OT: Can you make sense of this...

A

amdx

Guest
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

> https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

 It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


--
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.

Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20 drops per second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline with free electricity.
 
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20 drops per second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline with free electricity.

So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

I.e., in our case, our average rate of travel (measured by the car)
is ~19MPH (we only drive \"in town\" and, despite 45MPH speed limits,
there are enough stop lights to keep the average speed that low; I
wonder what it must be like in a REAL city!).

And, given the stop-n-go nature of our driving -- plus the fact that
the ACbrrr has to run even when you\'re making no forward progress -- our
\"in town\" mileage is only around 22MPG (that doubles as soon as we get
on the highway).

So, spend an hour charging the vehicle in order to drive it for an hour?
Seems *insanely* inefficient! We spend ~5 minutes (10 if there\'s a queue)
to get ~350 \"in town\" miles loaded into the tank.
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 1:28:43 PM UTC-7, Don Y wrote:
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20 drops per second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline with free electricity.
So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

It depends. With fast charging and the battery is empty, it might take around 15 to 20 minutes.
 
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:
 North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


 It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.

There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot.\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i.e.
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 4:28:43 PM UTC-4, Don Y wrote:
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20 drops per second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline with free electricity.
So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

I.e., in our case, our average rate of travel (measured by the car)
is ~19MPH (we only drive \"in town\" and, despite 45MPH speed limits,
there are enough stop lights to keep the average speed that low; I
wonder what it must be like in a REAL city!).

And, given the stop-n-go nature of our driving -- plus the fact that
the ACbrrr has to run even when you\'re making no forward progress -- our
\"in town\" mileage is only around 22MPG (that doubles as soon as we get
on the highway).

So, spend an hour charging the vehicle in order to drive it for an hour?
Seems *insanely* inefficient! We spend ~5 minutes (10 if there\'s a queue)
to get ~350 \"in town\" miles loaded into the tank.

I always find it amusing to watch one idiot complain about something said by another idiot.

Just so you are aware. Normal people charge BEVs at home, every night. So we don\'t use \"chargers\" unless we are on a trip. Even then, we don\'t spend hours charging to go a hundred miles. The Tesla Superchargers can charge later model cars at 1000 mph. Yup, mine won\'t charge faster than around 500 mph because it is older and because it is the electrical equivalent of a gas hog only getting 3 miles to a kWh (or $0.033 per mile rather than $0.025).

Ed Lee lives in his own little world where he bought a ragged out Leaf which had a small battery to begin with. Now the battery is not much more powerful than a couple of D cells. So he has to get towed between chargers when taking a trip. Not the sort of person you consult for advice on BEVs.

I had to charge on the way home the other day, but that worked well for me as it gave me time to have a shrimp sandwich and a pint after a long day of work.

--

Rick C.

- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:25:51 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:

North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot.\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i.e.
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!

Depending on where you are, there are lots of level 2 chargers that don\'t bother with the cost of the electricity. Hotels in particular have them. I\'ve never seen one that was in any way protected from just anyone using it. Heck, in one location it had a sign with an 800 number if you couldn\'t get your XYZ card to work (I had one) and they just turned it on for free. Public transportation also offers them.

The idea of requiring free gasoline along with free charging is interesting.. Normally laws are passed to solve a problem. I\'m wondering what problem free charging is causing? Maybe it\'s because Tesla didn\'t move their headquarters to North Carolina???

--

Rick C.

+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 7/17/2022 4:28 PM, Don Y wrote:
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the
Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one
drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20
drops per second.  We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline
with free electricity.

So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

I.e., in our case, our average rate of travel (measured by the car)
is ~19MPH (we only drive \"in town\" and, despite 45MPH speed limits,
there are enough stop lights to keep the average speed that low; I
wonder what it must be like in a REAL city!).

And, given the stop-n-go nature of our driving -- plus the fact that
the ACbrrr has to run even when you\'re making no forward progress -- our
\"in town\" mileage is only around 22MPG (that doubles as soon as we get
on the highway).

So, spend an hour charging the vehicle in order to drive it for an hour?
Seems *insanely* inefficient!  We spend ~5 minutes (10 if there\'s a queue)
to get ~350 \"in town\" miles loaded into the tank.

Most of the energy in the fuel goes to heat the Universe, I\'m definitely
not paying for gas car driver\'s free fuel to heat the Universe, any more
than my Mom wanted to pay for me leaving the sliding door to the den
open in the winter when I was a kid..
 
On Monday, 18 July 2022 at 00:31:21 UTC+2, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 4:28:43 PM UTC-4, Don Y wrote:
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20 drops per second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline with free electricity.
So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

I.e., in our case, our average rate of travel (measured by the car)
is ~19MPH (we only drive \"in town\" and, despite 45MPH speed limits,
there are enough stop lights to keep the average speed that low; I
wonder what it must be like in a REAL city!).

And, given the stop-n-go nature of our driving -- plus the fact that
the ACbrrr has to run even when you\'re making no forward progress -- our
\"in town\" mileage is only around 22MPG (that doubles as soon as we get
on the highway).

So, spend an hour charging the vehicle in order to drive it for an hour?
Seems *insanely* inefficient! We spend ~5 minutes (10 if there\'s a queue)
to get ~350 \"in town\" miles loaded into the tank.
I always find it amusing to watch one idiot complain about something said by another idiot.

Just so you are aware. Normal people charge BEVs at home, every night. So we don\'t use \"chargers\" unless we are on a trip. Even then, we don\'t spend hours charging to go a hundred miles. The Tesla Superchargers can charge later model cars at 1000 mph. Yup, mine won\'t charge faster than around 500 mph because it is older and because it is the electrical equivalent of a gas hog only getting 3 miles to a kWh (or $0.033 per mile rather than $0.025)..

Ed Lee lives in his own little world where he bought a ragged out Leaf which had a small battery to begin with. Now the battery is not much more powerful than a couple of D cells. So he has to get towed between chargers when taking a trip. Not the sort of person you consult for advice on BEVs.

I had to charge on the way home the other day, but that worked well for me as it gave me time to have a shrimp sandwich and a pint after a long day of work.

--
stop your bullshit
no EV chargers on the go, so ppl give up EV fake
 
On Monday, 18 July 2022 at 00:46:01 UTC+2, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 4:28 PM, Don Y wrote:
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the
Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one
drop of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20
drops per second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline
with free electricity.

So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

I.e., in our case, our average rate of travel (measured by the car)
is ~19MPH (we only drive \"in town\" and, despite 45MPH speed limits,
there are enough stop lights to keep the average speed that low; I
wonder what it must be like in a REAL city!).

And, given the stop-n-go nature of our driving -- plus the fact that
the ACbrrr has to run even when you\'re making no forward progress -- our
\"in town\" mileage is only around 22MPG (that doubles as soon as we get
on the highway).

So, spend an hour charging the vehicle in order to drive it for an hour?
Seems *insanely* inefficient! We spend ~5 minutes (10 if there\'s a queue)
to get ~350 \"in town\" miles loaded into the tank.

Most of the energy in the fuel goes to heat the Universe, I\'m definitely
not paying for gas car driver\'s free fuel to heat the Universe, any more
than my Mom wanted to pay for me leaving the sliding door to the den
open in the winter when I was a kid..
---Most of the energy in the fuel goes to heat the Universe,

don\'t be silly, learn more about the energy emitted b y the Sun
 
On 7/17/2022 6:35 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:25:51 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:

North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot.\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i.e.
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!

Depending on where you are, there are lots of level 2 chargers that don\'t bother with the cost of the electricity. Hotels in particular have them. I\'ve never seen one that was in any way protected from just anyone using it. Heck, in one location it had a sign with an 800 number if you couldn\'t get your XYZ card to work (I had one) and they just turned it on for free. Public transportation also offers them.

I know some hotels in Boston and Providence have free chargers for
patrons but the great majority of them are locked down in parking
garages with hourly or daily rates, I tend to consider these \"pay
chargers\" however you pay for them. Same thing with train stations.

Whether any hotels out in the \'burbs have free Level 2 chargers you can
just swoop into an open lot and use I admit I haven\'t deeply
investigated, I rarely stay in hotels near my home, lol.

The charger at my doctor\'s office and all the chargers at Audubon
sanctuaries in MA all something like 25 cent a kWh or so.


The idea of requiring free gasoline along with free charging is interesting. Normally laws are passed to solve a problem. I\'m wondering what problem free charging is causing? Maybe it\'s because Tesla didn\'t move their headquarters to North Carolina???

Laws made by your local Republicans are generally designed to \"solve\"
made-up problems that Fox News et al have propagandized all the
credulous stupos into believing; like that leftists have secretly made
it so there are thousands of totally free public chargers across the
state giving out millions of YOUR TAX DOLLARS in electricity every day
to the wealthy EV-drivng \"parasites at the top\", while meanwhile the
dirty poors and blacks \"parasites at the bottom\" rob them from below
with SSI and Section 8.

It doesn\'t generally tend to occur to the Fox News fanclub that if there
were actually so much free shit on offer anywhere America would likely
be a much different place than it is.
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 2:28:50 PM UTC-4, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.

If they want to be equitable, does that mean all gas stations will be required to sell diesel as well as electricity?

Will they apply the same principle to free samples in the stores? If you give this product away for free, you have to give away samples of every product?

Sometimes, it does boggle the mind.

--

Rick C.

-- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:58:23 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 6:35 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:25:51 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:

North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot.\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i.e..
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!

Depending on where you are, there are lots of level 2 chargers that don\'t bother with the cost of the electricity. Hotels in particular have them. I\'ve never seen one that was in any way protected from just anyone using it. Heck, in one location it had a sign with an 800 number if you couldn\'t get your XYZ card to work (I had one) and they just turned it on for free. Public transportation also offers them.
I know some hotels in Boston and Providence have free chargers for
patrons but the great majority of them are locked down in parking
garages with hourly or daily rates, I tend to consider these \"pay
chargers\" however you pay for them. Same thing with train stations.

I think that is just the city environment where you pay for the air and water.


Whether any hotels out in the \'burbs have free Level 2 chargers you can
just swoop into an open lot and use I admit I haven\'t deeply
investigated, I rarely stay in hotels near my home, lol.

Absolutely true. It\'s kinda like what they said about nuclear plants, \"too cheap to meter\". It\'s not worth the hassle of dealing with something that would bring in so little revenue.


The charger at my doctor\'s office and all the chargers at Audubon
sanctuaries in MA all something like 25 cent a kWh or so.

How do you pay for them? That\'s the problem.


The idea of requiring free gasoline along with free charging is interesting. Normally laws are passed to solve a problem. I\'m wondering what problem free charging is causing? Maybe it\'s because Tesla didn\'t move their headquarters to North Carolina???

Laws made by your local Republicans are generally designed to \"solve\"
made-up problems that Fox News et al have propagandized all the
credulous stupos into believing; like that leftists have secretly made
it so there are thousands of totally free public chargers across the
state giving out millions of YOUR TAX DOLLARS in electricity every day
to the wealthy EV-drivng \"parasites at the top\", while meanwhile the
dirty poors and blacks \"parasites at the bottom\" rob them from below
with SSI and Section 8.

That\'s no lie. I love all the free charging at the government\'s expense. They actually take my charging costs off my electric bill. Isn\'t that swell?


It doesn\'t generally tend to occur to the Fox News fanclub that if there
were actually so much free shit on offer anywhere America would likely
be a much different place than it is.

\"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh. He said \"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh...

--

Rick C.

-+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 7/17/2022 6:59 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 2:28:50 PM UTC-4, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.

If they want to be equitable, does that mean all gas stations will be required to sell diesel as well as electricity?

Will they apply the same principle to free samples in the stores? If you give this product away for free, you have to give away samples of every product?

Sometimes, it does boggle the mind.

I think basically what will happen at worst is that DPWs won\'t make
their chargers open to the public anymore, and maybe some businesses
that have Level 2 destination chargers that weren\'t making any money on
them to begin with will shut them down.

Oh well. There\'s a bunch of overpriced Level 2 chargers around me in
random places that nobody ever uses, it\'s already yesterday\'s tech I
don\'t care a bit if they\'re removed either, I\'ve always thought the
whole chargers on every street corner thing was a fucking gimmick anyway.

In the future most people will charge their cars at home most of the
time and hit up charge stations like Tesla has for long trips. I expect
the overall effect on EV adoption in NC if it passes will be close to zero
 
On Monday, 18 July 2022 at 01:04:20 UTC+2, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:58:23 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 6:35 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:25:51 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:

North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot.\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i..e.
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!

Depending on where you are, there are lots of level 2 chargers that don\'t bother with the cost of the electricity. Hotels in particular have them. I\'ve never seen one that was in any way protected from just anyone using it. Heck, in one location it had a sign with an 800 number if you couldn\'t get your XYZ card to work (I had one) and they just turned it on for free. Public transportation also offers them.
I know some hotels in Boston and Providence have free chargers for
patrons but the great majority of them are locked down in parking
garages with hourly or daily rates, I tend to consider these \"pay
chargers\" however you pay for them. Same thing with train stations.
I think that is just the city environment where you pay for the air and water.
Whether any hotels out in the \'burbs have free Level 2 chargers you can
just swoop into an open lot and use I admit I haven\'t deeply
investigated, I rarely stay in hotels near my home, lol.
Absolutely true. It\'s kinda like what they said about nuclear plants, \"too cheap to meter\". It\'s not worth the hassle of dealing with something that would bring in so little revenue.
The charger at my doctor\'s office and all the chargers at Audubon
sanctuaries in MA all something like 25 cent a kWh or so.
How do you pay for them? That\'s the problem.
The idea of requiring free gasoline along with free charging is interesting. Normally laws are passed to solve a problem. I\'m wondering what problem free charging is causing? Maybe it\'s because Tesla didn\'t move their headquarters to North Carolina???

Laws made by your local Republicans are generally designed to \"solve\"
made-up problems that Fox News et al have propagandized all the
credulous stupos into believing; like that leftists have secretly made
it so there are thousands of totally free public chargers across the
state giving out millions of YOUR TAX DOLLARS in electricity every day
to the wealthy EV-drivng \"parasites at the top\", while meanwhile the
dirty poors and blacks \"parasites at the bottom\" rob them from below
with SSI and Section 8.
That\'s no lie. I love all the free charging at the government\'s expense. They actually take my charging costs off my electric bill. Isn\'t that swell?
It doesn\'t generally tend to occur to the Fox News fanclub that if there
were actually so much free shit on offer anywhere America would likely
be a much different place than it is.
\"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh. He said \"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh...

--

Ricky, don\'t be silly

we don\'t buy EV Teslas, since no fast chargers on-the-go and energy costs doubled recently
so it makes on sense to buy Tesla
and charge it the whole day

There is no solution to the problem of scarcity of EV-chargers since
it\'s all about logistics and time spent at EV-chargers

Your Tesla spam , makes us sick

----+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-+ Tesla referral code - htt... rd11...09

Not interested
Tesla is down and may collapse within 12 months due to general global crisis

I buy Twitter.. was an old marketing fake ( I can afford to buy Twitter)
\\
But life is Brutal and full of Zasadzkas
But life is always for real

so stop your day dreaming

We don\'t buy Teslas, since it makes no sense to spend months at EV-chargers
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 7:15:07 PM UTC-4, a a wrote:
On Monday, 18 July 2022 at 01:04:20 UTC+2, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:58:23 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 6:35 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:25:51 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:

North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway.. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot..\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i.e.
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!

Depending on where you are, there are lots of level 2 chargers that don\'t bother with the cost of the electricity. Hotels in particular have them. I\'ve never seen one that was in any way protected from just anyone using it. Heck, in one location it had a sign with an 800 number if you couldn\'t get your XYZ card to work (I had one) and they just turned it on for free. Public transportation also offers them.
I know some hotels in Boston and Providence have free chargers for
patrons but the great majority of them are locked down in parking
garages with hourly or daily rates, I tend to consider these \"pay
chargers\" however you pay for them. Same thing with train stations.
I think that is just the city environment where you pay for the air and water.
Whether any hotels out in the \'burbs have free Level 2 chargers you can
just swoop into an open lot and use I admit I haven\'t deeply
investigated, I rarely stay in hotels near my home, lol.
Absolutely true. It\'s kinda like what they said about nuclear plants, \"too cheap to meter\". It\'s not worth the hassle of dealing with something that would bring in so little revenue.
The charger at my doctor\'s office and all the chargers at Audubon
sanctuaries in MA all something like 25 cent a kWh or so.
How do you pay for them? That\'s the problem.
The idea of requiring free gasoline along with free charging is interesting. Normally laws are passed to solve a problem. I\'m wondering what problem free charging is causing? Maybe it\'s because Tesla didn\'t move their headquarters to North Carolina???

Laws made by your local Republicans are generally designed to \"solve\"
made-up problems that Fox News et al have propagandized all the
credulous stupos into believing; like that leftists have secretly made
it so there are thousands of totally free public chargers across the
state giving out millions of YOUR TAX DOLLARS in electricity every day
to the wealthy EV-drivng \"parasites at the top\", while meanwhile the
dirty poors and blacks \"parasites at the bottom\" rob them from below
with SSI and Section 8.
That\'s no lie. I love all the free charging at the government\'s expense.. They actually take my charging costs off my electric bill. Isn\'t that swell?
It doesn\'t generally tend to occur to the Fox News fanclub that if there
were actually so much free shit on offer anywhere America would likely
be a much different place than it is.
\"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh. He said \"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh...

--

Ricky, don\'t be silly

we don\'t buy EV Teslas, since no fast chargers on-the-go and energy costs doubled recently
so it makes on sense to buy Tesla
and charge it the whole day

There is no solution to the problem of scarcity of EV-chargers since
it\'s all about logistics and time spent at EV-chargers

Your Tesla spam , makes us sick

----+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209

Not interested
Tesla is down and may collapse within 12 months due to general global crisis

I buy Twitter.. was an old marketing fake ( I can afford to buy Twitter)
\\
But life is Brutal and full of Zasadzkas
But life is always for real

so stop your day dreaming

We don\'t buy Teslas, since it makes no sense to spend months at EV-chargers

I think I understand what you are saying, but it\'s hard to get through your broken English. What is your first language?

But yes, I agree that BEVs are great. Thanks for the thumbs up!

Thanks on the bump for my referral code.

--

Rick C.

+- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
+- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 7/17/2022 7:20 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 7:15:07 PM UTC-4, a a wrote:
On Monday, 18 July 2022 at 01:04:20 UTC+2, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:58:23 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 6:35 PM, Ricky wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 6:25:51 PM UTC-4, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 2:28 PM, amdx wrote:

North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.


There probably aren\'t that many no-cost EV chargers around, anyway. In
Massachusetts there\'s only one I use sometimes nearby that charges $0,
it\'s at a DPW facility, runs entirely off solar power, and is also used
for charging DPW vehicles but is open to the public to use because our
tax $$$ paid for all that shit to begin with.

Most other chargers are on private property and the owners have realized
by now that they can charge money for its use. Sometimes the price is
absurd, sometimes it\'s nominal, but they all charge something.

\"Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to
show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot.\"

\"Party of small government\", lol. He\'s optimistic that most Americans
understand decimal numbers that small.

Like most topics local government officials are deeply out-of-touch with
how anything works in the real world but that doesn\'t stop them from
making legislation about it.

Anyway, can\'t wait for you wingnuts to get your \"small government\" i.e.
having your life run under the iron fist of some double-digit IQ state
or local petty tyrant functionary who think the Earth is 8000 years old
and doesn\'t know how many ovaries a woman has. Gonna be so much freedom
for you!!

Depending on where you are, there are lots of level 2 chargers that don\'t bother with the cost of the electricity. Hotels in particular have them. I\'ve never seen one that was in any way protected from just anyone using it. Heck, in one location it had a sign with an 800 number if you couldn\'t get your XYZ card to work (I had one) and they just turned it on for free. Public transportation also offers them.
I know some hotels in Boston and Providence have free chargers for
patrons but the great majority of them are locked down in parking
garages with hourly or daily rates, I tend to consider these \"pay
chargers\" however you pay for them. Same thing with train stations.
I think that is just the city environment where you pay for the air and water.
Whether any hotels out in the \'burbs have free Level 2 chargers you can
just swoop into an open lot and use I admit I haven\'t deeply
investigated, I rarely stay in hotels near my home, lol.
Absolutely true. It\'s kinda like what they said about nuclear plants, \"too cheap to meter\". It\'s not worth the hassle of dealing with something that would bring in so little revenue.
The charger at my doctor\'s office and all the chargers at Audubon
sanctuaries in MA all something like 25 cent a kWh or so.
How do you pay for them? That\'s the problem.
The idea of requiring free gasoline along with free charging is interesting. Normally laws are passed to solve a problem. I\'m wondering what problem free charging is causing? Maybe it\'s because Tesla didn\'t move their headquarters to North Carolina???

Laws made by your local Republicans are generally designed to \"solve\"
made-up problems that Fox News et al have propagandized all the
credulous stupos into believing; like that leftists have secretly made
it so there are thousands of totally free public chargers across the
state giving out millions of YOUR TAX DOLLARS in electricity every day
to the wealthy EV-drivng \"parasites at the top\", while meanwhile the
dirty poors and blacks \"parasites at the bottom\" rob them from below
with SSI and Section 8.
That\'s no lie. I love all the free charging at the government\'s expense. They actually take my charging costs off my electric bill. Isn\'t that swell?
It doesn\'t generally tend to occur to the Fox News fanclub that if there
were actually so much free shit on offer anywhere America would likely
be a much different place than it is.
\"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh. He said \"Fox\"... heh, heh, heh...

--

Ricky, don\'t be silly

we don\'t buy EV Teslas, since no fast chargers on-the-go and energy costs doubled recently
so it makes on sense to buy Tesla
and charge it the whole day

There is no solution to the problem of scarcity of EV-chargers since
it\'s all about logistics and time spent at EV-chargers

Your Tesla spam , makes us sick

----+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209

Not interested
Tesla is down and may collapse within 12 months due to general global crisis

I buy Twitter.. was an old marketing fake ( I can afford to buy Twitter)
\\
But life is Brutal and full of Zasadzkas
But life is always for real

so stop your day dreaming

We don\'t buy Teslas, since it makes no sense to spend months at EV-chargers

I think I understand what you are saying, but it\'s hard to get through your broken English. What is your first language?

But yes, I agree that BEVs are great. Thanks for the thumbs up!

Thanks on the bump for my referral code.

lol
 
On 7/17/2022 3:45 PM, bitrex wrote:
On 7/17/2022 4:28 PM, Don Y wrote:
On 7/17/2022 12:10 PM, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:45:43 AM UTC-7, Ed Lee wrote:
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 11:28:50 AM UTC-7, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/


It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.
Yes, to be fair. There should be free gasoline station dispensing one drop
of gasoline per minute next to it. No more and no less.

Actually, should be 1 gallon (70,000 drops) per hour or around 20 drops per
second. We need a federal law: equal right to free gasoline with free
electricity.

So, it takes an *hour* to get enough of a charge to travel 20-30 miles?

I.e., in our case, our average rate of travel (measured by the car)
is ~19MPH (we only drive \"in town\" and, despite 45MPH speed limits,
there are enough stop lights to keep the average speed that low; I
wonder what it must be like in a REAL city!).

And, given the stop-n-go nature of our driving -- plus the fact that
the ACbrrr has to run even when you\'re making no forward progress -- our
\"in town\" mileage is only around 22MPG (that doubles as soon as we get
on the highway).

So, spend an hour charging the vehicle in order to drive it for an hour?
Seems *insanely* inefficient! We spend ~5 minutes (10 if there\'s a queue)
to get ~350 \"in town\" miles loaded into the tank.

Most of the energy in the fuel goes to heat the Universe, I\'m definitely not
paying for gas car driver\'s free fuel to heat the Universe, any more than my
Mom wanted to pay for me leaving the sliding door to the den open in the winter
when I was a kid..

Your folks (and their folks before them, etc.) gladly did so.
And, it was likely a result of that that your standard of living
wasn\'t that of The Wild West or Cromagnon man.

Why not ride a bicycle? Or, walk?! Or, subsistence farm for
all you need (folks up north surely don\'t NEED citrus; folks
south don\'t NEED apples... why are we transporting all these
foodstuffs -- BY ANY MEANS -- when we likely have sufficient
nutrients in walking distance)

[Ans: because it limits what you can do and, by extension, what
a society can accomplish]

Always amusing to watch The Preachy and wonder what other \"sins\"
THEY\'RE still hiding (eat meat? NOT telecommute? work for a
company that doesn\'t contribute to \"improving the state of
the universe\"? etc.)
 
On Sunday, July 17, 2022 at 2:28:50 PM UTC-4, amdx wrote:
North Carolina Looks to Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably to the Trash

https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a40543385/north-carolina-wants-remove-free-public-ev-chargers/

It\'s more than spending taxpayer money so those with EVs can have a
subsidy.

The legislation is not to be taken seriously. The nut job sponsors are not North Carolina.

This one is a real lunatic:

In late September 2021, it was revealed that Rep. Kidwell\'s name was among the some 38,000 people whose names appear on a membership roster of the Oath Keepers; a far-right anti-government militia, following a hack of the group\'s internal data. Rep. Kidwell did not comment on whether he is a member of the group or not.[5] However, records show that Kidwell has been on the Oath Keepers\' roster since at least 2012.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Kidwell

This one is senile:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_G._Cleveland#:~:text=George%20Grant%20Cleveland%20(born%20May,the%20United%20States%20Marine%20Corps.

This one looks to be a career crook from the wiki bio:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Brody#:~:text=Mark%20Allen%20Brody%20(born%20December,and%20Union%20counties)%20since%202013.

This one is a medically certifiable imbecile- railroad engineer.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Moss


--
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