...Which you absolutely cannot do with electrics. Nearly every production car today has a 300+ mile range. Batteries to just double the range you can travel would be several hundred pounds at least, and most electrics can't travel even 300 miles. Continuing to use the Leaf, you'd need 4-5x the battery power to equal the range of the Versa - the existing battery weighing 480 lbs already makes that 1,920-2,400 lbs extra! Edmunds gives the GVW as 4,135 lbs - 805 lbs more than the regular Versa - already. Conversely, another 15 gallons of gas to travel 300-400 more miles in the Versa fits nicely in a container in the trunk, and would barely affect the use of the vehicle at all.Borgholio wrote:They carried much of their fuel with them.How did the early car industry deal with the time before the common gas station?
The best way to deal with that problem might be putting up wires, like what buses and trollies use, for cars to draw from. Unless some kind of nuclear battery works very well for cars...
Exactly. I think this is difficult to convey to people who don't experience it - you need a car to get anywhere around here. Not having one means a few-hour trip instead of a few-minute trip.That's not so much an issue with car culture as it is with the city planning being unsuited for mass transit.I'd argue most of us are more held hostage by the car culture. I can drive to school in 15 minutes, or take mass transit for 90 minutes (assuming no delays).