โDec-05-2019 04:33 AM
โDec-07-2019 08:29 PM
valhalla360 wrote:Really? What line on your 1040 relates to the EV surcharge?
Because they are taxing me to fund a rebate for you to buy one...you want to buy one, fine...if the company survives, great...but when you make me pay for it, I get say.
โDec-07-2019 08:26 PM
time2roll wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:Yes that is the part that grinds on me. Everyone has an example why Tesla or an EV in general cannot work for them.
So what's everyone else's problem again?:h
SO DON"T BUY IT
Nothing works for everybody in every possible situation. Be happy for those that can make it work.
Why is that so hard?
โDec-07-2019 08:23 PM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:ShinerBock wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:rjstractor wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
You might get close to 150-200 miles depending on how big your RV is. IIRC the Model X consumes about 700-900 w/hr per mile on the flat and up to 1800 w/hr per mile on a steep grade towing a 4500 lb horse trailer. I'm assuming the bigger, heavier Cybertruck towing a bigger, heavier trailer will consume more power, say 1 kwh per mile depending on speed and terrain. The 200 kwh battery in the Trimotor Cybertruck might get you close. As battery tech improves, so will capacity. If an electric pickup could get up over 300 kwh in battery capacity it would seriously be in business for RV towing. Of course, the more juice a battery holds the longer it takes to charge. You're looking at two hours for a full charge on a battery that big.
That's why I don't mind the more than a year for me to get the Cybertruck. Tesla usually put in all the improvements and advancements in technologies in their latest release.
My daughter's Tesla X would even get notifications for upgrades to her unit.
My Ram does the same.
Recalls are not upgrades.:B
โDec-07-2019 08:22 PM
Reisender wrote:ShinerBock wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:rjstractor wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
You might get close to 150-200 miles depending on how big your RV is. IIRC the Model X consumes about 700-900 w/hr per mile on the flat and up to 1800 w/hr per mile on a steep grade towing a 4500 lb horse trailer. I'm assuming the bigger, heavier Cybertruck towing a bigger, heavier trailer will consume more power, say 1 kwh per mile depending on speed and terrain. The 200 kwh battery in the Trimotor Cybertruck might get you close. As battery tech improves, so will capacity. If an electric pickup could get up over 300 kwh in battery capacity it would seriously be in business for RV towing. Of course, the more juice a battery holds the longer it takes to charge. You're looking at two hours for a full charge on a battery that big.
That's why I don't mind the more than a year for me to get the Cybertruck. Tesla usually put in all the improvements and advancements in technologies in their latest release.
My daughter's Tesla X would even get notifications for upgrades to her unit.
My Ram does the same.
So dodge does regular over the air updates? What do they update?
โDec-07-2019 04:44 PM
ShinerBock wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:rjstractor wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
You might get close to 150-200 miles depending on how big your RV is. IIRC the Model X consumes about 700-900 w/hr per mile on the flat and up to 1800 w/hr per mile on a steep grade towing a 4500 lb horse trailer. I'm assuming the bigger, heavier Cybertruck towing a bigger, heavier trailer will consume more power, say 1 kwh per mile depending on speed and terrain. The 200 kwh battery in the Trimotor Cybertruck might get you close. As battery tech improves, so will capacity. If an electric pickup could get up over 300 kwh in battery capacity it would seriously be in business for RV towing. Of course, the more juice a battery holds the longer it takes to charge. You're looking at two hours for a full charge on a battery that big.
That's why I don't mind the more than a year for me to get the Cybertruck. Tesla usually put in all the improvements and advancements in technologies in their latest release.
My daughter's Tesla X would even get notifications for upgrades to her unit.
My Ram does the same.
โDec-07-2019 04:37 PM
ShinerBock wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:rjstractor wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
You might get close to 150-200 miles depending on how big your RV is. IIRC the Model X consumes about 700-900 w/hr per mile on the flat and up to 1800 w/hr per mile on a steep grade towing a 4500 lb horse trailer. I'm assuming the bigger, heavier Cybertruck towing a bigger, heavier trailer will consume more power, say 1 kwh per mile depending on speed and terrain. The 200 kwh battery in the Trimotor Cybertruck might get you close. As battery tech improves, so will capacity. If an electric pickup could get up over 300 kwh in battery capacity it would seriously be in business for RV towing. Of course, the more juice a battery holds the longer it takes to charge. You're looking at two hours for a full charge on a battery that big.
That's why I don't mind the more than a year for me to get the Cybertruck. Tesla usually put in all the improvements and advancements in technologies in their latest release.
My daughter's Tesla X would even get notifications for upgrades to her unit.
My Ram does the same.
โDec-07-2019 04:17 PM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:rjstractor wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
You might get close to 150-200 miles depending on how big your RV is. IIRC the Model X consumes about 700-900 w/hr per mile on the flat and up to 1800 w/hr per mile on a steep grade towing a 4500 lb horse trailer. I'm assuming the bigger, heavier Cybertruck towing a bigger, heavier trailer will consume more power, say 1 kwh per mile depending on speed and terrain. The 200 kwh battery in the Trimotor Cybertruck might get you close. As battery tech improves, so will capacity. If an electric pickup could get up over 300 kwh in battery capacity it would seriously be in business for RV towing. Of course, the more juice a battery holds the longer it takes to charge. You're looking at two hours for a full charge on a battery that big.
That's why I don't mind the more than a year for me to get the Cybertruck. Tesla usually put in all the improvements and advancements in technologies in their latest release.
My daughter's Tesla X would even get notifications for upgrades to her unit.
โDec-07-2019 03:57 PM
rjstractor wrote:Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
You might get close to 150-200 miles depending on how big your RV is. IIRC the Model X consumes about 700-900 w/hr per mile on the flat and up to 1800 w/hr per mile on a steep grade towing a 4500 lb horse trailer. I'm assuming the bigger, heavier Cybertruck towing a bigger, heavier trailer will consume more power, say 1 kwh per mile depending on speed and terrain. The 200 kwh battery in the Trimotor Cybertruck might get you close. As battery tech improves, so will capacity. If an electric pickup could get up over 300 kwh in battery capacity it would seriously be in business for RV towing. Of course, the more juice a battery holds the longer it takes to charge. You're looking at two hours for a full charge on a battery that big.
โDec-07-2019 01:53 PM
stsmark wrote:
If Iโm not mistaken the Porsche Taycan is 800 volts.
โDec-07-2019 08:46 AM
โDec-07-2019 04:34 AM
โDec-06-2019 07:05 PM
โDec-06-2019 05:57 PM
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
I've ordered a Cybertruck to pull my RV and if I get 150 to 200 miles between charge, I'll be happy because that my normal stop for gas, lunch and toilet breaks anyways.
โDec-06-2019 12:27 PM
Reisender wrote:
Meh. Most people around here tow their trailer or boat to the lake on the weekend. Usually Friday after work. Set up and drinking beer by 7 or 8. Most round trips are probably less than 200 km towing. I suspect a cybertruck will tow double that. Most trailers are 25 foot or under or they wonโt fit into the provincial or forestry sites. Maybe 7000 pounds. Buy what suits your needs. Most legacy pickups (if any) couldnโt touch a cybertruck for facility unless you start buying caps or tonneau covers or lift kits or inverters or compressors or aftermarket lockable tool boxes not to mention having to chip them to get any kind of performance out of them. And then they still cost 7 or 8 times as much to drive them the same distance.
Regardless. If a gas or diesel truck scratches your itch then get one. Buyers choice.
For ourselves I canโt think of a single compelling reason why I would pick a gas or diesel 1/2 ton truck over a cybertruck. Not to mention legacy trucks are all freakin UGLY. To each his own.
โDec-06-2019 12:13 PM
mooky stinks wrote:
We haven't even begun to discuss what happens when it's goes down in the teens for months on end. We have 3 months a year that the highs are in the low 30s and lows are mid teens. Just curious, how do you warm the car/truck and keep it warm, and how much does that cut into your range?