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PostDec 07, 2021#76

Ebsy wrote:
Dec 07, 2021
JaneJacobsGhost wrote:
Dec 07, 2021
I hate MoLeg as much as anyone, but these companies are not looking elsewhere because we don’t incentivise green projects.

These companies choose NC, TN and TX because these states are staunchly anti-worker and anti-labor and have growing workforces.

If you really want Mo to compete for these projects, you’ll have to get onboard with right to work.
Missourians coming out in droves to vote down Right to Work was one of the proudest moments of my life. The people of this state did not believe the lies being peddled then, and bringing the same false dichotomy here isn't going to change anything.
It was also one of my proudest moments. Honda’s two plants in Ohio are the only foreign auto assembly plants in the us that are not right to work. That’s no coincidence.

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PostFeb 21, 2022#77

^ nice article. grotesquely, this was the sponsored add shown to me while reading it:
Screenshot 2022-02-21 at 12-16-24 Why aren't more people talking about the next affordable cities being in the Midwest - Ne[...].png (265.04KiB)

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PostFeb 21, 2022#78

Yeah it usually shows up for me, unfortunately.

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PostFeb 21, 2022#79

At least it's electric

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PostFeb 21, 2022#80

On its face it seems like electric cars are good idea. I'm just not so sure anymore.

Some random thoughts.

We all agree  gas stations are ugly. It's even uglier when they shut down and the remediation costs renders the land useless basically forever. But how ugly will the landscape look when 200 million people have their own personal charging station and how the hell will this even happen when you can't fill a pothole?

Is there enough children in Africa to mine the required resources?

I don't see how the world will be a better place with few hundred million Tesla's.

I don't even think I drIve maybe ten miles a week.

I read something generally saying that if New York City went four days without supplies and goods and food and resources trucked in it would essentially be chaos. I don't know if that's true or not.

Electric cars will be a niche white wealthy thing for the remainder of your lifespan.

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PostFeb 21, 2022#81

Seems like a good chunk of those 200 million already have a parking spot of some sort, so just put in chargers there?  We definitely need to figure out what gas stations of the future look like, though.  Biggest downside of electric cars is the long distance trips, but the same could be said for when automobiles were first invented. 

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PostFeb 21, 2022#82

electric cars would be a good idea in combination with VAST reductions in VMT, car consumerism, and driver entitlement. otherwise it's gonna be more of the same with pollution and environmental damage taking a different form. and EVs will likely be worse for pedestrians and cyclists due to their increased weight and torque. i have no hope that things are going to change for the better in the U.S.

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PostFeb 21, 2022#83

I like that they are quieter and the pollution generated for their propulsion is created somewhere besides where the car is. They still make a lot of fine particulates. As UD pointed out, they are heavier so more momentum in a crash and more damage to the road surface. Then there's taxing them to pay for the infrastructure. Sounds like a VMT tax is politically impossible and technically difficult. Missouri charges an annual fee right now. $75 for vehicles up to 18,000 lbs. One that scales with weight starting at 0 lbs sounds appropriate. Trouble is collecting the gas tax happens when a driver buys gas. When does the electric car driver pay? Depending on them doing it voluntarily sounds problematic as we've seen with car sales tax, registration fees, and insurance premiums. As for charging, a lot of charging will happen at home over night. But what about people who park in the street?

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PostFeb 21, 2022#84

I get my EV fee for infrastructure from the state at the end of the year in the mail. I think $75.00 sounds right but not sure how the come up with that amount?

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PostFeb 21, 2022#85

leeharveyawesome wrote:
Feb 21, 2022
On its face it seems like electric cars are good idea. I'm just not so sure anymore.
They're are a good idea. Better than internal combustion.

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PostFeb 21, 2022#86


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PostFeb 22, 2022#87

Techstl wrote:
Feb 21, 2022
I get my EV fee for infrastructure from the state at the end of the year in the mail. I think $75.00 sounds right but not sure how the come up with that amount?
I don't know how, but the math seems reasonable
10,000 miles/ 25 mpg = 400 gal * 0.17 state fuel tax = $68

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PostApr 19, 2022#88

Looks like Toyota's Troy MO will get a small slice of the EV pie, investments.   $109 million dollar investment as reported by Post Dispatch

https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 50176.html

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PostJun 20, 2022#89

A bunch of Tesla chargers have been built at the front of the Green Street HQ. Nice to see more of these popping up.

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PostJun 23, 2022#90

Disappointing to see a reputable company buy into the Tesla ponzi scheme.

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PostJun 23, 2022#91

Is there a particular drawback to installing Tesla chargers? As long as they don't try to pull an Apple and can charge any kind of electric car I don't see the problem here

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PostJun 23, 2022#92

^Tesla did pull an Apple. If they're specifically Tesla charging stations then they can't charge anything but a Tesla. Everybody else uses a different connector. (And I don't believe it's something where a simple adaptor will work, either. Entirely different systems.)

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PostJun 24, 2022#93

symphonicpoet wrote:
Jun 23, 2022
^Tesla did pull an Apple. If they're specifically Tesla charging stations then they can't charge anything but a Tesla. Everybody else uses a different connector. (And I don't believe it's something where a simple adaptor will work, either. Entirely different systems.)
I thought they let every manufacturer use their charger tech for free. Thought I read that somewhere. 

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PostJun 24, 2022#94

Based on a quick internet search, it looks like you can charge a "regular" electric vehicle at a Tesla charging station using an adapter that costs a few hundred bucks.

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PostJun 24, 2022#95

^Apologies. In my remarkably superficial research I didn't find the dongle. But that still seems pretty closely parallel to the Apple incompatibility problem. One of these days I'll probably go full EV, but not Tesla. (Probably Toyota, truth be told. I'm perfectly capable of joining a cult, but I tend to prefer my cults stodgier and older.)

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PostJun 25, 2022#96

No apologies necessary. My bad if my comment came across as snarky...stupid internet. And I agree with you, the fact that one would even need a several-hundred-dollar adapter is stupid and unnecessary. It's one of the reasons I prefer Android over Apple devices.

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PostJun 25, 2022#97

^Nah, you're fine. I didn't realize you could buy a dongle. My Prius is too old to plug in anyway, so I haven't researched it as well as I should.

And yeah, three hundred bucks is a bit of an outlay. If you can afford a car you can probably afford an adaptor, but . . . why would you? I'm under the impression there's enough non-Tesla fast-charging stations out there now anyway for a lot of Eastern US trips. Technology Connections did a couple of videos on the subject recently.

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PostJun 25, 2022#98

Thought I read once and so was under the impression that Tesla doesn't care if other manufacturers use their charger design, but it's up to those manufacturers to do so, hence the dongle.

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PostJun 26, 2022#99

^"I don't care if you use our design." = "Pay me for royalties on IP, but not have to build your own stations." 

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PostJun 27, 2022#100

^Oh, I think other people are building DC fast charging stations quickly enough now. Just not with the patented Musk emitter. There's a universal standard now used by nearly everyone but Tesla. A quick glance shows a DC fast charging station with both CCS and the rather unusual Japanese standard CHAdeMO over behind the South Grand Commerce bank by Rooster. There's a bunch of other public chargers nearby, but maybe not with the DC option.

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