Cannot believe the thread has made it this far without mentioning their freshly roasted and hot sugar-coated pecans and cashews. Nothing like 2,000 calories in a bag that will fit in your hand and be gone 10 miles down the road.
There was an article about it recently in the Sun Herald, so that’s a pretty ****** job of them if they didn’t fact-check themselves. And the property is across the interstate from the golf course so I have no idea why that would even been an issue.
5. Pastrami Reuben and homemade chips. Pretzel bun, sauerkraut, fried onion crisps, delicious....
Oh I’ve had them, just don’t think they are all that great. Granted, I’m a salty snack guy, not a sweet snack guy so I may be biased.You've evidently never had them. I can tell since you used the word "instead". Truth of the matter is they are puffs with caramel AND cheese on them.
Yes. I' not sure if the hundreds of vehicles are willing to wait to spend 30-45 minutes for a charge though.
I'm a big fan of EV tech. But until there's a battery that can give you 500 miles on a 15 minute charge at home, its not going to happen in Middle America.
How long were you in Buc-ees?
You want a 500 mile battery to charge in 15 minutes at home?
Just back of the envelope, the best EV's (which are way more fuel efficient than petrol or diesel) use 250W/Mile. So you'd need a 140 kwh battery. 140 kWh is 504 million watts. To put 140 Kw in something in 15 minutes you'd need, at least, a 150 amp 4160 V 3 Phase circuit or a 50 amp 11kV 3 phase circuit
That's not going to happen anywhere.
There was an article about it recently in the Sun Herald, so that’s a pretty ****** job of them if they didn’t fact-check themselves. And the property is across the interstate from the golf course so I have no idea why that would even been an issue.
They were never fined. They were sued by the owner of a dumpy truck stop at the next exit. But it has not been to trial. Likely a frivolous lawsuit because the owner knows he is going to be put out of business by the Buc-ee's
Thus, our point. While noble, the technology isn't there yet for rapid, widespread rollout of EV.
I don’t get the love for the beaver nuggets, they are cheese puffs with Carmel corn instead of cheese on them.
Thus, our point. While noble, the technology isn't there yet for rapid, widespread rollout of EV.
Is Buc-ee's a place that Hugh Freeze would feel at home in?
Average length of time an american owns a car is 7-12 years.
Development time for a new car is 5-7 years (which is why Hyundai has a 2040 target for eliminating gas cars)
If only we had a president that wanted to update the power grid and infrastructure....
To Make it relevant to the OP, do you think you could spend 30-45 minutes in a buc-ees during a electric car charge? Think there is enough to do, eat, drink and see?
Edler care workers not being slaves doesn't mean they are infrastructure.Or he could push an infrastructure bill that creates US jobs. (hint "elder care" workers are not slaves that work for free)
Yes, they are, and they are what, half of the proposed spending of the "infrastructure plan"?Power Grid is infrastructure.
As is internet, roads, bridges, ports, railroads,airports, water,
Not really. Might be good things to spend money on or not, but not really infrastructure.schools, hospitals, etc.
Yes, but depending on how low your threshold is for "widespread adoption", I think you'll see a lot of inroads made with two vehicle homes as better model options come out at prices within spitting distance of the ICE alternative. Of course, that's sort of a different way of saying your two options, as a lot of the better models are becoming available as improved battery technology means you don't have to have a small car to get decent range.The GOP had 4 years to get something done about infrastructure, and a bill never hit the floor.
One of 2 things needs to change for widespread adoption of EV's. 1) reduce the cost to below fossil fuel cars or 2) increase real world range.
We can't build high speed rail without a massive change in regulatory climate. I'm not sure it would make sense regardless, as the places that it makes the most sense tend to be densely populated and so expensive places to put new rail in.I guess americans could change how they travel if we had an expansion in high speed rail like china has since 2007.
Despite what you may hear in the news, we are many years away from a majority of cars being electric. It has nothing to do with manufacturing the cars or the battery technology. It’s the power grid. The current grid is nowhere near being able to handle charging up everyone’s car right now. And it will take many many many years to get there.
Or he could push an infrastructure bill that creates US jobs. (hint "elder care" workers are not slaves that work for free)
Power Grid is infrastructure.
As is internet, roads, bridges, ports, railroads,airports, water, schools, hospitals, etc.
The GOP had 4 years to get something done about infrastructure, and a bill never hit the floor.
One of 2 things needs to change for widespread adoption of EV's. 1) reduce the cost to below fossil fuel cars or 2) increase real world range.
I guess americans could change how they travel if we had an expansion in high speed rail like china has since 2007.
I was just spit balling, but y"all need to understand what is happening in the auto industry. In less than 10 years, there will be no gasoline engine vehicles produced by any major manufacturers in the US.
EVs are only affordable to most now because of government tax credits and free charging in a lot of places. In some instances, they don't even pay a road tax.
"Thus, our point. While noble, the technology isn't there yet for rapid, widespread rollout of automobiles." Horsewhip & wagon manufacturers, c. 1915
This one might be worth placing a wager on. Maybe by 2040 or 2050, but not 2030.
Is Buc-ee's a place that Hugh Freeze would feel at home in?
My batteries are under warranty for 8 years and 150,000 miles.
How much does a new engine cost? Transmission? Are the prices on new engines falling? Because battery prices are.