yeah flashy, but seriously who's gonna drive it. u drive this thing up to a traffic light in monaco. next to you pulls up a ferrari or a lamborghini. when the light goes green and they take off, man, it's like an f1 car. and while you sound like a forklift truck about to pick up some more dispatches. economically viable, but electric cars are for losers. when ur 25 and still riding a bicycle, ur being green, but u should have a car at that age. ur a loser. get what i mean.
@ChristopherJManess what? You have to know there's a difference between a wet-cell battery and a dry-cell battery. Lithium batteries don't have acid in them and even with the famine in Somalia right now, it will be insulting. The rape oil seed has jacked up prices of food since ethanol was produced to be mixed with petrol.
@toyotaprius79 You mention a famine, when discussing luxury transportation? I could ride a bicycle to work, but I have the option of a vehicle. And how much energy is spent creating the batteries, compared to feeding the starving Somalians?
@ChristopherJManess But to create Bio-Fuel you need to extract that from oil rape seed and sunflowers, ect, there is proof of food prices getting higher and that was just a couple of years ago. Also, when you said ''energy spent creating batteries, compared to feeding staving Somalians?'', albeit everything in production does, including petrol or ethanol, but I haven't heard of battery production effecting food prices. If you know please show me.
@toyotaprius79 Well, LG Chem and Johnson Controls are the two major producers of electric car batteries, but until I see the building process, I can't prove what raw materials are being used. There is a Johnson Controls plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and a distributor in Florence, South Carolina. Perhaps they will be able to answer these questions.
ummmm just one thing. IS IT WATER PROOF!!!!!!!!!!! and sorry if they have already said it cause I couldn't here propaly!!
MrScrasy2156 2 months ago
yeah flashy, but seriously who's gonna drive it. u drive this thing up to a traffic light in monaco. next to you pulls up a ferrari or a lamborghini. when the light goes green and they take off, man, it's like an f1 car. and while you sound like a forklift truck about to pick up some more dispatches. economically viable, but electric cars are for losers. when ur 25 and still riding a bicycle, ur being green, but u should have a car at that age. ur a loser. get what i mean.
dsdan83 5 months ago
At a price yet to be announced huh? That means only the people screwing us out of our money right now will be the only ones who can afford it.
exacerbatedtaboo 5 months ago
Still spills battery acid. Think bio fuel, no harmful leaks, just plant oil.
ChristopherJManess 5 months ago
@ChristopherJManess ....and buggy whip.....
afferch 5 months ago
@ChristopherJManess what? You have to know there's a difference between a wet-cell battery and a dry-cell battery. Lithium batteries don't have acid in them and even with the famine in Somalia right now, it will be insulting. The rape oil seed has jacked up prices of food since ethanol was produced to be mixed with petrol.
toyotaprius79 5 months ago
@toyotaprius79 You mention a famine, when discussing luxury transportation? I could ride a bicycle to work, but I have the option of a vehicle. And how much energy is spent creating the batteries, compared to feeding the starving Somalians?
ChristopherJManess 5 months ago
@ChristopherJManess But to create Bio-Fuel you need to extract that from oil rape seed and sunflowers, ect, there is proof of food prices getting higher and that was just a couple of years ago. Also, when you said ''energy spent creating batteries, compared to feeding staving Somalians?'', albeit everything in production does, including petrol or ethanol, but I haven't heard of battery production effecting food prices. If you know please show me.
toyotaprius79 5 months ago
@toyotaprius79 I love a good challenge! I'll be getting back to you on that. Excellent question!
ChristopherJManess 5 months ago
@toyotaprius79 Well, LG Chem and Johnson Controls are the two major producers of electric car batteries, but until I see the building process, I can't prove what raw materials are being used. There is a Johnson Controls plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and a distributor in Florence, South Carolina. Perhaps they will be able to answer these questions.
ChristopherJManess 5 months ago
@toyotaprius79 Also, have you ever heard of hemp and it's reproduction rate?
ChristopherJManess 5 months ago
FAKE!
qpae123 5 months ago