was no surprise that Ford unveiled an electrified version of its best-selling F-150 series. Electric trucks are a slow-growing category, but buyers will soon have more options to choose from. The most anticipated new electric trucks include the Chevrolet Silverado EV, Ram 1500 Revolution, GMC Sierra 1500 Denali, and Tesla Cybertruck.
The Ford F-150 Lightning is available in four variants – Pro ($55,947), XLT ($63,474 for standard range and $80,974 for extended range), Lariat ($74,474 for standard range and $85,974 for extended range), and Platinum ($85,974). Of all the available options, the XLT trim is the one that will appeal to most buyers. The XLT trim offers 240 miles using the standard-range battery, but equipping the truck with an extended-range battery should give the driver an additional 80 miles. The truck can deliver up to 462 horsepower and 775 lb-ft of torque with the standard-range battery. The long-range model boosts the output to 580 hp.

Nope. They don't have the range and towing capacity.
 
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