Electric vehicles are less likely to catch fire, but when they do, they are more difficult to contain.

    • @dragontamer
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      -11 year ago

      Sorry, typo fatality with cases. Hundreds of cases.

      In any event: your assertion that this is a “single case” is disproven. With 27 lifetime Ford Pinto deaths, Tesla is more than double the number of confirmed, explosive fire deaths

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Why do you keep bring up the Pinto? The “explosion” risk was overhyped by the media at the time and the stereotype of their danger was never even accurate. A story that seems all too familiar in these comments…

            • @dragontamer
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              1 year ago

              Funny you’re ignoring the blatant reality that I’ve got literal video footage of a Tesla exploding in this very thread.


              Also meme generator time:

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                Are you under the impression that this is the first time a vehicle has exploded? You’re ignoring the statistics that someone already provided you showing that these cars are involved in far fewer fires than others per capita. Your worldview seems backed and shaped by FUD in the media and straight up fictional movies.

                • @dragontamer
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                  1 year ago

                  Are you under the impression that this is the only case I’ve been talking about? I’ve brought up three separate cases in this thread so far, two of them locking the victims into the car while it exploded and 100% of the people inside the car dies.

                  Other car manufacturers have WORKING DOORS, beyond just electronic locks that immediately stop working in the case of battery fire.

                  There is a repeated problem here, and the EV community turning a blind eye to it is distasteful.