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#1
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
Awl -- I thought the subthread with the semi-asstute-but-still-deluded Whoyakidding should get its own thread, cuz it's a really important topic, imo butt another facet of Le Pubic's Global Ass****ing. . =============================== Moi: there are plenty of RCMers/AMCers/AHRers who could build a "servicable" (ie, not luxurious) electric car. One even built one already. And I never laid claim to that idea being *practical* -- I simply mentioned it metaphorically Whoyakidding: Well if we're only limited metaphorically then why stop at EVs? Might as well say we could all build folding 12V jetpacks to carry in our submarines. i if you will, to make the point that the BigfuknAuto (and gummint) is making much ado about sumpn fundamentally simple. If you want 10 fukn air bags and teleporting navigation, then yeah, that might be tough for an RCMer, but if you want a vehicle that can go from point A to point B real cheap, then plenty here could do it. Not for anything marketable there isn't. And herein lies the crux of the issue, elaborated on below, after clearing up butt another of 'Kidding's delusions. Certainly not Gunner or any of the others with similar "virtual" qualifications. Now if you're talking about glorified gocarts or whatever, then I'd have to see the details. If it's axles attached with bent over nails etc, then OK. If it's lithium batteries and hub motors and crash certification, then you need to lay off whatever you're smoking. If it's something in the middle, like a conversion with lead acid batteries, then what's the holdup? Build it already and show GM what a bunch of chumps they are. O please, cut the strawman bull****..... And Big Auto apparently CANNOT do it -- or won't -- economically, Real companies build what the market will buy. The market has dictated safety cocoons, power everything, long warranties, etc. Regardless, unless you can show that eliminating airbags is cost effective for society overall, then it's a stupid point to harp on. The small percentage of buyers who'd opt out of airbags if they could are probably the most likely to run up a ridiculous hospital bill after a minor crash. You need to wake up to the reality that the Gunners of the world merely sign up for vehicle insurance. They don't actually keep it current and there are increasing numbers of drivers without coverage. Forcing air bags on them saves the rest us a ****ing fortune. A bit of a digression, but an important one, that eventually also comes full circle to The Design Ante: A likely false assertion. The cost of medical care isn't "incremental" on a case-by-case basis. The fact that hospitals then BILL us up the ass for procedures has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE COSTS ACTUALLY INCURRED BY SED HOSPITAL. Precisely because of the notion of fixed vs. variable costs. Medical """costs""" are a TOTAL CONJOB, being used to rip off the whole of our economy, and eviscerate the finances of the working class. And the "real" medical costs that DO exist are ALSO a victim of The Design Ante, where MILLIONS are spent on machines to simply displace a few workers. But NOW, the hospital is now that machine mfr's BITCH, forever. Pay to fix the machine, mutha****a, or watch the hospital shut down. And pay exhorbitantly. And pay forever. And **** the displaced employees who would NOT have broken down.... mebbe a sick day here and there.... lol And you can surmise this from their bull**** billing. I was given a $7,000 dental bill, by accident. That same bill went to my insurance company -- $239.00. Hilarious, eh? Now, had I not been covered, those mutha****as would in fact be dunning me for $7,000. Oh, our COSTS, our COSTS..... yeah, right..... the fact that there is 1/100 the mechanical complexity in an electric than in an ICE. That is a stupid claim that you won't support with anything other than more stupid claims. Now for the crux of the Design Ante: That is a *transparently OBVIOUS* claim to ANYONE who has removed -- or made -- a crankshaft, fergodsakes. Or taken apart a transmission. You ever take apart a transmission????? If you have, and you still don't see the obviousness of this assertion, then you need much more detox than I originally thought. Now, sure, there's some subtler technology, as well, such as in battery chemistry, and I hope yer not so 'luded up as to think I was talking about RCMers mixing their own battery paste. So, what, the Volt is $5000 for the car, and $40,000 for the batteries???????? From your previous above points, here's what you and your gummint-fellating ilk don't get. In 1974, half the fukn world was driving around in a 42 or 54 hp air-cooled 2,000# beetle, that did perfectly fine in an era when 55 mph signs existed only on windy side-roads. So what happened? Well, assholes like you decided that their fukn Goth-to-be ****ty li'l babies needed BABY-ON-BOARD signs in every fukn car window in Merka, with 35 cupholdes, 10 airbags, and 64 bit navigation -- cuz, I can only surmise, Le Pubic is too fukn stupid to read a printed fuknMAP -- and the "ante of bull**** engineering" went stratospheric, so that, in a number of senses, you are right. RCMers -- NOR ANYONE ELSE -- couldn't even think about bringing such gratuitously technology-inflated products to market. Fuuuuuck, John Z DELOREAN couldn't bring his product to market!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! An assertion which you conveniently ig'd. How Tesla finagled it, idk, but, hey, timing (and graft) is everything...... So you tell me, O Mighty DeeZine Sage and Manufacturing Wizard: Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. Well, I'll tell you why the 1974 Beetle is not good enough for you or anyone else now, in 2013. Because you and Le Pubic have been so simultaneously mind****ed AND ass****ed, when you sit down for your morning cereal, you don't know whether to insert the spoonfuls of cereal in your mouth, or in your ass. The ambivalent proly alternate. Hey, why not?? Altho the Prius c is starting to get there. As far as Wrangler peeple being able to afford a volt, why not stick Mercedes in there, as well? Why don't YOU admit that neither the price nor the tech is the reason you're not buying an EV. What you're really after is a PITS Mark 1. Those are already available at www.pieinthesky.com. Oh, so yer a psychoANAList now?? And why, *exactly*, am I not buying an EV???? Hmmmm, could it be cuz I already got two cars??????? AND that I drive MUCH less than the avg person? Heh, NYC subways, donchaknow...... all-electric subways, I might add.... lol. Could it be that I'm just a li'l tapped right now, from the Haas GR510 that's coming in two weeks?? AND my bustid effing Fadal?? Hmmmmm?????? If I could justify it in any way, I'd buy the Volt in a HEARTBEAT. Which should have been clear to even the krw assholes leaving their mouse droppings in the previous thread. I'm going to restart that thread with some new calcs, which will basically show that on a MPG basis, the Volt makes sense in only selected low-kWhr rate areas. And even then, it will have a miserably long ROI compared to budget ICE cars, like the Fit, Versa, Yaris, others. KBB is fulla**** in their cost-to-own analysis. In high kWhr areas, the Volt will be just another semi-decently -- and overpriced -- efficient ICE car. 'tis what 'tis. I could go on about the Ante of Design, and how the hundreds of millions of people who start the digestion prcess via their anuses make life REALLY difficult for people who are still lucid enough to put the cereal spoon in their mouths, but that's its own thread as well. Look up Monster Cables (via Radio Shack), to see how self-absorbed audiophiles were conned into believing that gold plated RCA-to-RCA cables, with fancy insulation, at $100 per pair, would give them better fidelity -- vs. the 49c generic cables -- just as a start. Then Donny Deutsch, on his bull**** Big Idea, featured dat ripoff conman as a Great Entreepreeneer..... **** Radio Shack, **** Monster Cable, **** dat womanizing but still a closeted fagit Donny Deutsch. -- EA |
#2
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst"
wrote: Awl -- I thought the subthread with the semi-asstute-but-still-deluded Whoyakidding should get its own thread, cuz it's a really important topic, imo butt another facet of Le Pubic's Global Ass****ing. . =============================== Moi: there are plenty of RCMers/AMCers/AHRers who could build a "servicable" (ie, not luxurious) electric car. One even built one already. And I never laid claim to that idea being *practical* -- I simply mentioned it metaphorically Whoyakidding: Well if we're only limited metaphorically then why stop at EVs? Might as well say we could all build folding 12V jetpacks to carry in our submarines. i if you will, to make the point that the BigfuknAuto (and gummint) is making much ado about sumpn fundamentally simple. If you want 10 fukn air bags and teleporting navigation, then yeah, that might be tough for an RCMer, but if you want a vehicle that can go from point A to point B real cheap, then plenty here could do it. Not for anything marketable there isn't. And herein lies the crux of the issue, elaborated on below, after clearing up butt another of 'Kidding's delusions. Certainly not Gunner or any of the others with similar "virtual" qualifications. Now if you're talking about glorified gocarts or whatever, then I'd have to see the details. If it's axles attached with bent over nails etc, then OK. If it's lithium batteries and hub motors and crash certification, then you need to lay off whatever you're smoking. If it's something in the middle, like a conversion with lead acid batteries, then what's the holdup? Build it already and show GM what a bunch of chumps they are. O please, cut the strawman bull****..... And Big Auto apparently CANNOT do it -- or won't -- economically, Real companies build what the market will buy. The market has dictated safety cocoons, power everything, long warranties, etc. Regardless, unless you can show that eliminating airbags is cost effective for society overall, then it's a stupid point to harp on. The small percentage of buyers who'd opt out of airbags if they could are probably the most likely to run up a ridiculous hospital bill after a minor crash. You need to wake up to the reality that the Gunners of the world merely sign up for vehicle insurance. They don't actually keep it current and there are increasing numbers of drivers without coverage. Forcing air bags on them saves the rest us a ****ing fortune. A bit of a digression, but an important one, that eventually also comes full circle to The Design Ante: A likely false assertion. The cost of medical care isn't "incremental" on a case-by-case basis. The fact that hospitals then BILL us up the ass for procedures has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE COSTS ACTUALLY INCURRED BY SED HOSPITAL. Precisely because of the notion of fixed vs. variable costs. Medical """costs""" are a TOTAL CONJOB, being used to rip off the whole of our economy, and eviscerate the finances of the working class. And the "real" medical costs that DO exist are ALSO a victim of The Design Ante, where MILLIONS are spent on machines to simply displace a few workers. But NOW, the hospital is now that machine mfr's BITCH, forever. Pay to fix the machine, mutha****a, or watch the hospital shut down. And pay exhorbitantly. And pay forever. And **** the displaced employees who would NOT have broken down.... mebbe a sick day here and there.... lol And you can surmise this from their bull**** billing. I was given a $7,000 dental bill, by accident. That same bill went to my insurance company -- $239.00. Hilarious, eh? Now, had I not been covered, those mutha****as would in fact be dunning me for $7,000. Oh, our COSTS, our COSTS..... yeah, right..... the fact that there is 1/100 the mechanical complexity in an electric than in an ICE. That is a stupid claim that you won't support with anything other than more stupid claims. Now for the crux of the Design Ante: That is a *transparently OBVIOUS* claim to ANYONE who has removed -- or made -- a crankshaft, fergodsakes. Or taken apart a transmission. You ever take apart a transmission????? If you have, and you still don't see the obviousness of this assertion, then you need much more detox than I originally thought. Now, sure, there's some subtler technology, as well, such as in battery chemistry, and I hope yer not so 'luded up as to think I was talking about RCMers mixing their own battery paste. So, what, the Volt is $5000 for the car, and $40,000 for the batteries???????? From your previous above points, here's what you and your gummint-fellating ilk don't get. In 1974, half the fukn world was driving around in a 42 or 54 hp air-cooled 2,000# beetle, that did perfectly fine in an era when 55 mph signs existed only on windy side-roads. So what happened? Well, assholes like you decided that their fukn Goth-to-be ****ty li'l babies needed BABY-ON-BOARD signs in every fukn car window in Merka, with 35 cupholdes, 10 airbags, and 64 bit navigation -- cuz, I can only surmise, Le Pubic is too fukn stupid to read a printed fuknMAP -- and the "ante of bull**** engineering" went stratospheric, so that, in a number of senses, you are right. RCMers -- NOR ANYONE ELSE -- couldn't even think about bringing such gratuitously technology-inflated products to market. Fuuuuuck, John Z DELOREAN couldn't bring his product to market!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! An assertion which you conveniently ig'd. How Tesla finagled it, idk, but, hey, timing (and graft) is everything...... So you tell me, O Mighty DeeZine Sage and Manufacturing Wizard: Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. Well, I'll tell you why the 1974 Beetle is not good enough for you or anyone else now, in 2013. Because you and Le Pubic have been so simultaneously mind****ed AND ass****ed, when you sit down for your morning cereal, you don't know whether to insert the spoonfuls of cereal in your mouth, or in your ass. The ambivalent proly alternate. Hey, why not?? Altho the Prius c is starting to get there. As far as Wrangler peeple being able to afford a volt, why not stick Mercedes in there, as well? Why don't YOU admit that neither the price nor the tech is the reason you're not buying an EV. What you're really after is a PITS Mark 1. Those are already available at www.pieinthesky.com. Oh, so yer a psychoANAList now?? And why, *exactly*, am I not buying an EV???? Hmmmm, could it be cuz I already got two cars??????? AND that I drive MUCH less than the avg person? Heh, NYC subways, donchaknow...... all-electric subways, I might add.... lol. Could it be that I'm just a li'l tapped right now, from the Haas GR510 that's coming in two weeks?? AND my bustid effing Fadal?? Hmmmmm?????? If I could justify it in any way, I'd buy the Volt in a HEARTBEAT. Which should have been clear to even the krw assholes leaving their mouse droppings in the previous thread. I'm going to restart that thread with some new calcs, which will basically show that on a MPG basis, the Volt makes sense in only selected low-kWhr rate areas. And even then, it will have a miserably long ROI compared to budget ICE cars, like the Fit, Versa, Yaris, others. KBB is fulla**** in their cost-to-own analysis. In high kWhr areas, the Volt will be just another semi-decently -- and overpriced -- efficient ICE car. 'tis what 'tis. I could go on about the Ante of Design, and how the hundreds of millions of people who start the digestion prcess via their anuses make life REALLY difficult for people who are still lucid enough to put the cereal spoon in their mouths, but that's its own thread as well. Look up Monster Cables (via Radio Shack), to see how self-absorbed audiophiles were conned into believing that gold plated RCA-to-RCA cables, with fancy insulation, at $100 per pair, would give them better fidelity -- vs. the 49c generic cables -- just as a start. Then Donny Deutsch, on his bull**** Big Idea, featured dat ripoff conman as a Great Entreepreeneer..... **** Radio Shack, **** Monster Cable, **** dat womanizing but still a closeted fagit Donny Deutsch. Until a few years ago, many, if not most, EVs were home-built. A popular one was a VW Rabbit with 18 lead-acid batteries and a surplus series-wound DC motor ($4,000 used and rebuilt from an EV supplier), with several alternative speed controllers (usually choppers) and a standard, manual transmission. There was one in my town in the late '80s. A retired landscaper built it. He said he had a 20-mile range, which was about twice what he actually used. I never rode in it but I was following behind him in town a couple of times. It seemed to accelerate just fine. One of the most advanced EVs around, maybe six or eight years ago, was a home-built, converted Honda CRX. It had a big bank of small lithium-ion batteries, like the Tesla, and (this is what made it so advanced) a really large bank of supercaps. They were for acceleration and hill climbing, which was spectacular. The guy who built it had a strong EE background. Basic, lead-acid homebuilts are simple. You could (and maybe you still can) buy everything in a kit, for VW Rabbits and Golfs, for less than $10,000. They aren't going to satisfy any market except the market of enthusiasts, but they're completely practical if you just need a commuter for short hops. That's how most cars in this country are used, anyway. -- Ed Huntress |
#3
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:53:07 -0500, Ed Huntress
wrote: snip Until a few years ago, many, if not most, EVs were home-built. A popular one was a VW Rabbit with 18 lead-acid batteries and a surplus series-wound DC motor ($4,000 used and rebuilt from an EV supplier), with several alternative speed controllers (usually choppers) and a standard, manual transmission. I meant to say "8 to 18 batteries." For the electric motors mentioned below, you want at least 94 volts. I don't recall how many batteries were in the Rabbit that used to cruise around my town. There was one in my town in the late '80s. A retired landscaper built it. He said he had a 20-mile range, which was about twice what he actually used. I never rode in it but I was following behind him in town a couple of times. It seemed to accelerate just fine. One of the most advanced EVs around, maybe six or eight years ago, was a home-built, converted Honda CRX. It had a big bank of small lithium-ion batteries, like the Tesla, and (this is what made it so advanced) a really large bank of supercaps. They were for acceleration and hill climbing, which was spectacular. The guy who built it had a strong EE background. Basic, lead-acid homebuilts are simple. You could (and maybe you still can) buy everything in a kit, for VW Rabbits and Golfs, for less than $10,000. They aren't going to satisfy any market except the market of enthusiasts, but they're completely practical if you just need a commuter for short hops. That's how most cars in this country are used, anyway. |
#4
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
"Ed Huntress" wrote in message
... On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: Awl -- I thought the subthread with the semi-asstute-but-still-deluded Whoyakidding should get its own thread, cuz it's a really important topic, imo butt another facet of Le Pubic's Global Ass****ing. . =============================== Moi: there are plenty of RCMers/AMCers/AHRers who could build a "servicable" (ie, not luxurious) electric car. One even built one already. And I never laid claim to that idea being *practical* -- I simply mentioned it metaphorically Whoyakidding: Well if we're only limited metaphorically then why stop at EVs? Might as well say we could all build folding 12V jetpacks to carry in our submarines. i if you will, to make the point that the BigfuknAuto (and gummint) is making much ado about sumpn fundamentally simple. If you want 10 fukn air bags and teleporting navigation, then yeah, that might be tough for an RCMer, but if you want a vehicle that can go from point A to point B real cheap, then plenty here could do it. Not for anything marketable there isn't. And herein lies the crux of the issue, elaborated on below, after clearing up butt another of 'Kidding's delusions. Certainly not Gunner or any of the others with similar "virtual" qualifications. Now if you're talking about glorified gocarts or whatever, then I'd have to see the details. If it's axles attached with bent over nails etc, then OK. If it's lithium batteries and hub motors and crash certification, then you need to lay off whatever you're smoking. If it's something in the middle, like a conversion with lead acid batteries, then what's the holdup? Build it already and show GM what a bunch of chumps they are. O please, cut the strawman bull****..... And Big Auto apparently CANNOT do it -- or won't -- economically, Real companies build what the market will buy. The market has dictated safety cocoons, power everything, long warranties, etc. Regardless, unless you can show that eliminating airbags is cost effective for society overall, then it's a stupid point to harp on. The small percentage of buyers who'd opt out of airbags if they could are probably the most likely to run up a ridiculous hospital bill after a minor crash. You need to wake up to the reality that the Gunners of the world merely sign up for vehicle insurance. They don't actually keep it current and there are increasing numbers of drivers without coverage. Forcing air bags on them saves the rest us a ****ing fortune. A bit of a digression, but an important one, that eventually also comes full circle to The Design Ante: A likely false assertion. The cost of medical care isn't "incremental" on a case-by-case basis. The fact that hospitals then BILL us up the ass for procedures has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE COSTS ACTUALLY INCURRED BY SED HOSPITAL. Precisely because of the notion of fixed vs. variable costs. Medical """costs""" are a TOTAL CONJOB, being used to rip off the whole of our economy, and eviscerate the finances of the working class. And the "real" medical costs that DO exist are ALSO a victim of The Design Ante, where MILLIONS are spent on machines to simply displace a few workers. But NOW, the hospital is now that machine mfr's BITCH, forever. Pay to fix the machine, mutha****a, or watch the hospital shut down. And pay exhorbitantly. And pay forever. And **** the displaced employees who would NOT have broken down.... mebbe a sick day here and there.... lol And you can surmise this from their bull**** billing. I was given a $7,000 dental bill, by accident. That same bill went to my insurance company -- $239.00. Hilarious, eh? Now, had I not been covered, those mutha****as would in fact be dunning me for $7,000. Oh, our COSTS, our COSTS..... yeah, right..... the fact that there is 1/100 the mechanical complexity in an electric than in an ICE. That is a stupid claim that you won't support with anything other than more stupid claims. Now for the crux of the Design Ante: That is a *transparently OBVIOUS* claim to ANYONE who has removed -- or made -- a crankshaft, fergodsakes. Or taken apart a transmission. You ever take apart a transmission????? If you have, and you still don't see the obviousness of this assertion, then you need much more detox than I originally thought. Now, sure, there's some subtler technology, as well, such as in battery chemistry, and I hope yer not so 'luded up as to think I was talking about RCMers mixing their own battery paste. So, what, the Volt is $5000 for the car, and $40,000 for the batteries???????? From your previous above points, here's what you and your gummint-fellating ilk don't get. In 1974, half the fukn world was driving around in a 42 or 54 hp air-cooled 2,000# beetle, that did perfectly fine in an era when 55 mph signs existed only on windy side-roads. So what happened? Well, assholes like you decided that their fukn Goth-to-be ****ty li'l babies needed BABY-ON-BOARD signs in every fukn car window in Merka, with 35 cupholdes, 10 airbags, and 64 bit navigation -- cuz, I can only surmise, Le Pubic is too fukn stupid to read a printed fuknMAP -- and the "ante of bull**** engineering" went stratospheric, so that, in a number of senses, you are right. RCMers -- NOR ANYONE ELSE -- couldn't even think about bringing such gratuitously technology-inflated products to market. Fuuuuuck, John Z DELOREAN couldn't bring his product to market!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! An assertion which you conveniently ig'd. How Tesla finagled it, idk, but, hey, timing (and graft) is everything...... So you tell me, O Mighty DeeZine Sage and Manufacturing Wizard: Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. Well, I'll tell you why the 1974 Beetle is not good enough for you or anyone else now, in 2013. Because you and Le Pubic have been so simultaneously mind****ed AND ass****ed, when you sit down for your morning cereal, you don't know whether to insert the spoonfuls of cereal in your mouth, or in your ass. The ambivalent proly alternate. Hey, why not?? Altho the Prius c is starting to get there. As far as Wrangler peeple being able to afford a volt, why not stick Mercedes in there, as well? Why don't YOU admit that neither the price nor the tech is the reason you're not buying an EV. What you're really after is a PITS Mark 1. Those are already available at www.pieinthesky.com. Oh, so yer a psychoANAList now?? And why, *exactly*, am I not buying an EV???? Hmmmm, could it be cuz I already got two cars??????? AND that I drive MUCH less than the avg person? Heh, NYC subways, donchaknow...... all-electric subways, I might add.... lol. Could it be that I'm just a li'l tapped right now, from the Haas GR510 that's coming in two weeks?? AND my bustid effing Fadal?? Hmmmmm?????? If I could justify it in any way, I'd buy the Volt in a HEARTBEAT. Which should have been clear to even the krw assholes leaving their mouse droppings in the previous thread. I'm going to restart that thread with some new calcs, which will basically show that on a MPG basis, the Volt makes sense in only selected low-kWhr rate areas. And even then, it will have a miserably long ROI compared to budget ICE cars, like the Fit, Versa, Yaris, others. KBB is fulla**** in their cost-to-own analysis. In high kWhr areas, the Volt will be just another semi-decently -- and overpriced -- efficient ICE car. 'tis what 'tis. I could go on about the Ante of Design, and how the hundreds of millions of people who start the digestion prcess via their anuses make life REALLY difficult for people who are still lucid enough to put the cereal spoon in their mouths, but that's its own thread as well. Look up Monster Cables (via Radio Shack), to see how self-absorbed audiophiles were conned into believing that gold plated RCA-to-RCA cables, with fancy insulation, at $100 per pair, would give them better fidelity -- vs. the 49c generic cables -- just as a start. Then Donny Deutsch, on his bull**** Big Idea, featured dat ripoff conman as a Great Entreepreeneer..... **** Radio Shack, **** Monster Cable, **** dat womanizing but still a closeted fagit Donny Deutsch. Until a few years ago, many, if not most, EVs were home-built. A popular one was a VW Rabbit with 18 lead-acid batteries and a surplus series-wound DC motor ($4,000 used and rebuilt from an EV supplier), with several alternative speed controllers (usually choppers) and a standard, manual transmission. There was one in my town in the late '80s. A retired landscaper built it. He said he had a 20-mile range, which was about twice what he actually used. I never rode in it but I was following behind him in town a couple of times. It seemed to accelerate just fine. One of the most advanced EVs around, maybe six or eight years ago, was a home-built, converted Honda CRX. It had a big bank of small lithium-ion batteries, like the Tesla, and (this is what made it so advanced) a really large bank of supercaps. They were for acceleration and hill climbing, which was spectacular. The guy who built it had a strong EE background. Like Gummer?? Basic, lead-acid homebuilts are simple. You could (and maybe you still can) buy everything in a kit, for VW Rabbits and Golfs, for less than $10,000. And even that is a bit of a pill! At 30 mpg gas only, that's 13c/mi, with $4 gas. Suppose the electric cost is 5c/mi. If I've calc'd correckly, you'd have to drive 125,000 miles to break even. At least. They aren't going to satisfy any market except the market of enthusiasts, but they're completely practical if you just need a commuter for short hops. That's how most cars in this country are used, anyway. Except for mall sprawl. And the hapless PA peeple driving to work in NYC everyday. Heh, southern NJ to NYC is no joke either. But, you make my point (I think) that EVs need not be fuknRocket Science.... never mind $45,000 rocket science. But Ed, earlier you said charging batteries was 97% efficient. I've read different -- much different -- and the "proof" would seem to be the extensive ventilation or outright cooling these Li batts need, during operation AND charging. This heat would seem to be almost analogous to the waste heat of IC engines!!! Mebbe it could be used to heat the cabin, in winter?? LOL I too thought batt charging was super effic, but not with batts producing so much heat they gotta be cooled! -- EA -- Ed Huntress |
#5
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 10:53:11 -0500, "Existential Angst"
wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: Awl -- I thought the subthread with the semi-asstute-but-still-deluded Whoyakidding should get its own thread, cuz it's a really important topic, imo butt another facet of Le Pubic's Global Ass****ing. . =============================== Moi: there are plenty of RCMers/AMCers/AHRers who could build a "servicable" (ie, not luxurious) electric car. One even built one already. And I never laid claim to that idea being *practical* -- I simply mentioned it metaphorically Whoyakidding: Well if we're only limited metaphorically then why stop at EVs? Might as well say we could all build folding 12V jetpacks to carry in our submarines. i if you will, to make the point that the BigfuknAuto (and gummint) is making much ado about sumpn fundamentally simple. If you want 10 fukn air bags and teleporting navigation, then yeah, that might be tough for an RCMer, but if you want a vehicle that can go from point A to point B real cheap, then plenty here could do it. Not for anything marketable there isn't. And herein lies the crux of the issue, elaborated on below, after clearing up butt another of 'Kidding's delusions. Certainly not Gunner or any of the others with similar "virtual" qualifications. Now if you're talking about glorified gocarts or whatever, then I'd have to see the details. If it's axles attached with bent over nails etc, then OK. If it's lithium batteries and hub motors and crash certification, then you need to lay off whatever you're smoking. If it's something in the middle, like a conversion with lead acid batteries, then what's the holdup? Build it already and show GM what a bunch of chumps they are. O please, cut the strawman bull****..... And Big Auto apparently CANNOT do it -- or won't -- economically, Real companies build what the market will buy. The market has dictated safety cocoons, power everything, long warranties, etc. Regardless, unless you can show that eliminating airbags is cost effective for society overall, then it's a stupid point to harp on. The small percentage of buyers who'd opt out of airbags if they could are probably the most likely to run up a ridiculous hospital bill after a minor crash. You need to wake up to the reality that the Gunners of the world merely sign up for vehicle insurance. They don't actually keep it current and there are increasing numbers of drivers without coverage. Forcing air bags on them saves the rest us a ****ing fortune. A bit of a digression, but an important one, that eventually also comes full circle to The Design Ante: A likely false assertion. The cost of medical care isn't "incremental" on a case-by-case basis. The fact that hospitals then BILL us up the ass for procedures has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE COSTS ACTUALLY INCURRED BY SED HOSPITAL. Precisely because of the notion of fixed vs. variable costs. Medical """costs""" are a TOTAL CONJOB, being used to rip off the whole of our economy, and eviscerate the finances of the working class. And the "real" medical costs that DO exist are ALSO a victim of The Design Ante, where MILLIONS are spent on machines to simply displace a few workers. But NOW, the hospital is now that machine mfr's BITCH, forever. Pay to fix the machine, mutha****a, or watch the hospital shut down. And pay exhorbitantly. And pay forever. And **** the displaced employees who would NOT have broken down.... mebbe a sick day here and there.... lol And you can surmise this from their bull**** billing. I was given a $7,000 dental bill, by accident. That same bill went to my insurance company -- $239.00. Hilarious, eh? Now, had I not been covered, those mutha****as would in fact be dunning me for $7,000. Oh, our COSTS, our COSTS..... yeah, right..... the fact that there is 1/100 the mechanical complexity in an electric than in an ICE. That is a stupid claim that you won't support with anything other than more stupid claims. Now for the crux of the Design Ante: That is a *transparently OBVIOUS* claim to ANYONE who has removed -- or made -- a crankshaft, fergodsakes. Or taken apart a transmission. You ever take apart a transmission????? If you have, and you still don't see the obviousness of this assertion, then you need much more detox than I originally thought. Now, sure, there's some subtler technology, as well, such as in battery chemistry, and I hope yer not so 'luded up as to think I was talking about RCMers mixing their own battery paste. So, what, the Volt is $5000 for the car, and $40,000 for the batteries???????? From your previous above points, here's what you and your gummint-fellating ilk don't get. In 1974, half the fukn world was driving around in a 42 or 54 hp air-cooled 2,000# beetle, that did perfectly fine in an era when 55 mph signs existed only on windy side-roads. So what happened? Well, assholes like you decided that their fukn Goth-to-be ****ty li'l babies needed BABY-ON-BOARD signs in every fukn car window in Merka, with 35 cupholdes, 10 airbags, and 64 bit navigation -- cuz, I can only surmise, Le Pubic is too fukn stupid to read a printed fuknMAP -- and the "ante of bull**** engineering" went stratospheric, so that, in a number of senses, you are right. RCMers -- NOR ANYONE ELSE -- couldn't even think about bringing such gratuitously technology-inflated products to market. Fuuuuuck, John Z DELOREAN couldn't bring his product to market!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! An assertion which you conveniently ig'd. How Tesla finagled it, idk, but, hey, timing (and graft) is everything...... So you tell me, O Mighty DeeZine Sage and Manufacturing Wizard: Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. Well, I'll tell you why the 1974 Beetle is not good enough for you or anyone else now, in 2013. Because you and Le Pubic have been so simultaneously mind****ed AND ass****ed, when you sit down for your morning cereal, you don't know whether to insert the spoonfuls of cereal in your mouth, or in your ass. The ambivalent proly alternate. Hey, why not?? Altho the Prius c is starting to get there. As far as Wrangler peeple being able to afford a volt, why not stick Mercedes in there, as well? Why don't YOU admit that neither the price nor the tech is the reason you're not buying an EV. What you're really after is a PITS Mark 1. Those are already available at www.pieinthesky.com. Oh, so yer a psychoANAList now?? And why, *exactly*, am I not buying an EV???? Hmmmm, could it be cuz I already got two cars??????? AND that I drive MUCH less than the avg person? Heh, NYC subways, donchaknow...... all-electric subways, I might add.... lol. Could it be that I'm just a li'l tapped right now, from the Haas GR510 that's coming in two weeks?? AND my bustid effing Fadal?? Hmmmmm?????? If I could justify it in any way, I'd buy the Volt in a HEARTBEAT. Which should have been clear to even the krw assholes leaving their mouse droppings in the previous thread. I'm going to restart that thread with some new calcs, which will basically show that on a MPG basis, the Volt makes sense in only selected low-kWhr rate areas. And even then, it will have a miserably long ROI compared to budget ICE cars, like the Fit, Versa, Yaris, others. KBB is fulla**** in their cost-to-own analysis. In high kWhr areas, the Volt will be just another semi-decently -- and overpriced -- efficient ICE car. 'tis what 'tis. I could go on about the Ante of Design, and how the hundreds of millions of people who start the digestion prcess via their anuses make life REALLY difficult for people who are still lucid enough to put the cereal spoon in their mouths, but that's its own thread as well. Look up Monster Cables (via Radio Shack), to see how self-absorbed audiophiles were conned into believing that gold plated RCA-to-RCA cables, with fancy insulation, at $100 per pair, would give them better fidelity -- vs. the 49c generic cables -- just as a start. Then Donny Deutsch, on his bull**** Big Idea, featured dat ripoff conman as a Great Entreepreeneer..... **** Radio Shack, **** Monster Cable, **** dat womanizing but still a closeted fagit Donny Deutsch. Until a few years ago, many, if not most, EVs were home-built. A popular one was a VW Rabbit with 18 lead-acid batteries and a surplus series-wound DC motor ($4,000 used and rebuilt from an EV supplier), with several alternative speed controllers (usually choppers) and a standard, manual transmission. There was one in my town in the late '80s. A retired landscaper built it. He said he had a 20-mile range, which was about twice what he actually used. I never rode in it but I was following behind him in town a couple of times. It seemed to accelerate just fine. One of the most advanced EVs around, maybe six or eight years ago, was a home-built, converted Honda CRX. It had a big bank of small lithium-ion batteries, like the Tesla, and (this is what made it so advanced) a really large bank of supercaps. They were for acceleration and hill climbing, which was spectacular. The guy who built it had a strong EE background. Like Gummer?? Basic, lead-acid homebuilts are simple. You could (and maybe you still can) buy everything in a kit, for VW Rabbits and Golfs, for less than $10,000. And even that is a bit of a pill! At 30 mpg gas only, that's 13c/mi, with $4 gas. Suppose the electric cost is 5c/mi. If I've calc'd correckly, you'd have to drive 125,000 miles to break even. At least. But all you need to service it is some carbon brushes and a squirt can of spindle oil. Oh, you'll need brakes and tires. They aren't going to satisfy any market except the market of enthusiasts, but they're completely practical if you just need a commuter for short hops. That's how most cars in this country are used, anyway. Except for mall sprawl. And the hapless PA peeple driving to work in NYC everyday. They aren't hapless. They're hopeless. My former neighbor moved to the Poconos and commuted to One Penn Plaza. It helped that he was CEO of a chemical company and had a private garage under his office. Heh, southern NJ to NYC is no joke either. You have to be truly crazy to commute to NYC by car from any place south of Toms River. That is, even more crazy than anyone commuting to NYC from NJ by car for any reason. But, you make my point (I think) that EVs need not be fuknRocket Science.... never mind $45,000 rocket science. But Ed, earlier you said charging batteries was 97% efficient. I wasn't aware that I said that, but that is the quoted figure for lithium-ion. For lead-acid, it's around 50%. I've read different -- much different -- and the "proof" would seem to be the extensive ventilation or outright cooling these Li batts need, during operation AND charging. This heat would seem to be almost analogous to the waste heat of IC engines!!! Mebbe it could be used to heat the cabin, in winter?? LOL I too thought batt charging was super effic, but not with batts producing so much heat they gotta be cooled! I suspect that faster charging results in more IR^2 loss. The 97% figure may be for a slow charge. That doesn';t sound right, though; the amp-hours should be the same...oh, nuts, I'm not doing any more thinking. I did that last night figuring out how much high explosive Gunner needed to go 264 mph. d8-) 'Don't know, but it's something that would be better to research than to speculate about here. -- Ed Huntress |
#6
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 11:03:19 -0500, Ed Huntress
wrote: snip I suspect that faster charging results in more IR^2 loss. Duh....rhat's I^2 * R loss. No more thinking today! I'm on strike, and the brain is not working anyway! The 97% figure may be for a slow charge. That doesn';t sound right, though; the amp-hours should be the same...oh, nuts, I'm not doing any more thinking. I did that last night figuring out how much high explosive Gunner needed to go 264 mph. d8-) 'Don't know, but it's something that would be better to research than to speculate about here. ....for someone else to research. I'm on strike. -- Ed Huntress |
#7
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
"Ed Huntress" wrote in message
... On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 10:53:11 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: Awl -- I thought the subthread with the semi-asstute-but-still-deluded Whoyakidding should get its own thread, cuz it's a really important topic, imo butt another facet of Le Pubic's Global Ass****ing. . =============================== Moi: there are plenty of RCMers/AMCers/AHRers who could build a "servicable" (ie, not luxurious) electric car. One even built one already. And I never laid claim to that idea being *practical* -- I simply mentioned it metaphorically Whoyakidding: Well if we're only limited metaphorically then why stop at EVs? Might as well say we could all build folding 12V jetpacks to carry in our submarines. i if you will, to make the point that the BigfuknAuto (and gummint) is making much ado about sumpn fundamentally simple. If you want 10 fukn air bags and teleporting navigation, then yeah, that might be tough for an RCMer, but if you want a vehicle that can go from point A to point B real cheap, then plenty here could do it. Not for anything marketable there isn't. And herein lies the crux of the issue, elaborated on below, after clearing up butt another of 'Kidding's delusions. Certainly not Gunner or any of the others with similar "virtual" qualifications. Now if you're talking about glorified gocarts or whatever, then I'd have to see the details. If it's axles attached with bent over nails etc, then OK. If it's lithium batteries and hub motors and crash certification, then you need to lay off whatever you're smoking. If it's something in the middle, like a conversion with lead acid batteries, then what's the holdup? Build it already and show GM what a bunch of chumps they are. O please, cut the strawman bull****..... And Big Auto apparently CANNOT do it -- or won't -- economically, Real companies build what the market will buy. The market has dictated safety cocoons, power everything, long warranties, etc. Regardless, unless you can show that eliminating airbags is cost effective for society overall, then it's a stupid point to harp on. The small percentage of buyers who'd opt out of airbags if they could are probably the most likely to run up a ridiculous hospital bill after a minor crash. You need to wake up to the reality that the Gunners of the world merely sign up for vehicle insurance. They don't actually keep it current and there are increasing numbers of drivers without coverage. Forcing air bags on them saves the rest us a ****ing fortune. A bit of a digression, but an important one, that eventually also comes full circle to The Design Ante: A likely false assertion. The cost of medical care isn't "incremental" on a case-by-case basis. The fact that hospitals then BILL us up the ass for procedures has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE COSTS ACTUALLY INCURRED BY SED HOSPITAL. Precisely because of the notion of fixed vs. variable costs. Medical """costs""" are a TOTAL CONJOB, being used to rip off the whole of our economy, and eviscerate the finances of the working class. And the "real" medical costs that DO exist are ALSO a victim of The Design Ante, where MILLIONS are spent on machines to simply displace a few workers. But NOW, the hospital is now that machine mfr's BITCH, forever. Pay to fix the machine, mutha****a, or watch the hospital shut down. And pay exhorbitantly. And pay forever. And **** the displaced employees who would NOT have broken down.... mebbe a sick day here and there.... lol And you can surmise this from their bull**** billing. I was given a $7,000 dental bill, by accident. That same bill went to my insurance company -- $239.00. Hilarious, eh? Now, had I not been covered, those mutha****as would in fact be dunning me for $7,000. Oh, our COSTS, our COSTS..... yeah, right..... the fact that there is 1/100 the mechanical complexity in an electric than in an ICE. That is a stupid claim that you won't support with anything other than more stupid claims. Now for the crux of the Design Ante: That is a *transparently OBVIOUS* claim to ANYONE who has removed -- or made -- a crankshaft, fergodsakes. Or taken apart a transmission. You ever take apart a transmission????? If you have, and you still don't see the obviousness of this assertion, then you need much more detox than I originally thought. Now, sure, there's some subtler technology, as well, such as in battery chemistry, and I hope yer not so 'luded up as to think I was talking about RCMers mixing their own battery paste. So, what, the Volt is $5000 for the car, and $40,000 for the batteries???????? From your previous above points, here's what you and your gummint-fellating ilk don't get. In 1974, half the fukn world was driving around in a 42 or 54 hp air-cooled 2,000# beetle, that did perfectly fine in an era when 55 mph signs existed only on windy side-roads. So what happened? Well, assholes like you decided that their fukn Goth-to-be ****ty li'l babies needed BABY-ON-BOARD signs in every fukn car window in Merka, with 35 cupholdes, 10 airbags, and 64 bit navigation -- cuz, I can only surmise, Le Pubic is too fukn stupid to read a printed fuknMAP -- and the "ante of bull**** engineering" went stratospheric, so that, in a number of senses, you are right. RCMers -- NOR ANYONE ELSE -- couldn't even think about bringing such gratuitously technology-inflated products to market. Fuuuuuck, John Z DELOREAN couldn't bring his product to market!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! An assertion which you conveniently ig'd. How Tesla finagled it, idk, but, hey, timing (and graft) is everything...... So you tell me, O Mighty DeeZine Sage and Manufacturing Wizard: Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. Well, I'll tell you why the 1974 Beetle is not good enough for you or anyone else now, in 2013. Because you and Le Pubic have been so simultaneously mind****ed AND ass****ed, when you sit down for your morning cereal, you don't know whether to insert the spoonfuls of cereal in your mouth, or in your ass. The ambivalent proly alternate. Hey, why not?? Altho the Prius c is starting to get there. As far as Wrangler peeple being able to afford a volt, why not stick Mercedes in there, as well? Why don't YOU admit that neither the price nor the tech is the reason you're not buying an EV. What you're really after is a PITS Mark 1. Those are already available at www.pieinthesky.com. Oh, so yer a psychoANAList now?? And why, *exactly*, am I not buying an EV???? Hmmmm, could it be cuz I already got two cars??????? AND that I drive MUCH less than the avg person? Heh, NYC subways, donchaknow...... all-electric subways, I might add.... lol. Could it be that I'm just a li'l tapped right now, from the Haas GR510 that's coming in two weeks?? AND my bustid effing Fadal?? Hmmmmm?????? If I could justify it in any way, I'd buy the Volt in a HEARTBEAT. Which should have been clear to even the krw assholes leaving their mouse droppings in the previous thread. I'm going to restart that thread with some new calcs, which will basically show that on a MPG basis, the Volt makes sense in only selected low-kWhr rate areas. And even then, it will have a miserably long ROI compared to budget ICE cars, like the Fit, Versa, Yaris, others. KBB is fulla**** in their cost-to-own analysis. In high kWhr areas, the Volt will be just another semi-decently -- and overpriced -- efficient ICE car. 'tis what 'tis. I could go on about the Ante of Design, and how the hundreds of millions of people who start the digestion prcess via their anuses make life REALLY difficult for people who are still lucid enough to put the cereal spoon in their mouths, but that's its own thread as well. Look up Monster Cables (via Radio Shack), to see how self-absorbed audiophiles were conned into believing that gold plated RCA-to-RCA cables, with fancy insulation, at $100 per pair, would give them better fidelity -- vs. the 49c generic cables -- just as a start. Then Donny Deutsch, on his bull**** Big Idea, featured dat ripoff conman as a Great Entreepreeneer..... **** Radio Shack, **** Monster Cable, **** dat womanizing but still a closeted fagit Donny Deutsch. Until a few years ago, many, if not most, EVs were home-built. A popular one was a VW Rabbit with 18 lead-acid batteries and a surplus series-wound DC motor ($4,000 used and rebuilt from an EV supplier), with several alternative speed controllers (usually choppers) and a standard, manual transmission. There was one in my town in the late '80s. A retired landscaper built it. He said he had a 20-mile range, which was about twice what he actually used. I never rode in it but I was following behind him in town a couple of times. It seemed to accelerate just fine. One of the most advanced EVs around, maybe six or eight years ago, was a home-built, converted Honda CRX. It had a big bank of small lithium-ion batteries, like the Tesla, and (this is what made it so advanced) a really large bank of supercaps. They were for acceleration and hill climbing, which was spectacular. The guy who built it had a strong EE background. Like Gummer?? Basic, lead-acid homebuilts are simple. You could (and maybe you still can) buy everything in a kit, for VW Rabbits and Golfs, for less than $10,000. And even that is a bit of a pill! At 30 mpg gas only, that's 13c/mi, with $4 gas. Suppose the electric cost is 5c/mi. If I've calc'd correckly, you'd have to drive 125,000 miles to break even. At least. But all you need to service it is some carbon brushes and a squirt can of spindle oil. Oh, you'll need brakes and tires. They aren't going to satisfy any market except the market of enthusiasts, but they're completely practical if you just need a commuter for short hops. That's how most cars in this country are used, anyway. Except for mall sprawl. And the hapless PA peeple driving to work in NYC everyday. They aren't hapless. They're hopeless. My former neighbor moved to the Poconos and commuted to One Penn Plaza. It helped that he was CEO of a chemical company and had a private garage under his office. Heh, southern NJ to NYC is no joke either. You have to be truly crazy to commute to NYC by car from any place south of Toms River. That is, even more crazy than anyone commuting to NYC from NJ by car for any reason. But, you make my point (I think) that EVs need not be fuknRocket Science.... never mind $45,000 rocket science. But Ed, earlier you said charging batteries was 97% efficient. I wasn't aware that I said that, but that is the quoted figure for lithium-ion. For lead-acid, it's around 50%. I didn't know lead-acid was that low! By virtual thermodynamic definition, if sumpn is only 50% efficient, the other half is going off as heat. But lead acids don't even that hot, unless yer really zapping them. So if they are that inefficient -- and dats without a dedicated cooling system -- then I can't imagine Li is that much better. And yeah, fast charging dudn't help. I suspect that 97% Li figure is just greenie/industry jive. If that were true, heat wouldn't be an issue, by definition. -- EA I've read different -- much different -- and the "proof" would seem to be the extensive ventilation or outright cooling these Li batts need, during operation AND charging. This heat would seem to be almost analogous to the waste heat of IC engines!!! Mebbe it could be used to heat the cabin, in winter?? LOL I too thought batt charging was super effic, but not with batts producing so much heat they gotta be cooled! I suspect that faster charging results in more IR^2 loss. The 97% figure may be for a slow charge. That doesn';t sound right, though; the amp-hours should be the same...oh, nuts, I'm not doing any more thinking. I did that last night figuring out how much high explosive Gunner needed to go 264 mph. d8-) 'Don't know, but it's something that would be better to research than to speculate about here. -- Ed Huntress |
#8
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 12:14:48 -0500, "Existential Angst"
wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 10:53:11 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: Awl -- I thought the subthread with the semi-asstute-but-still-deluded Whoyakidding should get its own thread, cuz it's a really important topic, imo butt another facet of Le Pubic's Global Ass****ing. . =============================== Moi: there are plenty of RCMers/AMCers/AHRers who could build a "servicable" (ie, not luxurious) electric car. One even built one already. And I never laid claim to that idea being *practical* -- I simply mentioned it metaphorically Whoyakidding: Well if we're only limited metaphorically then why stop at EVs? Might as well say we could all build folding 12V jetpacks to carry in our submarines. i if you will, to make the point that the BigfuknAuto (and gummint) is making much ado about sumpn fundamentally simple. If you want 10 fukn air bags and teleporting navigation, then yeah, that might be tough for an RCMer, but if you want a vehicle that can go from point A to point B real cheap, then plenty here could do it. Not for anything marketable there isn't. And herein lies the crux of the issue, elaborated on below, after clearing up butt another of 'Kidding's delusions. Certainly not Gunner or any of the others with similar "virtual" qualifications. Now if you're talking about glorified gocarts or whatever, then I'd have to see the details. If it's axles attached with bent over nails etc, then OK. If it's lithium batteries and hub motors and crash certification, then you need to lay off whatever you're smoking. If it's something in the middle, like a conversion with lead acid batteries, then what's the holdup? Build it already and show GM what a bunch of chumps they are. O please, cut the strawman bull****..... And Big Auto apparently CANNOT do it -- or won't -- economically, Real companies build what the market will buy. The market has dictated safety cocoons, power everything, long warranties, etc. Regardless, unless you can show that eliminating airbags is cost effective for society overall, then it's a stupid point to harp on. The small percentage of buyers who'd opt out of airbags if they could are probably the most likely to run up a ridiculous hospital bill after a minor crash. You need to wake up to the reality that the Gunners of the world merely sign up for vehicle insurance. They don't actually keep it current and there are increasing numbers of drivers without coverage. Forcing air bags on them saves the rest us a ****ing fortune. A bit of a digression, but an important one, that eventually also comes full circle to The Design Ante: A likely false assertion. The cost of medical care isn't "incremental" on a case-by-case basis. The fact that hospitals then BILL us up the ass for procedures has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE COSTS ACTUALLY INCURRED BY SED HOSPITAL. Precisely because of the notion of fixed vs. variable costs. Medical """costs""" are a TOTAL CONJOB, being used to rip off the whole of our economy, and eviscerate the finances of the working class. And the "real" medical costs that DO exist are ALSO a victim of The Design Ante, where MILLIONS are spent on machines to simply displace a few workers. But NOW, the hospital is now that machine mfr's BITCH, forever. Pay to fix the machine, mutha****a, or watch the hospital shut down. And pay exhorbitantly. And pay forever. And **** the displaced employees who would NOT have broken down.... mebbe a sick day here and there.... lol And you can surmise this from their bull**** billing. I was given a $7,000 dental bill, by accident. That same bill went to my insurance company -- $239.00. Hilarious, eh? Now, had I not been covered, those mutha****as would in fact be dunning me for $7,000. Oh, our COSTS, our COSTS..... yeah, right..... the fact that there is 1/100 the mechanical complexity in an electric than in an ICE. That is a stupid claim that you won't support with anything other than more stupid claims. Now for the crux of the Design Ante: That is a *transparently OBVIOUS* claim to ANYONE who has removed -- or made -- a crankshaft, fergodsakes. Or taken apart a transmission. You ever take apart a transmission????? If you have, and you still don't see the obviousness of this assertion, then you need much more detox than I originally thought. Now, sure, there's some subtler technology, as well, such as in battery chemistry, and I hope yer not so 'luded up as to think I was talking about RCMers mixing their own battery paste. So, what, the Volt is $5000 for the car, and $40,000 for the batteries???????? From your previous above points, here's what you and your gummint-fellating ilk don't get. In 1974, half the fukn world was driving around in a 42 or 54 hp air-cooled 2,000# beetle, that did perfectly fine in an era when 55 mph signs existed only on windy side-roads. So what happened? Well, assholes like you decided that their fukn Goth-to-be ****ty li'l babies needed BABY-ON-BOARD signs in every fukn car window in Merka, with 35 cupholdes, 10 airbags, and 64 bit navigation -- cuz, I can only surmise, Le Pubic is too fukn stupid to read a printed fuknMAP -- and the "ante of bull**** engineering" went stratospheric, so that, in a number of senses, you are right. RCMers -- NOR ANYONE ELSE -- couldn't even think about bringing such gratuitously technology-inflated products to market. Fuuuuuck, John Z DELOREAN couldn't bring his product to market!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! An assertion which you conveniently ig'd. How Tesla finagled it, idk, but, hey, timing (and graft) is everything...... So you tell me, O Mighty DeeZine Sage and Manufacturing Wizard: Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. Well, I'll tell you why the 1974 Beetle is not good enough for you or anyone else now, in 2013. Because you and Le Pubic have been so simultaneously mind****ed AND ass****ed, when you sit down for your morning cereal, you don't know whether to insert the spoonfuls of cereal in your mouth, or in your ass. The ambivalent proly alternate. Hey, why not?? Altho the Prius c is starting to get there. As far as Wrangler peeple being able to afford a volt, why not stick Mercedes in there, as well? Why don't YOU admit that neither the price nor the tech is the reason you're not buying an EV. What you're really after is a PITS Mark 1. Those are already available at www.pieinthesky.com. Oh, so yer a psychoANAList now?? And why, *exactly*, am I not buying an EV???? Hmmmm, could it be cuz I already got two cars??????? AND that I drive MUCH less than the avg person? Heh, NYC subways, donchaknow...... all-electric subways, I might add.... lol. Could it be that I'm just a li'l tapped right now, from the Haas GR510 that's coming in two weeks?? AND my bustid effing Fadal?? Hmmmmm?????? If I could justify it in any way, I'd buy the Volt in a HEARTBEAT. Which should have been clear to even the krw assholes leaving their mouse droppings in the previous thread. I'm going to restart that thread with some new calcs, which will basically show that on a MPG basis, the Volt makes sense in only selected low-kWhr rate areas. And even then, it will have a miserably long ROI compared to budget ICE cars, like the Fit, Versa, Yaris, others. KBB is fulla**** in their cost-to-own analysis. In high kWhr areas, the Volt will be just another semi-decently -- and overpriced -- efficient ICE car. 'tis what 'tis. I could go on about the Ante of Design, and how the hundreds of millions of people who start the digestion prcess via their anuses make life REALLY difficult for people who are still lucid enough to put the cereal spoon in their mouths, but that's its own thread as well. Look up Monster Cables (via Radio Shack), to see how self-absorbed audiophiles were conned into believing that gold plated RCA-to-RCA cables, with fancy insulation, at $100 per pair, would give them better fidelity -- vs. the 49c generic cables -- just as a start. Then Donny Deutsch, on his bull**** Big Idea, featured dat ripoff conman as a Great Entreepreeneer..... **** Radio Shack, **** Monster Cable, **** dat womanizing but still a closeted fagit Donny Deutsch. Until a few years ago, many, if not most, EVs were home-built. A popular one was a VW Rabbit with 18 lead-acid batteries and a surplus series-wound DC motor ($4,000 used and rebuilt from an EV supplier), with several alternative speed controllers (usually choppers) and a standard, manual transmission. There was one in my town in the late '80s. A retired landscaper built it. He said he had a 20-mile range, which was about twice what he actually used. I never rode in it but I was following behind him in town a couple of times. It seemed to accelerate just fine. One of the most advanced EVs around, maybe six or eight years ago, was a home-built, converted Honda CRX. It had a big bank of small lithium-ion batteries, like the Tesla, and (this is what made it so advanced) a really large bank of supercaps. They were for acceleration and hill climbing, which was spectacular. The guy who built it had a strong EE background. Like Gummer?? Basic, lead-acid homebuilts are simple. You could (and maybe you still can) buy everything in a kit, for VW Rabbits and Golfs, for less than $10,000. And even that is a bit of a pill! At 30 mpg gas only, that's 13c/mi, with $4 gas. Suppose the electric cost is 5c/mi. If I've calc'd correckly, you'd have to drive 125,000 miles to break even. At least. But all you need to service it is some carbon brushes and a squirt can of spindle oil. Oh, you'll need brakes and tires. They aren't going to satisfy any market except the market of enthusiasts, but they're completely practical if you just need a commuter for short hops. That's how most cars in this country are used, anyway. Except for mall sprawl. And the hapless PA peeple driving to work in NYC everyday. They aren't hapless. They're hopeless. My former neighbor moved to the Poconos and commuted to One Penn Plaza. It helped that he was CEO of a chemical company and had a private garage under his office. Heh, southern NJ to NYC is no joke either. You have to be truly crazy to commute to NYC by car from any place south of Toms River. That is, even more crazy than anyone commuting to NYC from NJ by car for any reason. But, you make my point (I think) that EVs need not be fuknRocket Science.... never mind $45,000 rocket science. But Ed, earlier you said charging batteries was 97% efficient. I wasn't aware that I said that, but that is the quoted figure for lithium-ion. For lead-acid, it's around 50%. I didn't know lead-acid was that low! By virtual thermodynamic definition, if sumpn is only 50% efficient, the other half is going off as heat. But lead acids don't even that hot, unless yer really zapping them. Two points, and then I'm going to stop thinking for the day: First, the distribution of heat between the charger and battery will depend on their relative internal resistances (ask Terrell, if your stomach is in good shape. Or ask Dan Caster.) Second, the energy density of a lead-acid battery is much lower than for a Li-ion, so the surface temp of the battery will be lower for a given amount of waste heat. thinking OFF So if they are that inefficient -- and dats without a dedicated cooling system -- then I can't imagine Li is that much better. And yeah, fast charging dudn't help. I suspect that 97% Li figure is just greenie/industry jive. If that were true, heat wouldn't be an issue, by definition. It varies for all batteries between top and bottom of charge, losses in the charger versus the battery, etc. You're on your own. d8-) -- Ed Huntress |
#9
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst"
wrote: summary, so far - wants EV, doesn't want EV - modern EV should aspire to be '74 Beetle - car companies stupid, RCM smart - public needs to step up thinking to 6th grade level - mind****ing prevalent - medical costs: pfffft - breaking news: Monster cables overpriced Looking forward to the next installment... |
#10
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
"whoyakidding's ghost" wrote in message
... On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: summary, so far - wants EV, doesn't want EV - modern EV should aspire to be '74 Beetle - car companies stupid, RCM smart - public needs to step up thinking to 6th grade level - mind****ing prevalent - medical costs: pfffft - breaking news: Monster cables overpriced Looking forward to the next installment... LOL!!! Perty good summary.... for a bipolar. I'm working on the next install now. But before you can productively read it, you'll need to check these out: http://www.soberrecovery.com/links/detoxcenters.html Among the dozens of cites is Oasis: "We welcome you to Oasis Pompano Beach, an open-minded and caring facility that specializes in helping addicts overcome their substance abuse and addiction. Our loving and caring staff aims to aid you in detoxing in a way that is best for you; all the while ensuring that you remain as comfortable as possible during this entire process. At Oasis Detox we understand your need for rest and refreshment. Life can be overwhelming. Oasis provides the ideal environment to gather strength for the journey" EA will hold you, as well, if you need it. -- EA |
#11
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 11:32:46 -0500, "Existential Angst"
wrote: "whoyakidding's ghost" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: summary, so far - wants EV, doesn't want EV - modern EV should aspire to be '74 Beetle - car companies stupid, RCM smart - public needs to step up thinking to 6th grade level - mind****ing prevalent - medical costs: pfffft - breaking news: Monster cables overpriced Looking forward to the next installment... LOL!!! Perty good summary.... for a bipolar. I'm working on the next install now. I'm hoping it will be somewhat more accepting of reality for a change. But before you can productively read it, you'll need to check these out: http://www.soberrecovery.com/links/detoxcenters.html hopes dashed I need to find something to get me really high if I'm going to wade through much more of your ranting. Anyway, good to know that you'll be doing something productive cough while I'm driving my Volt today. If I get a chance to whoosh away from a belching pickup at a stoplight, I'll drink a bottled water toast you and all the other brave souls who are dedicated to ****ing into the wind. |
#12
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
"whoyakidding's ghost" wrote in message
... On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 11:32:46 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: "whoyakidding's ghost" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: summary, so far - wants EV, doesn't want EV - modern EV should aspire to be '74 Beetle - car companies stupid, RCM smart - public needs to step up thinking to 6th grade level - mind****ing prevalent - medical costs: pfffft - breaking news: Monster cables overpriced Looking forward to the next installment... LOL!!! Perty good summary.... for a bipolar. I'm working on the next install now. I'm hoping it will be somewhat more accepting of reality for a change. But before you can productively read it, you'll need to check these out: http://www.soberrecovery.com/links/detoxcenters.html hopes dashed I need to find something to get me really high if I'm going to wade through much more of your ranting. Anyway, good to know that you'll be doing something productive cough while I'm driving my Volt today. If I get a chance to whoosh away from a belching pickup at a stoplight, I'll drink a bottled water toast you and all the other brave souls who are dedicated to ****ing into the wind. Well, Moi's pickup don't belch.... And no surprise that you are such a competitive gloating asshole. And, lessee, just how many lathes, 4x8's, pounds of 12' aluminum bar, and pallets of concrete (dats right, PALLETS) can your Volt carry???? Zero, did you say?????? The good thing about being in such desperate need of detox is that you don't realize what it -- heh, or your fuknVolt -- is costing you. My Fit is costing me half of what your Volt is costing you, even after yer tax credit. And just wait 'til you need a repair..... any hope of ANY ROI will go out the window. Yeah, the Volt is cool, I don't deny it's a very good car (I've said so), and I wish I had one...... BUT not if it dudn't make sense. And yeah, you got ONE thing right: EVs -- and ALL cars -- should aspire to the '74 Beetle, at least in some measure. Too bad you took yer toys away, and punked out of the discussion. Typical. -- EA |
#13
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 12:29:05 -0500, "Existential Angst"
wrote: "whoyakidding's ghost" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 11:32:46 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: "whoyakidding's ghost" wrote in message ... On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 09:28:59 -0500, "Existential Angst" wrote: summary, so far - wants EV, doesn't want EV - modern EV should aspire to be '74 Beetle - car companies stupid, RCM smart - public needs to step up thinking to 6th grade level - mind****ing prevalent - medical costs: pfffft - breaking news: Monster cables overpriced Looking forward to the next installment... LOL!!! Perty good summary.... for a bipolar. I'm working on the next install now. I'm hoping it will be somewhat more accepting of reality for a change. But before you can productively read it, you'll need to check these out: http://www.soberrecovery.com/links/detoxcenters.html hopes dashed I need to find something to get me really high if I'm going to wade through much more of your ranting. Anyway, good to know that you'll be doing something productive cough while I'm driving my Volt today. If I get a chance to whoosh away from a belching pickup at a stoplight, I'll drink a bottled water toast you and all the other brave souls who are dedicated to ****ing into the wind. Well, Moi's pickup don't belch.... Mine doesn't either, particularly since I keep it parked as much as possible. But a lot of the 4X4 diesels favored by the "sport" crowd do. And no surprise that you are such a competitive gloating asshole. I do tend to get competitive when jerks are trying to weave in and out of bumper to bumper traffic in order to fill the tragically empty half a car length space in front of me. I love to smugly leave that type of guy standing still at the light. Yeah we're not going to get far from one another in traffic but it gives my wife something to complain about which is good because otherwise she'd get bored with my perfection. And, lessee, just how many lathes, 4x8's, pounds of 12' aluminum bar, and pallets of concrete (dats right, PALLETS) can your Volt carry???? Zero, did you say?????? You forgot to end that sentence with hmmmmmm. I DID ask about concrete pallet hauling at the Chevy dealer and they told me it was OK so long as I put the lathe on the roof. They also offered a money back guarantee if my hauling ability was ever bested by a '74 Beetle. My Fit Arf arf. After all your nonsense about a Beetle being all anybody needs, you bought something with two and a half as many doors and an extra 500 pounds of worthless dead weight? And what's with the ****ing CVT? I don't remember those from '74! Anyway, how about posting a picture of it hauling "lathes, 4x8's, pounds of 12' aluminum bar, and pallets of concrete." is costing me half of what your Volt is costing you, even after yer tax credit. One of my buddies (whose net worth is about twice mine) buys his cars at auction, fixes them himself in the cheapest possible manner, and drives them into the ground. But HE is smart enough not to compare his apples to my oranges, or pretend he wants an EV even though he never has. Nor would he attempt to redefine "want" as "if somebody buys it for me." And just wait 'til you need a repair..... any hope of ANY ROI will go out the window. Your laundry list of excuses is telling. You really jumped the shark with the lathe hauling horse****. I no longer believe you could afford a good used '74 VW. Yeah, the Volt is cool, I don't deny it's a very good car (I've said so), and I wish I had one...... **** me. Make up your mind. BUT not if it dudn't make sense. And yeah, you got ONE thing right: EVs -- and ALL cars -- should aspire to the '74 Beetle, at least in some measure. Too bad you took yer toys away, and punked out of the discussion. Typical. You got to sit there ranting yesterday while I was stuck driving the Volt on a lakeshore highway on the way to a tool store? You lucky *******! |
#14
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The Ante of Design..... and whoyakidding's delusions....
Existential Angst wrote:
Exactly WHY was the 1974 54 hp beetle good enough then -- and good enough for 1/2 the driving world -- but it's **** now? Can you imagine the mpg of that car, with a decent motor in it? I'm sure we'd be talking 70 mpg with a pure ICE, and much higher with any hybridization. There was a guy a few years ago selling his Honda Insight (hybrid) on eBay, and he had a picture of the dashboard display, I think it was 86 MPG averaged over the 130,000 miles on the car. This was a stock production vehicle, although it was obvious he actually knew how to drive it for good economy. Jon |
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