EV Owners Thread

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markemark

Veteran
I read that “the CyberTruck is 17 times more likely to have a fire fatality than a Ford Pinto”, a vehicle famous for randomly bursting into flames 😳
Fatality rates per 100,000 vehicles is 14.52 for the Tesla, 0.85 for the Pinto 🧐
https://cleantechnica.com/2025/02/10/new-fire-fatalities-report-adds-to-cybertruck-mystique

Having just come back from the States and seeing a number of Cybertrucks, they look lethal. The edges are so sharp that even a low speed collision looks like it will rip apart anything squidgy.
 

figbat

Slippery scientist
One difficulty with having a Cybertruck here is that is is steer-by-wire, which is not approvals in the UK. It’ll be a hell of a lot of work to install a physical steering system in its place.
 
OP
OP
icowden

icowden

Veteran
Location
Surrey
One difficulty with having a Cybertruck here is that is is steer-by-wire, which is not approvals in the UK. It’ll be a hell of a lot of work to install a physical steering system in its place.
Steer by wire is approved just not widely taken up
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
I'm not sure why you'd want one over here anyway. You'd be constantly getting stuck due to it being stupidly wide, and you'd never be able to park it anywhere.

People drive massive American trucks over here - there maybe one owner on this very thread (not me). :whistle:
 

DRM

Guru
Location
West Yorks
Will never get approved, hit a pedestrian, splat.

Not only that, i'm sure I saw something on the interweb about a lack of crumple zones, and the lighting being not to E.U spec, and would require a complete redesign for the lighting alone, so we won't be seeing them here any time soon
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
One difficulty with having a Cybertruck here is that is is steer-by-wire, which is not approvals in the UK. It’ll be a hell of a lot of work to install a physical steering system in its place.

You know those big things that fly across your towns and cities have been using steer by wire for decades.

The system on Tesla has redundancy back up systems
 

CXRAndy

Guru
Location
Lincs
I'm not sure why you'd want one over here anyway. You'd be constantly getting stuck due to it being stupidly wide, and you'd never be able to park it anywhere.
The Cybertruck is narrower than my Ford F150 Raptor (not the European Ford Raptor)
People drive massive American trucks over here - there maybe one owner on this very thread (not me). :whistle:
Yes me, I've driven through cities and MacDonald drive through.

It's a big old beastie, most other vehicles just get out of the way, it has 36" tyres so goes over most obstacles.

In the early years I would get folk taking pictures, kids pointing and cheering.

My kids were embarrassed to go to school in it, but then they found the other kids like to see it, so it all changed for getting lifts here and there 🤣

Big pick-ups are far more common -mine is pretty rare in the UK being a US model
 

DRM

Guru
Location
West Yorks
You know those big things that fly across your towns and cities have been using steer by wire for decades.

The system on Tesla has redundancy back up systems

As do aircraft, usually quadrupled back up, sometimes with a basic hydraulic back up too, but the bottom line is, if the steer generator fails, none of it will work in a car application
 

mustang1

Legendary Member
Location
London, UK
What's the deal with EV specific tyres?

The manufacturers claim advantages such as
A - electric cars have instant acceleration so need hard wearing tyres (I just call them hard compound tyres)
B - they need to last long (yeah, hard compound again)

Before EV cars, they were fast and slow. The fast cars has soft compound tyres, the slower cars didn't need cornering grip and acceleration and hard braking properties, so went with harder compound tyres.The harder compound tyres were cheaper.

Now, with EVs, aren't these cheaper, hard compound tyres, just being re-sold at a higher price, or are there some real differences between EV and "normal" tyres?
 
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