I'm more curious why they've made it so ugly

Driver could combine his rest break with the ferry crossing.Mito Man wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:04 pm Less relevant for a HGV as the driver must have taken at least one 45 minute rest break with that sort of distance.
I'm more curious why they've made it so ugly![]()
Wouldn't be very good marketing would it?Jobbo wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:09 pmDriver could combine his rest break with the ferry crossing.Mito Man wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:04 pm Less relevant for a HGV as the driver must have taken at least one 45 minute rest break with that sort of distance.
I'm more curious why they've made it so ugly![]()
I was gonna say "I mean, it's a lorry, it's gonna be a bit ugly regardess" but I looked closer, and good lord that headlight treatement and it's surround is truly fucking gopping.
Doing something pointless does get people talking I guessMito Man wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:28 pmWouldn't be very good marketing would it?Jobbo wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:09 pmDriver could combine his rest break with the ferry crossing.Mito Man wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:04 pm Less relevant for a HGV as the driver must have taken at least one 45 minute rest break with that sort of distance.
I'm more curious why they've made it so ugly![]()
Maybe they’re trying to make it look like their hypercar but even that makes no senseBeany wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:31 pmI was gonna say "I mean, it's a lorry, it's gonna be a bit ugly regardess" but I looked closer, and good lord that headlight treatement and it's surround is truly fucking gopping.
Made me think of a Qvale Mangusta sucking a lemon, although upon checking, it's not quite there, but it's not far off.
Hey, you wanna try this fruit? Just suck all the juice out of it.
Sure!
Slurp slurp slurp
![]()
Marvin having a fuckin' stroke and his mouth drooping.DeskJockey wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 1:31 pm Reminds me of Marvin from Hitchhiker's Guide (the last movie).
Looking at the carbon from the amount of fuel a standard diesel engined Mercedes actros would emit for the journey, using the tunnel- based on a review of the truck where they recorded 8.65mpg- the journey would make 1.1tonnes of carbon emissionsJobbo wrote: Fri Aug 29, 2025 11:48 am They could have cut the mileage and not taken any longer to get there by using the Harwich-Hoek ferry. Would that have been possible on a single charge?
EV specialists Wisely have done a video on i3s tyres this week.simon_g wrote: Sun Aug 24, 2025 12:36 amGoing to go to square setup, 195/55R20 all round. Apparently fits fine on i3s with standard wheels. Booked in at Costco once the kids are back at school for 4x Goodyear Efficientgrip for £280. I'll probably just jack it up and take the wheels with me in the Stepwagon to avoid any "computer says no" nonsense.simon_g wrote: Wed Jul 16, 2025 9:29 pm Yes, fronts are fine but rears will probably need changing by the winter. In the paperwork, BMW quote on its recent health check - £310.42 each![]()
Changed the 12v battery today as a precaution. Most labour intensive one I've done, despite being tiny it's a mission to get the old one out and new one in place deep under the scuttle.
Erm watChallenge: During product research, Tesla drive unit oil was sent out for 3rd party independent analysis. The sample oil was from a completely stock 5,000-mile street drive Model 3 SR+. The conclusion by 3rd party testing company Cavpower Pty Ltd indicated “Aluminium levels are elevated” and recommended immediate oil change. The Solution? A magnetic filter is integrated into the oil filter to catch and easily remove the metal shavings
You're not wrong, but perhaps coming at things from the wrong perspective with regards to range. As ever it boils down to the use case: how often do you need to do 400-450 miles without a break(s)? Yes, it will be a longer break than if filling up with dino-juice, but doesn't (infrastructure and car permitting) have to be significantly longer. As a family our stops on longer journeys are rarely less than an hour, so in theory it wouldn't change much for us (but five up in the Zoe is not an experience I am keen to try again unless circumstances forces it) anyway.Alex88 wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 10:00 am I'm pretty out of touch with the world of EV's, but was just glancing through Autotrader to see what the situation is now re. Price and range. Few observations; please tell me if I'm wrong:
Firstly, our 2016 Mini Cooper 1.5 Turbot will do about 400 - 450 miles to a tank.
But to get the same same range from an electric car, it looks like we'd need a big SUV, or something similarly sized, which doesn't suit our needs + too expensive anyway.
An equivalent brand new Cooper EV will apparently do around 150-200 miles, so about half what our 10 year old ICE version gets now.
Some EV's appear to be very good value. I had no idea you could pick up a used Tesla Model 3 or a Hyundai Ioniq 5 for under £15k.. I suppose there's a lot of them hitting the second hand market post lease.
I am certainly noticing more public chargers springing up, but not in huge volumes and usually in supermarket car parks. It also appears that attempts to find a charging solution for those without off-street parking have been somewhat forgotten about? Might not be so much of a problem if there was an abundance of cheap public charging infrastructure, but it doesn't look that way.
Most EV's I see on the roads are the large, expensive ones. I really don't see many small hatch variants, and while I hear the new Renault 5 is selling well, I've only seen 2 in person.
It feels like EV's, as it stands today, make sense to those who can justify and afford a larger car, and also have the space at home to plug it in.
So, for people who have a small car like, a modern-ish Mini, which is economical, cheap to tax (£30 or something), pretty cheap to own, and also have no off-road parking, it's a tough ask to get them in an EV. Apparently public chargers are more expensive to use than home chargers, which negates an element of the cost saving, and finding equivalent range requires a totally different style of car.
Perhaps significant progress will be made by the time we arrive at the deadline, or will the government kick the can down the road? Not sure. I might be completely wrong in my observations (probably am!) but that's how the situation looks at this moment.
It's a very good point to be fair, and I'll admit that it's one that I am guilty of neglecting when thinking about EV's more generally.DeskJockey wrote: Thu Sep 04, 2025 12:33 pm
You're not wrong, but perhaps coming at things from the wrong perspective with regards to range. As ever it boils down to the use case: how often do you need to do 400-450 miles without a break(s)? Yes, it will be a longer break than if filling up with dino-juice, but doesn't (infrastructure and car permitting) have to be significantly longer. As a family our stops on longer journeys are rarely less than an hour, so in theory it wouldn't change much for us (but five up in the Zoe is not an experience I am keen to try again unless circumstances forces it) anyway.
But, you're right about the issues around public charging infrastructure/no-offstreet-parking options.
As for the SUV argument, it is, I would argue, dictated by what people otherwise buy and perhaps a convenient way to hide the added weight. We've got a Renault Zoe as a second car, and that works well for us. My wife commutes to work in it three days a week, and while we charge it daily (charger attached to the house, we have a drive) it could easily manage her commute two, possibly even three days between charging. Rest of the week it is the runabout for errands and appointments.