Don James and Poulsbo RV weep.All those rv shops on the Washington side of the border will relocateSounds like Idaho is gonna pick up some business!
Don James and Poulsbo RV weep.All those rv shops on the Washington side of the border will relocateSounds like Idaho is gonna pick up some business!
Pronouns, Meh. Another run-of-the-mill try-hard generational Shart.Doubt itI'd love to get a communication from a financial advisor with its pronouns and a "stolen lands" acknowledgement. I'd be worried that my 401(k) was going to be looted for the cause.I still see plenty.Says it all, doesn't it?
Plenty of people at work sign their emails with pronouns, some aggressive financial people who are working with my mom, and of course children who don't know any better think this stuff is normal because of SJWs and groomers in skools…
99.81% of the time it's silly virtue signaling
The new Tesla model S ($80k the way I'd order it) goes 130mph and 0-60 in 3 seconds. Plaid model ($96K for same config) does 200 mph and 0-60 in under 2 seconds. The model S has a 400 mile battery whereas the Plaid is 350. You get an 80% charge in 15 minutes. I'm not tree hugger and absolutely love driving fast. When they offer a deal to trade in my 10 year old model S and I get free charging for life extended to the new S, I'm taking that deal. I could have last year but thought they might come out with an even larger battery. I think I've seen some competition claiming 600 miles now. It an absolute blast to drive. It does better on snow and ice that any car I've ever owned. I can drive to Tahoe (all uphill) and back on a single charge or charge at the resort of choice or any number of chargers there. This notion of going uphill takes more energy is defeated by going downhill when you actually gain miles due to regenerative braking. I drive everywhere on the freeways going between 75 and 80 mph and have only lost 23% of the original 300 mile battery. This is after driving almost 300,000 miles in 10 years. I'm on the original brakes and have had no major repairs other than the assholes who have rear ended me twice at 50-60 mph when I was at a full stop and being side swiped on the freeway. You would never know driving my car. Sorry, the model S Tesla is the best car I've ever owned and that includes BMW, Audi, Acura, Jeep, Infiniti and Honda.Follow the SCIENCE. So Cali and states like Washington and Oregon who have tied there emission rules to the Cali standard are going to ban RV sales and registrations. No internal combustion engines allowed, just electric RVs which don't exist except for some small RV Camper Van prototypes which as seen below aren't functional. Since Oregon doesn't have a sales tax and a relatively low vehicle registration tax it is currently a mecca for RV sales. Kiss that good bye. Good thing leftards care so much about the working man in the US RV industry.https://instapundit.com/
https://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-gear/cars-trucks/review-winnebago-erv2/![]()
The Winnebago eRV2 is a promising new camper van slated for launch in early 2024. We took it for a five-day test drive to find out how practical it was for weekend trips and longer jaunts.
https://www.outsideonline.com/byline/robert-annis/Follow
![]()
Minutes after Winnebago introduced their https://winnebago.gcs-web.com/news-releases/news-release-details/winnebago-industries-reveals-e-rv-all-electric-motorhome-concept, I began hounding the company to let me take it for a spin. Thankfully, after unveiling their https://www.winnebago.com/all-electric, called the eRV2, earlier this year, they finally relented and agreed to let me borrow it for a five-day test drive in California.
The state has the most charging stations of any other in the country, so I chose to test the eRV2—which will likely be available to consumers early next year—north of the Bay Area, believing it would likely have the best ratio of chargers to gorgeous scenery. I wanted to test the range of the vehicle, the amenities, and the overall comfort to see if it was a practical vehicle for both weekend road trips and extended jaunts. Here’s what I found out.
Let’s address the massive elephant in the room right off the bat. Built on Ford’s eTransit platform, the eRV2 that I drove had a claimed range of about 108 miles. That distance quickly shrinks if you speed, accelerate too quickly, or travel uphill for long distances. If you keep the cruise control to 55 MPH, you might be able to stretch it … a little. Because charging https://www.transportation.gov/rural/ev/toolkit/ev-basics/charging-speed to a virtual crawl after you reach 80-85 percent, you’re left with an effective range of between 80 and 90 miles (at best) during the bulk of your driving day. Think about it like this: for every 90 minutes you drive, you need to spend around 45 minutes at a fast charger before you can get going again.
NoooooooooooooooooDrill, Baby, Drill.
None of that has anything to do with RV's. Your Tesla also depreciates by 50% in 2 years.The new Tesla model S ($80k the way I'd order it) goes 130mph and 0-60 in 3 seconds. Plaid model ($96K for same config) does 200 mph and 0-60 in under 2 seconds. The model S has a 400 mile battery whereas the Plaid is 350. You get an 80% charge in 15 minutes. I'm not tree hugger and absolutely love driving fast. When they offer a deal to trade in my 10 year old model S and I get free charging for life extended to the new S, I'm taking that deal. I could have last year but thought they might come out with an even larger battery. I think I've seen some competition claiming 600 miles now. It an absolute blast to drive. It does better on snow and ice that any car I've ever owned. I can drive to Tahoe (all uphill) and back on a single charge or charge at the resort of choice or any number of chargers there. This notion of going uphill takes more energy is defeated by going downhill when you actually gain miles due to regenerative braking. I drive everywhere on the freeways going between 75 and 80 mph and have only lost 23% of the original 300 mile battery. This is after driving almost 300,000 miles in 10 years. I'm on the original brakes and have had no major repairs other than the assholes who have rear ended me twice at 50-60 mph when I was at a full stop and being side swiped on the freeway. You would never know driving my car. Sorry, the model S Tesla is the best car I've ever owned and that includes BMW, Audi, Acura, Jeep, Infiniti and Honda.Follow the SCIENCE. So Cali and states like Washington and Oregon who have tied there emission rules to the Cali standard are going to ban RV sales and registrations. No internal combustion engines allowed, just electric RVs which don't exist except for some small RV Camper Van prototypes which as seen below aren't functional. Since Oregon doesn't have a sales tax and a relatively low vehicle registration tax it is currently a mecca for RV sales. Kiss that good bye. Good thing leftards care so much about the working man in the US RV industry.https://instapundit.com/
https://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-gear/cars-trucks/review-winnebago-erv2/![]()
The Winnebago eRV2 is a promising new camper van slated for launch in early 2024. We took it for a five-day test drive to find out how practical it was for weekend trips and longer jaunts.
https://www.outsideonline.com/byline/robert-annis/Follow
![]()
Minutes after Winnebago introduced their https://winnebago.gcs-web.com/news-releases/news-release-details/winnebago-industries-reveals-e-rv-all-electric-motorhome-concept, I began hounding the company to let me take it for a spin. Thankfully, after unveiling their https://www.winnebago.com/all-electric, called the eRV2, earlier this year, they finally relented and agreed to let me borrow it for a five-day test drive in California.
The state has the most charging stations of any other in the country, so I chose to test the eRV2—which will likely be available to consumers early next year—north of the Bay Area, believing it would likely have the best ratio of chargers to gorgeous scenery. I wanted to test the range of the vehicle, the amenities, and the overall comfort to see if it was a practical vehicle for both weekend road trips and extended jaunts. Here’s what I found out.
Let’s address the massive elephant in the room right off the bat. Built on Ford’s eTransit platform, the eRV2 that I drove had a claimed range of about 108 miles. That distance quickly shrinks if you speed, accelerate too quickly, or travel uphill for long distances. If you keep the cruise control to 55 MPH, you might be able to stretch it … a little. Because charging https://www.transportation.gov/rural/ev/toolkit/ev-basics/charging-speed to a virtual crawl after you reach 80-85 percent, you’re left with an effective range of between 80 and 90 miles (at best) during the bulk of your driving day. Think about it like this: for every 90 minutes you drive, you need to spend around 45 minutes at a fast charger before you can get going again.
I haven't been in the car market for some time now but aren't most decent cars in the $60K range now? If I was younger again and trying to work my way up in the world, I wouldn't buy new. I'd buy a used car buy one that had a lot of useful life left.I've no problem with the free market. But the average Joe isn't buying an $80k auto. To pretend otherwise and make Joe by an EV is just pretending you care (not you -but the green leftards). Pretending that you can buy a full size EV RV is just that. Pretending.
Except for Tesla, the business plan for all the companies manufacturing electric vehicles in the United States has been government mandating that customers buy EVs, and then the government also providing huge incentives to customers and manufacturers to make the sale of the unwanted EVs feasible.President-elect Donald Trump's transition team is planning to kill the $7,500 consumer tax credit for electric-vehicle purchases as part of broader tax-reform legislation, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
Ford and GM may just have to give up on the EV fairy-tale and go back to profitably manufacturing gasoline-powered cars for that huge mass market, while Tesla profitably corners the EV niche.Ending the tax credit could have grave implications for an already stalling U.S. EV transition. And yet representatives of Tesla - by far the nation's largest EV seller - have told a Trump-transition committee they support ending the subsidy, said the two sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Elon Musk, one of Trump's biggest backers and the world's richest person, said earlier this year that killing the subsidy might slightly hurt Tesla sales but would devastate its U.S. EV competitors, which include legacy automakers such as General Motors.