• JJROKCZ
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    1 year ago

    Idk Motorola seems to be doing fine in several markets still and there’s plenty of time for the Japanese car brands to come around on EV cars. Wish their bike brands would get their shit together and get some good EV motorcycles on the market sub $20k

    I don’t see America embracing Chinese cars anytime soon, if they even get certified for sale here. I would love to see Nio’s approach to battery swapping at stations over charging take off but anti-sino sentiments are strong here

    • @NIB
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      1 year ago

      Motorola(Mobility, ie phones) is an american brand that has been bought by the chinese Lenovo.

      • @devnull406
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        31 year ago

        Fun fact - there was a very popular record player brand Victrola, and a company that was making car radios and used a similar sounding name… The Moto-rola and they are/were very much an American company.

      • JJROKCZ
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        61 year ago

        Battery swapping and having a bank of charged/charging batteries at the station is still faster than waiting 30-45 minutes for the fast charger to recharge a nearly depleted battery. And fast chargers are not common yet, not nearly enough in my city to replace the thousands of gas pumps at least

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          It’s well under 30 minutes for most cars now. Besides, with the number of makes and models of electric vehicles on the road today, the chances of manufacturers agreeing on one model of pack is slim to none. It also doesn’t help that most battery packs are water cooled, which adds complexity to the design.

          A model 3 is more like fifteen minutes charge time now.

          • JJROKCZ
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            11 year ago

            If a model 3 really charges in 15 minutes then every single model 3 driver at my work and the stations near me is an ass for sitting in the EV chargers far longer than that

            • Tar_Alcaran
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              1 year ago

              it’s 20 minutes for 20% -> 80%, assuming it’s a 150kW charger. Nobody has a 150kW charger at their home or office, unless they happen to work at the local powerplant and/or charging station.

              0%->100% at home, at 7kW-11kW is going to take basically a workday (and change) depending on battery size.

              • JJROKCZ
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                11 year ago

                Ah so that guy is just lying, coolio. Kinda what i figured