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427 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3711
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Title: HPR3711: Cars
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3711/hpr3711.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 04:29:46
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,711 from Monday the 24th of October 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Cars.
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It is hosted by Zen Flotor 2, and is about 34 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is a short review of Cars today.
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Hello to everybody from Zen Flotor, your favorite magical forest squirrel farmer human being
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converted into squirrel by aliens in the 1960s and atheists.
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As they knew Hacker Public Radio broadcast, it's been a year since I've done one.
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I don't do them frequently in Hacker Public Radio, but I decided to do one on the subject
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of Cars, and it is based on Hacker Public Radio 3542 done by Beezah over his worst car
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I've ever had.
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And also, I noticed that Dave Morris did one, Hacker Public Radio 3601 on May 23rd, 2022,
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just a few days after Beezah did his.
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So, we'll go ahead and start off with the Ford Motor Company and talk about what do
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they have in the way of Cars today.
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Okay, we start with Ford Motor Company.
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And as soon as you open the website from link A in my notes, for Ford Motor Company,
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and then click on the Cars selection, you'll see that Ford Motor Company is still selling
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the Mustang.
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It's price starts at $27,470, which is really just very high for most people.
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If we have to click on, I didn't see, oh, here we are.
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Click on all vehicles, and you should see that they have several selections of Mustangs.
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They have one called the Ford GT, which looks like a sports car, which I don't even see
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a price on.
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And the Ford GT MK2, but really, I don't see any of the vehicles that look like Cars.
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They used to sell the Ford Fusion, at least last year, I believe they did.
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But it appears to me that the Ford Mustang is the only vehicle that you're going to find
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in the Ford Cars that still exists.
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Ford doesn't make any other cars, not even small economy cars.
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They make a whole bunch of SUVs, but this podcast isn't going to be about SUVs.
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So next we'll take a look at Chevrolet and see what they have to offer.
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Okay, if you open the link I've provided in the show notes for Exhibit B, which is Chevrolet,
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and then you click on the Vehicles tab, and then scroll over with your mouse or your
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trackpad, and click on the Cars tab, you'll see that Chevrolet only has two cars.
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They have the Chevrolet Spark, which is reasonably priced, starting at $13,600.
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Now that's more like it for a car, even in today's environment.
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That would be one that I would recommend you look into.
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So I know several people that own a Spark, and they seem to like them.
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They could be head for just a little over $10,000.
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And then the Chevy Malibu, which is also not terribly priced at $23,000, $40,000.
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You could probably get it for a lot less, and it's a nice looking car, so Chevrolet still
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has two cars that you could possibly own.
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But compared to yesterday, when Chevrolet dealerships were just filled with cars, they're
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not filled with cars anymore.
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No, I mean cars are quickly becoming a thing of the past.
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Now I think it's time we probably go to Dodge, so let me get set up for that, and I'll
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pause the tape just a second.
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All right, if we go to Bullet C on my show notes, which is Dodge Motor Company, we'll
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be startled to find out that Dodge only really has essentially one car, even though they've
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given it two different names.
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They've got the Charger for $32,645, and they've got the Challenger for $30,940, which is
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a little bit cheaper.
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But I believe they're essentially the same frame car.
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The styling is slightly different, they're kind of expensive.
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They're not fuel efficient vehicles, they're muscle cars.
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And you know, Dodge used to have a line up just like Chevrolet and Ford did of different
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vehicles, but they don't seem to have them anymore.
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I mean, unless you've got the money, you know, and you want to put down 50 grand or whatever
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on a Mustang, or don't forget Chevrolet still sells, I believe, even though I didn't
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see it on the website, I'm assuming they're still selling the Camaro, but don't hold me
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to that.
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And I'm sure the Corvette is still being sold, and it's probably a special order item,
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you know, $60,000, $70,000, but really, unless you're just super wealthy, you're not buying
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a car typically, still, that Chevrolet Sprite, the small vehicle for $13 grand, is the best
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American bet we've seen yet.
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And I kind of like the looks of that car, you know, for the price and everything, I would
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recommend it if you're looking for a first car.
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That would be about the only one that we've seen so far.
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And you know, we can't review Plymouth because Plymouth is gone.
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There's no point reviewing Jeep motor company, a subsidiary of Chrysler also, because they
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have no cars, they're all SUVs.
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So since we can't review Plymouth next stop, we'll be Chrysler, and then we'll work
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back across the board and take a look and see what models, the other car companies have
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that are tear up from the baseline.
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All right, boys and girls, if we open show note link number D, or a letter D, excuse
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me, Chrysler.com, we see that Chrysler has really, possibly two vehicles, but really
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one, the Chrysler 300 is still being sold.
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It's going for about the same price as the Dodge Charger Challenger, $33,740, and they
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don't even have a price into the Chrysler 300C, which I guess is maybe a step up.
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And they have another vehicle called the Chrysler Airflow Concept.
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There's no price on that, so I guess that's to be released or something maybe.
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Oh, it's an electric vehicle, okay.
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I'm going to try to exclude electric vehicles because I'm not covering Tesla in this.
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I'm just looking for vehicles that people could afford and will be practical.
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I'll talk about electric vehicles at the end of the segment.
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And what I think of them currently considering what's going on with electricity and all the
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government's telling you, you can't charge your cars now because we're overloading the
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system.
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So we'll get to that toward the end of this.
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I guess we should move on to, we can't cover Pontiac, it also will be on anymore because
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they don't exist in the GM line, so we'll go with Buick and Cadillac in the next segment.
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So let me get set up for that.
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All right, if we open Item E on my show notes that's Buick Motor Company, we'll find
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that when we click on their current vehicles for 2023, for that matter even 2022, Buick
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doesn't make cars anymore.
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They're all SUVs, every single one of them, every single one of them.
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So again, Pontiac and Elzobiel are gone, so okay, Google, open Cadillac Motor Company.
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All right, if you go to show note F, we're going to review Cadillac Motor Corporation and
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basically they have only one car.
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It's the CT4 or CT5 depending on whether you're talking about 2022, 2023.
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And I noticed one of their models starts at $33,695, which is the lowest price when goes
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all the way up to like $84,000 in price for the CT5-V Black Wing.
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So yeah, I just don't know that a car is worth that much money.
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I mean, you can buy brand new houses in Oklahoma for that.
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And I don't think there are many people in Hacker Public Radio that's going to want to buy
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one.
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I know I won't because if I'm going to spend that kind of money, 50 grand, they're about
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to 60 grand on a vehicle.
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It's going to be a giant Ford F350 or something like that.
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In fact, I drive a Ford F150 right now and it's a 2012 model and I'm perfectly happy with
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it.
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But it's not exactly an economy car.
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Even back in its day in 2012, it was a little pricey for most people.
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So anyway, one car essentially, they just changed the model number for Cadillac out of
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if we think back over the history of Fleetwoods and all the other vehicles that Cadillac
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had, that's just simply amazing that they have only one car now.
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Let's move on to Lincoln because Mercury is out of business.
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Mercury doesn't exist anymore as a company, so we're going to jump to Lincoln Motor Company
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and give the Ford Motor Company.
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All right, if we go to show note, G, Lincoln Motor Company, we see immediately click on
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whatever you want.
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Lincoln doesn't make any cars anymore.
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I guess 2020 was probably the last year, maybe, or 19 that they made a car.
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They're all SUVs, every one of them.
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And it appears that they're all hatchback SUVs.
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And also, every one of them is a five-door, just different names.
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And that's all you have, so you won't even find a car from Lincoln.
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Let's take a look at Toyota, Nissan, and Honda, and then we might explore a bit more
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before we conclude the searching for cars thing.
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Okay, now going to show note H Toyota Motor Company.
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I was pleasantly surprised to find that the Toyota is still making cars.
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And I would gather, it's because people overseas don't necessarily want to pick up truck
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like here in America.
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You know, the F-150, I think, is the best-selling vehicle in America right now.
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Ford F-150 vehicle, the pickup truck I am, and followed by Chevy Silverado, I think, something
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like that.
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And then dodges in there with their Ram Trucks somewhere too, I don't know if they're number
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two yet or not.
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We find, if we go to the car section of Toyota from the website, link I gave you.
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The Prius Prime and Prius is there, and the prices aren't bad.
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You could have one in the 20s somewhere, maybe low 20s.
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Those are both hybrids, you know, they're part electric vehicles.
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And then we have the Corolla, which is also available in a hybrid at $21,000.
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That's still a pretty good price.
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I would recommend the Corolla.
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I know several people that have had a Corolla.
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The Corolla hybrid is only like a grand more, a little over $1,000 more.
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The Corolla hatchback, which I'll go ahead and include that one, because it's not an SUV.
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For 2023, then there's the Camry for $25,945, $26,000, as they're asking price, you could
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obviously get it for less than that probably.
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However, that's an all-wheel-drive, also available model.
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And then it looks like a car.
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It's really kind of an SUV.
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And then of course, they get Camry hybrid.
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And then Avalon, which is also a nice car, but it's very expensive, $36,825.
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And of course, an Abhybrid.
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Then one they call the Mirari, I guess it is, for nearly $50,000, hydrogen-powered vehicle,
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which I don't know if you could even get that in America, but they're claiming you can.
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It's a hydrogen-powered fuel cell, zero-emission car.
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I guess if I was going to get one, I'd get a hydrogen-powered car considering the state
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of batteries, which we'll talk about at the end of the podcast for electric cars, currently
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it isn't too terribly good.
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And then they have a GR86, which looks like a car coming out in 2023 for high 20s.
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Don't have any information on that.
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GR Super, which looks like some sort of a sports car for $44,000, roughly.
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The CNF for $35,385, $35,385, which is sort of a hatchback car hybrid.
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And that's about it for Toyota.
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Anyway, Toyota's still got a few cars.
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If you want a back car, you can get one there.
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I still think the Chevy deal for what was at the spryte, the little bitty car for 13 grand
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was probably still the most attractive to me, though.
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All right, if we open show note, I, for Nissan Motor Company, and we'll click through
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the vehicles, and we'll take a look at the car subcategory.
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We find that they've got a lot of cars.
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You've got the Nissan Versa for $15,580, which is a good price.
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You can probably get it for less than that.
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The center, which is also a nice car for under 20 grand, it's $19,950, asking price.
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Ultimately, again, not out of price range horribly, it's $25,290.
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Nissan Leap, which I guess is probably, I don't know if that's across ever or not.
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And of course, Maxima for $38,140, and I own to Maxima once they're nice cars.
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But I didn't pay $38,140 for it.
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So yeah, there are five separate car models from Nissan.
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They're still going strong.
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Now we'll open the next link, which I believe is J, and J will lead us to Honda Motor Company.
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So let's go to their official website.
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I'm just opening this.
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There we go.
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Honda.
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And Honda's going to have some cars.
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You know, they'll have the Civic and the Accord for sure, and I forget what else.
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They even have a pickup truck now that they're trying to sell.
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Just waiting for it to come up.
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All right.
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So under the menu for Honda, we can click on Honda Autos, and let's see what that brings
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us.
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Okay, clicking around there, I see that they still have the Civic sedan for $24,650.
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The price has just gone up incredibly because you know, the Civic sedan used to be a full
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$10 grand less than what I'm seeing here.
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They just become so popular.
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A new one called the Honda Insight, which I haven't even heard of yet, $25,760.
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The Accord, which I've owned a couple of those, $26,520.
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As I recall, I paid like $18.9 or something for my Honda Accord back in the 90s.
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They were pretty damn expensive, even back then in 1992, I think it was, I bought it.
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So they've gone up a little bit in the last 30 years.
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Of course, they have an Accord hybrid and then the Civic SI sedan, which I'm not sure
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what it is.
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Maybe that's a hybrid as well.
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Then they have a couple of hatchbacks, which I'll include, include the Civic hatchback,
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which would be attractive to me, you know, for someone that might want to have to haul
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up a brand new hot water tank into the house or something.
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And then the Civic Type A TC, which is a race car for $89,900.
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So we'll kind of look over that one.
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Anyway, the hatchback gets 30 to 38 miles per gallon.
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Actually it gets a little better high-well mileage than the Civic sedan does.
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But if the Accord gets the same mileage, just the stock Accord, I like the Accord so much
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I probably have one.
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But you know on their website, they also listed Accra on here, I believe, which is there.
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I didn't bother to go into Toyota's either Accra or Infinity, either one of them, because
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you know, they're just more expensive models of the same cars.
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They'll have cars.
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So if you want a car, my recommendation still is to buy the Inexpensive Chevrolet, because
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I believe it has a very efficient engine and its fuel mileage is probably very comparable
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to that of a Honda for the price.
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You save a lot of money.
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And then of course we could go to Hyundai and, oh, who's the other one.
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I forget who the other car company is from Korea.
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Key I think it is, yeah.
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And there are several models there that you could buy that are inexpensive.
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I'm not going to cover them all.
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I'm sure Volkswagen still makes a few cars.
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Let's get on to the next subject, the next couple of subjects, which is Terrorism.
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And they actually have a terrorist organization that's attacking SUVs here in America and electric
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cars.
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So let me get ready for that.
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All right.
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Sorry about that.
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Go to show note K, which is a New York Times article that briefly talks about a terrorist
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organization that's been running around destroying burning other people's SUVs, because that's
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all they sell anymore for the most part.
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American car manufacturers is SUVs, that's it.
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And SUVs are less fuel efficient, they're more expensive.
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They cost more to buy, but it's what everybody wants to buy.
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They all want to buy them.
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So anyway, there is a group that's running around attacking people's SUVs in America and
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torching and burning them.
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I just thought I'd make you aware of that.
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All right.
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If we go to the wrap up here, Item L has a couple links to an auto-week story and a
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Washington Post story about solid state batteries.
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All the electric cars had been built using some form of battery that's like what's in
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the cell phone, an nickel cadmium, whatever battery that can catch fire.
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If you charge it too fast and get it too hot, it might catch fire or it definitely destroys
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the battery life.
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And they've got a rule here in America that you can't sell a car unless you put a brand
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new battery in a different electric car.
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If you buy a car, electric car, just remember you're going to have to put out the 30 grand
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or whatever it costs, it may be more to replace the battery in it when you sell that vehicle
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to buy your next electric car, whatever you're going to buy.
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And in California, they just passed a law I believe that states by, what is it, 2026
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some time, they're going to outlaw gasoline powered vehicles.
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So you won't be able to buy a gasoline powered vehicle in California, it'll be all electric
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so there's a couple of problems with it right now and I'll just go down through the
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list of them that I know of.
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They're trying to develop a solid state battery for all these electric cars, first of all,
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that won't catch on fire and you can charge it in 30 minutes or less.
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And these solid state batteries are supposed to have more capacity than the nickel cadmium,
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whereas you'll have vehicles that will be able to travel 500 miles, 600 miles on a charge
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instead of what we currently have, which is a vehicle that would be lucky if you could
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do 200 miles.
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I know the Tesla is, they're range may be a little bit more, but nobody has a solid state
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battery yet.
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So we're waiting on the technology for solid state batteries and these two articles cover
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that in the dangers of it.
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The other problem is that we don't have the electrical power currently.
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All of our electrical power is either provided by nuclear or depending on where you're at
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coal or natural gas-fired power plants and all three are dangerous.
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We haven't developed fusion yet and fusion still won't be commercially viable for at least
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another decade.
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In fact, they're hoping that by 2026 they'll light the fire on the very first prototype fusion
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plant that works for real and then they're going to figure out how to make more of them.
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And of course, once we figure out how to make mass quantities of electrical energy through
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fusion that won't hurt the environment, then we have to rework the nation's entire electrical
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infrastructure to handle like 20 to 30 times the power that it currently does because
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everybody's going to have an electrical vehicle.
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They're all going to want to charge them and the wattage that's going to be flying across
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these lines is going to be out of sight.
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They're probably going to have to use technologies that will include conductors that are less
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resistive to electricity, superconductor technology and all kinds of things that we haven't
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seen yet that will come out in the future.
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So realistically, we're 20, perhaps 30 years away from actually being able to run a society
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in electric cars and fusion, but it's coming.
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It's coming and so we have to rework all that and then we have to consider one other thing.
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I don't know how many of you have seen a video, but you might want to Google on YouTube
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what happens to a hot dog when you hook it up to 220 volts, 3-phase power, 440 volts, 3-phase
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power, and watch the hot dog explode.
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Now if you've got a family of five or six and everybody's charging a car, let's say
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there's four or five cars out of the driveway that have these long black extension cords
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running out to them from the garage, charging, you're going to have to have some sort of
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an inspection system to make sure that they're safe for the people to use because if you
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don't, after being used for 10 years, a dozen years, they might get frayed and 3-phase
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power is what's going to be necessary to charge these new vehicles in the future.
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You could literally lose a foot or a leg.
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You could die some kid running a bicycle cross, a tricycle, one of these power lines touching
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it with their foot or hand if it's not properly insulated.
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So we're going to have to have a whole new form of inspections to check these systems
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over to make sure that they're safe.
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I mean people are going to have to have their homes inspected virtually every year, maybe
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twice a year, if you're charging electrical vehicles just to make sure that your system
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is safe to charge so you don't kill your family with it or neighbors and end up at a
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huge velocity.
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The other point I wanted to bring up is while the nation reworks the power lines, the overhead
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power lines for every neighborhood, for every city because of fusion and the power that
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it's going to bring, we also have to rework every single house in America with 3-phase
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power because there are almost no homes that have 3-phase power today.
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You have 2-phase power and that's all you've got.
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Which you can split up into 2 banks of 110 volts.
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120 volts, whatever it is.
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And 240 is 2-phase power.
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You have that in every home in America but you don't have 3-phase power.
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So every house will have to be rewired and they'll have to be inspected every year because
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when you start dealing with 3-phase power and that kind of power, you run into extreme
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danger.
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So it would be my guess that they'll probably just put charging stations out on the street
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that you can drive your car up to and charge them in your residential neighborhood.
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There might be one in front of every house and you're just going to have to take turns
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charging from that one station.
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That's probably the way they're going to do it because I can't see them rewiring every
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house in North America for 3-phase power.
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It's not going to happen.
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Unless they provide these people with an option of charging these new vehicles at 110 volts
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in which case, if you're going to have a 5 or 600-mile range in a car, I guess you
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better be planning on having that thing plugged in at 110 volts for 18 hours or something.
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Because power is power, but if you've got a solid state battery, it's going to take
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a very long time to put the energy necessary to make a vehicle move down the highway 500
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miles before it runs out of power.
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So there's a lot of caveats in electric vehicles.
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There's also caveats with these hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicles and that hydrogen is very
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explosive.
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If you have a leak on any of these vehicles, it will blow your house away.
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Just like propane, I've had neighbors have propane tanks explode and it will literally
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blow huge Ford farm tractors up on the top of Oak trees, you know, 3,000 pound farm
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tractors and pickup trucks will be blown into the air and lodged into the top of Oak
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trees that they have to take down with cranes after they put the fire out, all the residents
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killed of course because there's no surviving, something like that.
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So there's a huge danger with hydrogen-powered vehicles in that regard because hydrogen
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is much more explosive than propane is today.
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And propane tanks are what they use to clear heliport pads and Vietnam, you know, they
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drop a propane tank in with a parachute and a detonator and it would make a big circle
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after it exploded, it'd burn all the trees and vegetation up so they could land the helicopters
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in there.
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|
They would drop 6, 7 of these tanks in with a C-130 and set them off and the next day
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|
they could land helicopters at this site.
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So, yeah, that's very expensive and very dangerous stuff compared to gasoline.
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|
It's too bad that we can't make a gasoline fuel that we could just use in our conventional
|
|
combustible vehicles that would not put out CO2 in the air, you know.
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|
It's too bad we can't do that.
|
|
Our find a way to make hydrogen fuel less explosive, you know, I know they're working on technology
|
|
to try to make the hydrogen gas leak out of tanks slowly but none of that's ever happened.
|
|
None of that development has ever gone forth because they push forward with electric cars.
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|
So, and of course, the other problem with electric cars that I see like, especially with
|
|
the Tesla is that you may buy the vehicle but if you get an auto navigation where the
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|
car steers itself, you know, drives itself down the freeway, that is a rent to use option.
|
|
You know, you don't actually buy that.
|
|
You pay for it just like you would a service to your Google Chrome browser and you pay
|
|
so much a year for it and when you quit paying for it, they just turn it off in the vehicle.
|
|
You know, it's not their permanently.
|
|
For instance, I understand the electric heated seats and the Tesla are optional.
|
|
The heaters are there, you just get used them unless you pay them the money.
|
|
In other words, it's a rent to own type of deal and I'm personally kind of turned off by
|
|
that.
|
|
I don't like it.
|
|
I don't like what they're doing with cars.
|
|
They're turning them into rent homes, you know, apartments basically where you don't
|
|
actually own a vehicle, you're just renting it.
|
|
That sucks.
|
|
It does.
|
|
I mean, it's, it's, ah, the problems that you run into that.
|
|
Anyway, that pretty much concludes this podcast with the conclusion that you're not going
|
|
to have to worry about complaining about your car in the future because cars are going
|
|
away.
|
|
In fact, they've already gone away in several of the motor companies and even the SUVs
|
|
will be going away.
|
|
I believe there are quite a few Tesla's that are four-wheel drive, you know, they have
|
|
a motor in each axle or maybe each wheel.
|
|
But you know, the idea of cars is just going away.
|
|
I mean, we've had decades of beautiful cars, like I still remember my dad's 1960 Chevrolet
|
|
wagon with the crank up and down rear window and the sideways seating we had in the back
|
|
as kids.
|
|
It was awesome.
|
|
All that's going away.
|
|
Even the concept of owning a big Chevy or Dodge van, you know, a party van is going away.
|
|
The only place you can buy a Chrysler minivan is Chrysler now.
|
|
Dodge doesn't even make one.
|
|
I don't remember if I saw one on Chevy's site, but I don't think that Chevy has a van
|
|
anymore and I don't think Ford does anymore either.
|
|
They used to, but you know, now you've got the Honda Odyssey.
|
|
You've got Nissan's got one, Toyota's got one.
|
|
They all have these mini-mans.
|
|
And like a Chrysler minivan, I believe starts in the low 30s somewhere for the all gasoline
|
|
power version.
|
|
For me personally, I won't even think about buying an electric car until another decade
|
|
has gone past.
|
|
They solve some of these problems because when they get the solid state battery, you
|
|
won't have a need to replace it anymore.
|
|
You shouldn't be able to wear that well and you can charge it rapidly for a much longer
|
|
range to where it becomes practical and will beat a gasoline-powered vehicle, but until
|
|
it beats that gasoline-powered vehicle, I just won't own one.
|
|
So anyway, I've had fun.
|
|
I hope you enjoy it.
|
|
That concludes this Hacker Public Radio broadcast.
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Thank you.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive
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and our sync.net.
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On the Sadois stages, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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