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73 votes
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iPhone music players with good CarPlay experience?
I’m about to take a road trip and I want to be able to easily play my music and it would be a huge pain to do this with iTunes. I’ve got VLC but the UI leaves much to be desired. I can’t even view...
I’m about to take a road trip and I want to be able to easily play my music and it would be a huge pain to do this with iTunes. I’ve got VLC but the UI leaves much to be desired. I can’t even view my music by album in CarPlay, which is how I’m going to be accessing my music. There are tons of music playing apps out there but they are all varying degrees of sketchy. Does anyone have any recommendations?
11 votes -
How China became the world’s largest car exporter
7 votes -
Waymo outsources fleet operations to African fintech Moove in Phoenix and, soon, Miami
14 votes -
Zipcar tech glitch strands US customers in random places for hours - prevents cancelling or ending ride booking
11 votes -
Porsche Macan gets recalled for exessively bright headlights in US
21 votes -
Car maintenance/replacement advice
I have a 2014 CRV, it loses oil horribly and I'm going to have to check it a couple times a week or risk my engine. The mechanic was hesitant to even help me limp it along and said basically...
I have a 2014 CRV, it loses oil horribly and I'm going to have to check it a couple times a week or risk my engine. The mechanic was hesitant to even help me limp it along and said basically there's no fix besides replacing the engine. He put 3 quarts in that day. I didn't have a warning it was low other than the loud start.
I'm trying to decide if it's worth continuing maintenance on this car or worth trading in now while the engine is still kicking (and switching to an electric used car probably) or nursing this along for another year or so. We have a car loan on a wheelchair van we're trying to refinance which means I'll be looking at cars that are about equivalent in value to the CRV.
Thoughts? Advice? Besides keeping oil in my car because I didn't know it was this bad. Ó╭╮Ò
19 votes -
Automatic braking systems save lives. Now they’ll need to work at 62 MPH.
29 votes -
Scrapped policy to charge London’s drivers by the mile
4 votes -
Swedish battery cell maker Northvolt, which produces cells for electric vehicles, has announced that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the US
6 votes -
New York Governor Kathy Hochul to relaunch congestion pricing with $9 base toll, sources say
15 votes -
How self-driving cars will destroy cities
41 votes -
Waymo’s robotaxis are now available to everyone in Los Angeles
16 votes -
California EV maker Aptera unveils solar car with 64 km of daily, charge-free range
18 votes -
Volkswagen plans major cutbacks in Germany: 'We cannot continue as before'
23 votes -
New deadline by which only zero-emission new vans may be sold in Norway will no longer be 2025, but 2027
9 votes -
US probes Tesla's Full Self-Driving software after fatal crash
23 votes -
The bill finally comes due for Elon Musk
41 votes -
Toyota is the latest company to scale back its Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion policies
28 votes -
Roads in Africa are among world’s deadliest despite few cars
9 votes -
Uber almost got me killed!
55 votes -
A dealership damaged my car. Any advice?
Temporarily removed for legal reasons.
30 votes -
Headlamp tech that doesn’t blind oncoming drivers—where is it?
33 votes -
Filipinos are embracing electric three-wheelers faster than officials can regulate them
24 votes -
Human drivers keep rear-ending Waymos
37 votes -
EV discussion thread
Just though it might be nice to have a space for general EV discussion here on Tildes. The only other space I know of to talk on the subject is r/electricvehicles, which has gotten big enough to...
Just though it might be nice to have a space for general EV discussion here on Tildes. The only other space I know of to talk on the subject is r/electricvehicles, which has gotten big enough to get polarized and echo-chambery… prepare to get bombarded if you say anything positive about EV models from Japanese manufacturers or suggest that a used Chevy Bolt isn’t a great fit for everybody, for example.
Anyway, what is everybody driving and how do you like it? Has it given you any trouble? Any upcoming models you’re excited about or interested in? If you don’t drive one now, is there a model you’re eying?
Right now I’m driving a 2023 Nissan Ariya Platinum+, which I chose because it’s what I could get a reasonable lease deal on without too much trouble. It’s been great for the most part but I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t total overkill for my needs… something more like a modernized electric Golf would better fit me, but those don’t exist in the US, so here I am.
The upcoming model I’m most interested in is by far the Rivian R3. It’s sized about the same as a Golf, the retro styling is cool, and its got several high-utility features that make it almost seem like a reincarnation of the Toyota Matrix (fold flat seats including front passenger, back hatch window that can open to accommodate long objects, etc) without the Matrix’s weaknesses. The Pacific Northwest inspired interior of the higher end R3X model looks gorgeous too and is a welcome departure from the sterile grayscale interiors that EVs have become known for.
38 votes -
Driver discovers the true cost of finding a "perfect" Chicago parking spot
27 votes -
London saw a surprising benefit to fining high-polluting cars: More active kids
28 votes -
Tesla Cybertruck owners shocked that tires are barely lasting 6,000 miles
50 votes -
Norway sees electric cars outnumber petrol models – sovereign wealth fund cushion has made it possible for government to offer green incentives to motorists
11 votes -
United States postal service debuts long-awaited new mail truck
88 votes -
That time the Army Jeep was a nuclear launch vehicle
8 votes -
Ford seeks patent for tech that listens to driver conversations to serve ads
58 votes -
NHTSA proposes new vehicle safety standard to better protect pedestrians
36 votes -
Swedish battery company Northvolt has announced it would be laying off a large part of its workforce and selling or consolidating several sites as the electric vehicle market slows down
11 votes -
When electric vehicle startups shut down, will their cars still work?
24 votes -
My experience buying a used low-range EV a year later
A little over a year ago I posed some questions on Tildes about used electrics. Shortly after that topic, I went put and purchased a 2016 VW E-Golf. I think that my experiences might be useful for...
A little over a year ago I posed some questions on Tildes about used electrics.
Shortly after that topic, I went put and purchased a 2016 VW E-Golf. I think that my experiences might be useful for anyone that is considering an electric but struggles with range anxiety or just wonders how practical a car with low range would actually be. When looking at used car prices, I was shocked at how cheap a low range electric car was compared to longer range EVs. I picked mine up for $10,500 out the door.
For context, I live on the outside of a small city in the Midwest. It gets cold here. I am also in a two car household, the other being a hybrid. There are two adults and children in the house.
The Golf has a roughly 20 kWh battery. Over the year that I have driven it, I have averaged 4.5 miles per kWh. That sounds like a range of 90 miles, but that doesn't tell the whole story. On cold days when resistive heating has to be run, the mileage drops by around 30%. On a nice mild day, I can get it up to 6 mi/kWh on a trip if I am off of the highway.
I did not need to install any additional charging abilities in my garage. I have the charger plugged into a random 110V outlet in my garage. I was prepared to shell out a bit of money for an electrician if the 110 circuit didn't cut it, but over a year of use I have not actually run into a scenario where I needed to use more than the trickle charge.
I work a hybrid setup. Twice a week I need to drive into the office around 20 miles away. The office does have some electric charging stations on a 220 circuit but I have not felt the need to charge there on any occasion.
The shorter range does mean that some coordination is required between the two adults in the household. If one of us needs to travel out of town for work or something involving the kids, the other has to limit their travel. In practice for our house, this annoyance ends up being more a concern for which vehicle needs car seats than a concern for mileage. Exactly one occasion this year we have had to adjust plans to deal with having a limited range vehicle.
Overall, I really have been thoroughly happy with the low range EV choice as the primary vehicle in a two vehicle household with a backup for longer range trips.
70 votes -
Volvo Cars has abandoned its plan to become a fully electric car manufacturer by 2030 due to weakening consumer demand for pure electric vehicles
42 votes -
Bipartisan group of 350 US city mayors commit to electrifying fleets and broadening EV charging infrastructure
18 votes -
Did your car witness a crime? Bay Area police may be coming for your Tesla — and they might tow it.
28 votes -
California hits new milestone with EV chargers: 40% increase in one year
16 votes -
Over the last ten years Finland reduced road deaths by a sizable 29% – the average decline in the European Union was 16%
18 votes -
Car maintenance suggestions/guide for a 2016 Lexus IS 350F Sport
Hello, I am thinking of perhaps purchasing the vehicle mentioned in my title, is there recommended maintenance suggestions that should be done other than what can be found in Lexus's car care...
Hello,
I am thinking of perhaps purchasing the vehicle mentioned in my title, is there recommended maintenance suggestions that should be done other than what can be found in Lexus's car care recommendations or something that would be found in the drivers manual? Anything unusual to watch out for? Any particular brand of motor oil that would be best? etc.
Thanks
5 votes -
Hydrogen powered Toyota Mirai turned into bomb by Ukrainian forces explodes with the force of 400 pounds of TNT
29 votes -
Californian police can’t stop sideshows. Solution: Make the streets more annoying.
28 votes -
No-car Games: Los Angeles Olympic venues will only be accessible by public transportation
34 votes -
Japan orders ‘drastic reforms’ for Toyota after fresh certification violations
17 votes -
The meaning of construction costs per rider
5 votes -
Mercedes EV fire causes power outage, hospitalizations, 140 cars damaged
26 votes -
You don’t need a pickup truck, you need a cowboy costume
55 votes