I am firmly convinced the more something costs vs it’s useful value, the less the owner actually cares about it beyond the “bling” factor.
So, a $150k “truck” that is as useful as a $40k truck, likely is just owned as a “look at me, I’m rich” and the owner doesn’t care if it breaks, just that they are considered “rich” among their peers.
We’re lucky if people get charged for manslaughter when they run somebody over deliberately. And if the person they kill is a cyclist, we’re lucky if they get charged with anything at all.
Theoretically yes, but it depends on the capabilities of the police officers at the scene to deduce that the fatal accident was likely caused by the quality of your tires and any prosecuting attorneys or lawyers attached to the accident after the fact.
I am looking forward to lighter weight batteries with larger drive range that should be coming out in the near future but I’m also holding off on getting an electric vehicle until these issues are sorted out.
Plus, one of the largest sources of pollution in the form of forever chemicals comes from vehicle tires so we definitely need to fucking work on that.
I’ve always been told Charles Goodyear was a really great guy and a hard-working inventor and I feel like he would be rolling over in his grave to know that the reason why so many fish are dying out is because of his invention.
I too am very concerned about pollution from tire particles. Although, I can’t even begin to consider electric anyway because there’s no infrastructure in my area, and I can’t get permission to install a charger.
Extremely heavy + low-end torque = bald tires, pronto!
But if you can afford this, you should not be cheaping out on the tires. Who would spend so much to ignore maintenance?
I am firmly convinced the more something costs vs it’s useful value, the less the owner actually cares about it beyond the “bling” factor.
So, a $150k “truck” that is as useful as a $40k truck, likely is just owned as a “look at me, I’m rich” and the owner doesn’t care if it breaks, just that they are considered “rich” among their peers.
Can you be charged for manslaughter if you drive a car with worn tires that causes an accident that kills someone? I sure hope so for all our sake.
We’re lucky if people get charged for manslaughter when they run somebody over deliberately. And if the person they kill is a cyclist, we’re lucky if they get charged with anything at all.
So, realistically, no. 😡
Theoretically yes, but it depends on the capabilities of the police officers at the scene to deduce that the fatal accident was likely caused by the quality of your tires and any prosecuting attorneys or lawyers attached to the accident after the fact.
I am looking forward to lighter weight batteries with larger drive range that should be coming out in the near future but I’m also holding off on getting an electric vehicle until these issues are sorted out.
Plus, one of the largest sources of pollution in the form of forever chemicals comes from vehicle tires so we definitely need to fucking work on that.
I’ve always been told Charles Goodyear was a really great guy and a hard-working inventor and I feel like he would be rolling over in his grave to know that the reason why so many fish are dying out is because of his invention.
I too am very concerned about pollution from tire particles. Although, I can’t even begin to consider electric anyway because there’s no infrastructure in my area, and I can’t get permission to install a charger.
Do tyres contain PFAS? I thought that the fish issue was that some of the rubber additives mimicted fish hormones.
There is only one tire that fits on that shitty rim as far as i know
There’s options (285/65r20 if you want to look) it’s the weight that’s the issue
Tech bros