Mikebart
Established Member
Let’s have a revolution, do away with Politicians, ruling class, rich people, stupid people, share the wealth evenly and life will be wonderful.
You keep banging on about this Luton car park fire as if it was caused by an EV. If there was any evidence, the anti-EV lobby would be all over it like a rash. The only suggestions about an EV causing the fire are posts on social media. 'I bet it was an EV' for example. This is not evidence.I raise this point because other issues have become obvious post the Luton airport car park fire.
Indeed.The Bedfordshire fire chief has said it was caused by a diesel vehicle, but of course what does he know, he's only an expert.
Or half a revolution, as my father was fond of pointing out. A full revolution gets you back to where you started.Let’s have a revolution, do away with Politicians, ruling class, rich people, stupid people, share the wealth evenly and life will be wonderful.
Think I'd rather have enormous piles than most of our politiciansI would have thought the enormous piles would only be good for the garden!
You are Jacob and I claim my £5.Let’s have a revolution, do away with Politicians, ruling class, rich people, stupid people, share the wealth evenly and life will be wonderful.
i am suggesting that communal transportation should be a much larger part of the mix. Good public transport, well designed cities and towns that make walking and cycling more practical.??? I am not sure that I understand you. Are you suggesting that there is no need for social movement, i.e. that everyone should stay in their dwellings and meet online only?
No argument against that proposition from mei am suggesting that communal transportation should be a much larger part of the mix.
Once again, I cannot offer any argument against your proposal. On the other hand we are not starting from a blank slate and my question concerns the current infrastructure, which is serving the UK as we speak. What would you remove and how would you achieve that, while building the urban areas that you posit?Good public transport, well designed cities and towns that make walking and cycling more practical.
Prima facie, this sounds entirely sensible. I am old enough to remember that Richard Beeching closed a significant amount of British Railways in the early 1960s. per Wikipedia ~ The first report identified 2,363 stations and 5,000 miles (8,000 km) of railway line for closure, amounting to 55% of stations, 30% of route miles, and the loss of 67,700 British Rail jobs.Add good rail networks for longer journeys and freight.
I have no argument with the proposition, with one proviso... People who currently live on houseboats, which travel along our canal system, should preferably not be made to suffer because of our continuous aand successive govermental failures to invest heavily in public transport across the whole of the UK since post WWII.Canals even for bulky goods that have no ’best by’ date.
The chaotic mess of public transportation in the UK is mute witness to the notion that not one iota of ingenuity has been applied. When I was in Hungary, I was based in Budapest. The capital city has very wide streets (often 6 or 8 lanes wide) and the private car is a luxury even to many middle class households. The public transportation system is outstanding and a beacon of excellence.we are fixated on single-occupancy heavy status symbols that use ridiculous amounts of resources for the good they provide. Then we spend huge amounts of ingenuity trying to make the poor solution work. Or work slightly better.
Couple of points.Personal ownership of cars may be overtaken by autonomous vehicles within the next decade.
The model for many urban dwellers will be a smartphone app to summon a vehicle as and when they need to travel. This eliminates parking issues, insurance, maintenance etc etc. Some already adopt a similar "sharing" model with self drive cars used as required.
Cars will be operational up to 20 hours per day vs an owned car which is used averagely 1 hour per day. When the battery needs charging it will take itself to a remote charging point. Similarly with maintenance.
This is likely to be a transition, not a rapid change. Likely to affect urban rather than small town and rural dwellers. Those with off street charging may continue the ownership model - but I suspect over time autonomous will (a) have a better safety record than fallible humans, and (b) the sharing model will be materially cheaper for most folk.
and even if it were true, they should check this:You keep banging on about this Luton car park fire as if it was caused by an EV. If there was any evidence, the anti-EV lobby would be all over it like a rash. The only suggestions about an EV causing the fire are posts on social media. 'I bet it was an EV' for example. This is not evidence.
The Bedfordshire fire chief has said it was caused by a diesel vehicle, but of course what does he know, he's only an expert.
When 'road tax', as it was, ended it was then used initially to fund benefits.No really it doesn’t. What you pay now is Vehicle Excise Duty. It is not the same as “Road Tax”. VED is a tax based on emmisions and is a contributor to general taxation. It is not ring fenced for roads. As per my previous reply to Phil VED is greater than the cost of roads. However it’s a false argument to state VED covers roads. The reality is a proportion of general taxation, which includes VED pays for roads, in exactly the same way as it pays for the NHS and other state initiatives. Someone who doesn’t pay VED is still contributing to roads in the same way as someone who pays no tax but does pay VED is contributing to HS2.
Edit: Because there is a tendency for “Anti” arguments to focus on things that fit their perspective I've added some more background. Cost of roads falls in to two different categories. New roads and road maintenance. New roads and upgrades are funded through DfT, maintenance is through local authorities. It is all too easy to compare apples and oranges. VED revenue is greater than the cost of new roads, which is what Road Tax was introduced in 1920 to cover. Road tax was ring fenced for new road construction. Road tax ended in 1937. VED is less than the full cost of roads when including maintenance. Maintenance of roads has always been from general taxation even when there was “Road Tax”. A clear issue is that heavier vehicles cause more damage to roads than light vehicles and that’s a problem. A road usage tax (like fuel duty) is going to be needed in the future. But that’s a different discussion.
I can't comment on the legal issues, but the latest generation of standards for EV chargers would allow for the ability to define charging periods/tariffs, and methods of payment. Obviously a charger with that functionality would not be required for home users, so it'd a commercial model/brand. But I can't see any reason why it would not be possible to produce a small/medium EV charger with those facilities, for purchase by end users who wish to provide a public charger.Is there a business case for installing a charge point and charging motorists to recharge their EVs? Suppose you owned a pub, or lived opposite one. Anywhere that people might go and spend some time so they might like to charge their vehicle while they are there. Would it be legal and worthwhile to do that on a small scale?
So I have to stay in the pub for 8 hours? Oh, OK then. I'll have another.The main issue might be that smaller chargers (e.g. in a pub car park) may not have access to the higher power levels required to charge a car rapidly; such that you could provide an EV charger, but if it's one that's going to take 8 hours to charge a car then it probably wouldn't get much business.
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