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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/03/2024 in all areas

  1. Ccap41 and @Robert Hall per the 2022, all Hybrids and EVs have to make a noise via Default setting by OEM or customer selectable sound, but must at 25mph and below create a noise that the disabled can hear. Federal Register :: Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Minimum Sound Requirements for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles
  2. It is eerie.....especially after being around ICE cars for almost 6 decades now. How are you doing, haven't seen you around as much? We need more electric car infrastructure.
  3. Just that it's been very frustrating charging his car... he lives downtown in an apartment--driving for Uber and Lyft while going to grad school, so he has to rely on public charging stations and he finds them hogged by people trying to get 100% and they are often out of order. Could be about the Honda...got out at my house and instead of a normal engine idling sound, I heard this humming. Just haven't been around Accord Hybrids before... or any hybrid for that matter--none in my reality context. (GM 1.5 and 3.6, FCA 3.6, and classic Ford Windsor 5.0 and 5.8 are what I have at home..)
  4. Wagon Tuesday....good morning everyone...
  5. Random daydreaming ...
  6. I was thinking along the lines of Taco Tuesday even though I'm heading out shortly for Greek food stateside.
  7. Yeah, I don't know why anyone would even consider an EV if they were stuck 100% publicly charging. That seems like a horrible decision.
  8. What'd the EV6 driver say about his charging adventures? As for the humming sound of the hybrid Honda, I believe they do that for safety reasons, that way it isn't creeping along at parking lot speeds literally silent. I think a few or most hybrids do this and I thought I read that it was so people can hear them at low speeds, where there's zero tire noise. I thought EVs were supposed to be doing this, as well, but I haven't noticed if they are or aren't. @Drew Dowdell could yo confirm this or tell me I'm wrong, hahaha?
  9. Adam is hilarious ... an automotive walking encyclopedia with a voice for radio ... I learned quite a bit here. 1:15 - I think the silhouette is sort of weird, with the squared-up greenhouse about the exact same proportions as the hood and trunk on either side of it ... this was the car to borrow from your parents to put your friends in the trunk and take them to the drive-in free of charge. These proportions are off. I'm sure they could have done something a little better. 2:00 - Am I to read that, for the downsize in 1977, it was the 425 ci V8, and, then, for this year only, there was a NA 368 ci divisional V8 before Cadillac started to do some weird things for a couple of years? 3:00 - I had no clue that the cylinder deactivation modules could be removed and it would become a normal 368 ci V8. However, if taking it through its smog or safety check, their seeing it deactivated would cause it to flunk, I believe. 10:00 - the amount of information in this strip gauge era was not enough. The temp gauge was sorely needed. Bull about how well engineered Caddy cooling systems were. On an heirloom 350 V8 Cutlass Supreme, the fan clutch was iffy and the car could run hot. We had that fixed. Then, the upper radiator hose had a mind of its own, which has nothing to do with the cooling system's engineering, and it would periodically form a bulge in one of its elbows. We had to carry a spare in the trunk. I was driving it east to go to school over 2,000 miles away, and one burst in the desert near St. George, UT. I had to wait for a long time for it to cool, put in the provisional one from the trunk, and then buy yet another one from a NAPA or sim. in St. George, UT. Needing a temperature gauge goes beyond how well the car is engineered because other things could cause an overheating problem. You just need the idiot light to turn on soon, so it steers you to keeping an eye on the temperature gauge. 11:45 - he feels the same way I do about these interiors. They were phenomenal for a long road trip and a feast for the eyes. Never say never; however, I don't think we'll experience some of the creature comforts from this chapter again. So, yes, this car does feel like a brief return to the pre-1977 GM full-size downsizing in which most of the models got slab sided and lost a little bit of their personalities in the process.
  10. Taking it easy and resting this weekend after a heavy month at work.. just tired. Got a concert tonight, but plan to rest most of the weekend, do a bit of grilling. Short work week next week then my vacation starting a week from today..
  11. I am so down with that kind of absurdity in this absurd world!
  12. Today is Warren Buffet's birthday per financial website power reading. It looks like 94. He lives in the same house he has lived in for decades. It cost something like $30,000. What sort of car does that buy today? He keeps cars for a long time. They say that those who are comfortable in their wealth don't fuss over the flash and cash of newer and expensive cars. Well, I keep cars for a long time. What the hell happened with me?!?
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