• buzz86us@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Yup you keep on with the self sabotage and that will happen. We were at the top of EV in the 90s good job oil companies.

      • Tak@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Nobody should go that long driving without a break. When people talk about only being able to drive for 2-3 hours on a charge I’m glad to finally get out of the car and walk around.

        • besbin@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          The journalists who tried to test the range of the new byd car did take multiple breaks on the ways though. The point is that the car could do that whole trip without recharge or refuel, not that you should do that all in one sitting.

            • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOP
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              5 months ago

              The important point is about capacity. You wouldn’t use your smartphone for 24 hours straight without sleeping either, but it’d be nice for the battery to last as long as possible.

              • Tak@lemmy.ml
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                5 months ago

                I agree but there’s a huge problem with this and cars. A phone battery is inconsequential but having double the battery you need in a car is hundreds of kilos you didn’t need and this just makes the car use the battery capacity faster. The Hummer EV for instance is nearly 200kwh of potential storage and 9,000lbs.

                As charging networks improve, you ideally want just enough range to make it to chargers when you’d normally want to get out of the car anyway.

      • No1@aussie.zone
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        5 months ago

        Pfffffft. The range isn’t enough so I’ll buy a diesel monster truck and roll coal.

        /s

  • ynazuma@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    How much did chinese ev manufacturers pay this shill for the fluff piece?

    Article contains no data, no numbers, no hard facts.

    It does contain a long tirade in the middle about how the author would like to suck on TikToks dick

  • SteefLem@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    What i understand is that the rdw (they do safety and quality checks for new cars to be sold in europe etc) is that the safety rules to get new cars to europe is very strict and the chinese either dont want to or dont know how to meet these requirements. And if a chinese electric car is allowed in to be sold to the masses they meet the absolute minimum requirements to do so. So not a mm (or inch which is more btw) extra effort for safety just so it can be sold.

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      That’s the point of safety standards though. If you meet the standard you are safe enough. If you want higher standards bring it up with your government. I regularly complain to my legislators about it because American safety standards are laughable.

    • No1@aussie.zone
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      5 months ago

      LOL! Gotta love that ‘EVs = FIRE!!!’ narrative.

      ‘Fire at 10 dealerships’ doesn’t sound nearly as clickbaity as ‘10 dealerships burned to a crisp’.

      And if you see a picture of that 10th dealership, only the showroom burned down. ‘a total of seven vehicles were destroyed in this latest fire, and several privately-owned vehicles (at the location for repairs) were also damaged in the incident’. There were dozens of cars in the dealership lot that were untouched.

      But I guess we have different sources, and live in different bubbles.

      • papertowels@lemmy.one
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        5 months ago

        I’m not sure how many showrooms I am comfortable with catching on fire in 3 years, lol.

        BYD also benefits heavily from investigating these themselves and downplaying them.

          • HoustonHenry@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            So, to review- you say I’m wrong when I say some EV dealerships burned up, but then you provide more examples of EV dealerships burning up. Do you think they do or don’t burn? Mixed messages

          • papertowels@lemmy.one
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            5 months ago

            You were extolling the virtues of skepticism and critical thinking in another post, so the bar is set a little higher - did you do a count of fires at dealerships per brand, so we’re not comparing the number of fires of a specific brand in China to the number of fires of all brands across the US?

            It would also be helpful to primarily look at the most common car brands sold in the us first.

              • papertowels@lemmy.one
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                5 months ago

                So you haven’t actually done the research, and you were trying to convince me that byd cars are a safe brand by sharing arbitrary news articles for dealership fires across all brands of cars in the USA? That’s not very convincing, lol.

                I did a preliminary search of Buick, Volkswagen, etc. and there were less fires in the same time span for those brands.

                • No1@aussie.zone
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                  5 months ago

                  That’s not what I was on about. I’m not pro any brand in particular.

                  It was a simple search to show fires happen at dealerships of other brands too. And as you’ve now found there is no reliable independent data on fires at dealerships by brand.

                  So, nobody can really state whether BYD has more or less dealership fires than any other brand.

      • No1@aussie.zone
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        5 months ago

        And it’s overblown and exaggerated.

        There’s a narrative being pushed that EVs = fires.

        It’s used as a fear tactic, and every time I’ve done a basic search, the facts show it to be proven false. Be sceptical, and use your critical thinking skills when you see these claims/stories.

        See my post above relating to this specific claim.

          • No1@aussie.zone
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            5 months ago

            And 10 dealerships were not burned to a crisp, as I already proved with a trivial search in my other post

  • nucleative@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I’ve been to china many times and sorta agree with the title. They are disrupting the industry in the way iPhone unseated Nokia.

      • nucleative@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Bunch of Chinese brands like BYD, but also Tesla is really popular. Some of the models of electric cars cost just a few thousand dollars. For those who can’t afford or don’t needs cars, the motorcycles and scooters are all electric. The buses are electric. Delivery trucks are mostly still gas powered. Charging stations are ubiquitous.

        So their supply chains, manufacturers, city planners, and infrastructure are all way ahead, and they are gaining experience and getting cheaper/better by the day.

  • absquatulate@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    For an article that size, it’s surprisingly light on actual numbers and facts. A lot of auto-show impressions, lots of “ooh look at that” and “ooh that feels nice”, even more he-said-she-saids, but no proper comparisons. It’s also pretty incoherent and it features A LOT of chinese praise, including whole paragraphs of praising tiktok ( in a friggin car article ). Yeah, I’m not gonna hold my breath that “western car makers are cooked” just based on what this guy wrote.

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      They aren’t cooked. But they aren’t in a great position either. The government is going to need to subsidize them a bit. China just went all in on EVs as a national project before anyone else and now it’s paying dividends. Western car manufacturers can and will catch up.

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 months ago

      It’s full of comparisons, some examples:

      I’d later learn that the auto show had more than 100 new model debuts and concepts. That’s a far cry from the Detroit Auto Show last September, which only featured one fully new model. Two other models were refreshed versions of current cars already on sale. None were electric.

      Western automakers aren’t entangled deeply with tech companies in ways that would serve the end user, Chinese or otherwise. They didn’t get way ahead of the curve to establish a battery supply chain in the ways China did. And they don’t seem to want to cater to the Chinese market (or any market, rather) through continuous updates and agility with their product line.

      Even Tesla in China can’t be bothered to update one of its most important products, the Model Y, in this hyper-competitive market. Instead, it relies on margin-hurting gimmicks to move units, like constant price cuts, subsidized trade-in incentives, and 0% financing to get customers to buy a car that is aged and now uncompetitive.

      Tesla didn’t even have a presence at the Beijing Auto Show. Elon Musk came and went to Beijing during the show, only to make a case for his robotaxi pivot with government officials. It’s like he’s already given up on cars here.

      GM blew it here too. Up until the Beijing Auto Show’s debut of a PHEV version, the GL8 was one of the few vans in the segment without any plug-in capabilities. Green-plated New Energy vehicles are an important market in China, as are luxury vans. Why weren’t Western automakers paying attention? Why didn’t GM get an electrified vehicle on sale faster?

      • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOP
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        5 months ago

        If anyone thinks lemmy doesn’t have bots: so far 4 of my downvoters are from accounts created during the reddit exodus, and have zero comments or posts.

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          People read and lurk. It’s not a new phenomena. If they are bots, it would have to be the saddest smallest swarm ever.

            • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Oh absolutely. That would be extremely petty and pointless. But definitely within the realm of possibility. But it wouldn’t be bots. It’s just as possible it could be people who just don’t like bourgeoisie propaganda. Regardless of whether it is Western or Chinese bourgeoisie pushing it. Two wrongs don’t make a right.

              It is however supremely illustrative of the Privacy problems Lemmy as a whole has. Any admin of any Federated service can see all that activity at any time. You’d just hope that a moderator or administrator of a larger instance such as this would have a thicker skin. 4 down votes and they go searching for a reason to be a victim of something? I think it’s something perhaps we’ve all done at one point in time or wondered to ourselves. But ante out that way publicly never a good look for anyone with authority.

              I tried to bring a number of people over at that time when I joined. I know many of them browse and likely vote. But I also know that many of them don’t interact or comment much due to the association with ML. I thought it a little too paranoid on their part. But Behavior like this doesn’t help. Honestly about nine times out of 10 when I comment on an ml domain hosted Community or thread. It’s because I didn’t check. And just engaged with the content. I know there are others that feel the same. So it’s not that far-fetched for people to read and vote but not interact.

          • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOP
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            5 months ago

            Before / during the reddit exodus, a lot of servers had open registrations, and every time I see a no-content account, it’s from that time period. Almost no new accounts on any lemmy server are zero-content ones.

            • KeenSnappersDontCome@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Not sure how lemmy compares but it isn’t unusual for user generated content online to follow a 1:9:90 distribution of posters, commenters, and lurkers. Just look a the number of upvotes a post gets compared to the number of comments it has and you can tell that most people who vote dont also comment.

              I rarely comment because internet discussions tend towards arguments. I usually just upvote comments that already say what I was going to comment anyways.