45 isn't that many considering the number of units sold (Over 300,000).
45 isn't that many considering the number of units sold (Over 300,000).
Follow IWL on instagram! https://instagram.com/iwatchleague
Certainly enough to be indicative of a design flaw.
Let's make some BIG assumptions here.
Let's say GM's ignition switch failure which caused 124 deaths caused them in 124 discrete accidents caused by the ignition switch failure. There was a 2.7m car recall.
That's 0.00046% failure rate to recall number.
Compare 45 Tesla infernos to 300,000 sold, that's 0.015%.
GM also paid out an estimated $2.5b in settlements and penalties.
Of course, that's a lot of BIG assumptions. There were probably far more ignition switch failures than there were fatalities.
Last edited by Raza; Mar 1, 2019 at 03:28 AM.
Read my latest IWL blog entry! An Ode To Rule Breaking
The more scary thing is their questionable financials. They may not exist by this time next year.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/techn...=.65f33c55b942
Cheers,
Michael
Tell everyone you saw it on IWL!
Since we're discussing Tesla...
https://electrek.co/2019/03/01/tesla...autopilot/amp/
-- Wayne
Musk companies are a questionable at best. I know some people at NASA that have said the safety standards of SpaceX are pretty crap.
The model 3 to me has massive design flaws from a safety point of view.
I think electrical cars are going to be the main cars going forward but I question Tesla as that driving force.
Sent from my LG-H910 using Tapatalk
Olma, Oris, Vostok, Casio, Smiths, Luch, Elgin, Fossil, Orient
IWL DIY, Restorations and Mods subforum
Until electric power is generated primarily by renewable sources, I don’t get why electric cars are any better environmentally. And until you can fill up as quickly and conveniently as you can with gas, I don’t see that it’s practical over here outside of urban use.
Which isn’t to say that instantaneous torque isn’t fun...
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I agree completely.
This should be the future, but with this electric car distraction, I fear we're going to go too far down the rabbit hole of resource usage, resource allocation, and infrastructure investment to devote real resources to this:
https://www.audi-mediacenter.com/en/...ng-tested-9912
Clean, renewable gasoline with 80% less CO2 emissions and no changes to infrastructure, no environmentally harmful mining required unlike for batteries, no burning to death because you hit a rock, and the material is still in its infancy. I first heard about it in 2015 and despite the fact that it could literally save the world, it's gotten no major press.
Read my latest IWL blog entry! An Ode To Rule Breaking
Follow IWL on instagram! https://instagram.com/iwatchleague
Interesting, but the biggest issue with something like this is going to be scale-up. From the article:
What is likely a ton of money and years of research has resulted in...one tank of gas. Logistically, the manufacturing plants required for such a fuel would be mind-boggling. I read an article recently about an oilfield in Texas that was pumping several million barrels of crude a day. What size chemical plant would be required to match the output of that one oilfield?...the largest batch of e-gasoline ever produced – 60 liters (15.9 US gal) – has been achieved.
Alternative energy (sun, wind, water) can be produced in so many places. We bought a plug-in hybrid a few months back and when running errands locally, we are able to run on battery power alone. The electricity at our house is sourced entirely from wind and solar.
There is no perfect solution. Batteries have a higher environmental impact at the beginning and end. Gasoline has a steady impact. Even a synthetic gasoline as described in that article would have significant environmental costs in the growth/harvesting/processing of the biomass and chemical conversion and distribution, and even with decreased emissions, it would still have an impact during use.