I wonder how the batteries would handle a 2900 watt digitally processed 12 speaker focal audio system?
I wonder if that would hurt the miles per charge? |
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Early Model S had issues with motors. They changed all out for free as part of their 8 yr, infinite mile warranty. That warranty covers everything. They since decided they couldn't trust others to build their drive train, and brought the manufacturing in house. The goal is a one million mile guarantee. Given the semi uses the same motors as the Model 3, and the semi has a million mile guarantee, they are there. Model X had reliability issues with the falcon wing doors mostly. It was brand new tech. Those issue have almost completely been resolved. They get bad marks for taking the risk of innovating. Something Detroit hasn't done since electronic fuel injection. The risk is too great for them. They're pussies. They even got away from vertical integration after Japan ate their lunch in the 80's. Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk |
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Exciting stuff!
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amazing! The future is now!
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5 yrs later they'll all be automated and the poor truckers are out of business however. Not too mention undercutting the oil industry etc... I love it, but I also work in automation and see the future is bleak for the everyday worker.
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If they made 10 cars in the last hour of Q3, they achieved said goal. Only Wall Street would never report it that way b/c they focus on short-term, not long-term. Such is the nature of the daily closing bell. The ramp will involve a lot of downtime to adjust line components for max efficiency. That's how production line optimization works. Only most companies slow the ramp to reduce downtime and increase production. That's not something Tesla is interested in. For them, long-term outweighs short-term. Their big bottleneck is in the battery production gigafactory in Sparks, Nevada. An unnamed systems integrator(probably Panasonic) dropped the ball on battery production ramp and Tesla learned of the problem too late. They had to completely rewrite 20-30 man years of software in a matter of weeks. Also had to rework many electrical and mechanical components. To rewrite all that software likely took loads of manpower. I'd estimate 500+ software programmers/engineers. This is likely why the improvement of autopilot 2.0 has suffered as a result. |
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There's no way to avoid a bloody revolution against the rich, and a luddite revolution against their machines without universal basic income. The worst part of the impending future is the lack of privacy and freedom for the independent spirit. People who crave that will need to go to Mars. Unless of course technology also allows us to reclaim much of the developed land. City densification and improved farming techniques such as vertical and container gardening should help. |
Checked out Cummins?
https://cleantechnica.com/2017/11/14...c-truck-party/ <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/w2SGUGMlNAU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Quote:
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The initial goal was 5000/wk, not 1500/wk. |
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At announcing these goals, they stated they were lofty and probably unachievable, such is the nature of an Elon Musk goal. They've since readjusted their stated goal to reach 5000/week run rate to end of Q1 2018. Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk |
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Cummins is Class 7 with a 100 mile range(don't see economics working), and Daimler is Class 8 with 220 miles of range. Daimler might be an option for local routes or farmers if they can compete on price. |
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