Electric cars are not THE solution.

  • PlantDadManGuy@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Good thing DOGE and the rest of the Trump fueled Republicans are foaming at the mouth to completely eliminate federal funding for the California high speed rail project. Thank God they’re going to save us from affordable transportation for the masses in favor of continuing to murder the planet actively by distributing microplastics into every square millimeter of the Earth.

  • 3ntranced@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    We just need to swap all roads out with big orange hot wheels tracks. I don’t know if it’d solve the problem but at least it’s a suggestion and it’d be sick as hell.

  • GHiLA@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    Ban tires!

    The American auto industry

    Lobbyists

    Conservatives

    The existence of hundreds of thousands of miles of asphalt paid for by the American taxpayer

    Oh, right. Well, I’ll just wave my finger once a year and… die, eventually.

  • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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    I’ve been saying this for a while. Not only that, but electric cars are substantially heavier than their ICE-powered equivalents, meaning both tires and roads wear out more quickly. Plus, there’s a ton of pollution and other environmental damage caused by battery production that at least partly offsets the lack of tailpipe emissions.

    As loathe as I am to admit, because I’m a car enthusiast and I enjoy driving, cars cannot be the default mode of transportation everywhere indefinitely; they will always need to exist, but should mostly be for small centres with no capacity to implement transit infrastructure and last mile type of things.

    • Bob Robertson IX @discuss.tchncs.de
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      Plus, there’s a ton of pollution and other environmental damage caused by battery production that at least partly offsets the lack of tailpipe emissions.

      The battery production pollution is an issue, however one thing to keep in mind is that once the minerals are out of the ground they can be recycled, unlike drilling for oil. When looked at on a long timeline the battery for an electric vehicle is a lot cleaner than everything needed to power an ICE vehicle.

      That said, there’s always room for improvement and we should never get complacent. But we don’t avoid innovation just because it isn’t perfect.

    • zurohki@aussie.zone
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      It’s not just tailpipe emissions, though - there’s an entire supply chain of extraction, shipping, refining, delivery that’s needed to get fuel to your local gas station.

      The fossil fuel industry always wants to compare the total environmental damage of an EV with just what comes out of the tailpipe of an internal combustion vehicle. Don’t fall for it.

    • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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      This should be the definition of ‘letting perfect be the enemy of good’ Please stop using false oil lobby talking points to attack the transition to electric cars. Electric cars are an order of magnitude better for the environment than petrol/diesel, stop fighting big oils battle for them. Now let’s talk about how we can reduce road journeys through public transport, and reduce environmental impact of tires.

    • Snoopey@lemmy.world
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      Is that true about the tires though? Electric car tires are designed to be substantially tougher because of the increase in weight, do they actually shed more material?

      • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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        There’s no such thing as an “electric car tire.” They just use standard passenger vehicle tires rated for the appropriate weight class.

        “Tougher” just means they handle more weight by holding higher air pressure, so they’ll have more layers of steel, kevlar, canvas, etc. The materials that makes contact with the road still wear the same.

        • FrederikNJS@lemm.ee
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          There is in fact such a thing as an “electric car tire”.

          Fundamentally you are correct that they are in essence just tires rated for the weight class, but there’s more to it than just that.

          Electric car tires are usually made with a stiffer rubber than comparable combustion cars, this is mostly to handle the additional weight, but they also stagger the tread pattern, and some have foam inside them, both to improve the noise and acoustics of them. Something that wasn’t a problem when there were a noisy combustion engine running. But in an electric car you don’t have the engine noise, and therefore hear a lot more of the wheel noise.

          None of this help with the particle emissions, but there is in fact such a thing as an electric car tire.

          Engineering Explained has a great video if you are curious: https://youtu.be/8pM9o2Ifcro

          • Snoopey@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            This is what I’d read, this guy specifically states that the tires are much stiffer to counteract the increased wear of a regular tire from the 20-30% increase in car weight. Anyone know of any good studies on this?

      • vodka@lemm.ee
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        You can’t really engineer away the need for friction, and if there’s friction there is going to be wear.

        If EV tires were much better than normal tires with the same grip levels and somehow magically less wear, all tires would adopt that technology.

        Not that I’m a materials scientist, but EV tires don’t seem much different than other “economy” tires, other than a higher load rating.

          • vodka@lemm.ee
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            All the EVs I see sold around where I live (Norway) come with the same eco tires as ICE cars. The heavier ones like a Tesla Model X just comes with the same tires rated for higher load. (And the extra foam inside for sound dampening, but that’s an option for most tires) The Model X also happens to be delivered with the same tire they put on the very much not EV Ford Explorer.

            • FrederikNJS@lemm.ee
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              I know nothing about the tires on the Teslas or the non EV ford explorer, or even what tires are fitted in Norway. But the Hyundai Ioniq 5 I bought in Denmark last year came fitted with Michelin Primacy 4 tires, which are indeed EV tires.

              • vodka@lemm.ee
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                What makes it EV and not just an eco tire? On Michelins website (Norwegian one) and various tire shop websites it just, an eco tire.

                • FrederikNJS@lemm.ee
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                  The staggered tread pattern, the stiffer rubber, the profile of the tire, and the sound dampening foam inside the tire. There’s nothing stopping you from mounting these on regular ICE cars though.

                  Here’s a video explaining more about EV tires:

                  https://youtu.be/8pM9o2Ifcro

      • Salvo@aussie.zone
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        You have answered your own question. They are built to be tougher, by using more material.

        They still shed a proportional amount of material for the vehicle weight.

        Not only that but if they get damaged due to trauma prior to end-of-life (such as a puncture of pothole damage) that is a lot more material that is going to landfill (or tyre “recycling” in countries that have it).

      • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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        They use the same materials, they’re usually just thicker. If you get one of those heavy boat luxury cars you’ll put the same tires on them. They shed material at a faster rate, but they have more material to compensate.

  • Salvo@aussie.zone
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    The solution is fewer and lighter vehicles. Everyone purchasing oversized EVs is the exact opposite of the solution.

    Mass Transit (trains and light rail) Pushbikes, e-bikes, Subcompact, and micro/Kei cars are the answer.

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        Polluting, inefficient, unsafe, noisy.

        If you go to South East Asian countries where the main form of transport is post WW2 motorbikes, you will notice that they aren’t the safest or most comfortable places to live.

        If you have a western budget, however, you can transcend the day-to-day hazards and live in a resort for a pittance.

        • sinkingship@mander.xyz
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          Polluting - I don’t think so, except they’re 2 stroke engines, which are rare, nowadays. These days you see even more and more electric bikes.

          Inefficient - People often go 2, 3, 4 people on a bike that uses maybe 3 l/100km (78 MPG) or pull trailers wich stuff loaded, while using less space than a car.

          Unsafe - totally less safe for the people on the vehicle. I don’t know about pedestrians. However, a lot of the accidents happen, because poor education to get the license, if any; hardly any law enforcement and poor vehicle maintenance.

          Noisy - not more than a ICE car. Some motorbikes here have broken exhausts, which make them noisy, but that again is a lacking law enforcement and maintenance issue.

          I am aware, however, that driving 2 wheel vehicles in ice and snow is not a wise idea, so while it works in SEA, it would be different in colder climates.

          • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Maybe where you live 2 strokes are rare, but when we are talking cheap, it’s always 2 stroke. Especially the example the other person gave, Asia is full of 2 stroke engines, all super noisy and poluting. Living near a dense traffic street in Asia is a very interesting form of torture for anyone who enjoys clean air or peace and quiet.

            Hell, even where I live, they are mildly popular and very hard to miss when one goes by. To move to clean and quiet alternatives can’t come soon enough.

            • Salvo@aussie.zone
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              Thank goodness that cheap e-bike motors and solar panels are available to these markets.

              Someone with a little bit of intelligence can retrofit an e-bike motor on a pushbike, put some solar panels on their roof, connected to some trusty Lead-Acid batteries in their hovel and they can recharge their e-bike or cargo-bike.

              • Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                21 hours ago

                Cheap is a very relative term and I doubt you can reach an equivalent gas powered two stroke on the same budget.

                In Asia they use these vehicles as their main mode of transportation, meaning they also need to have power, travel far and carry their family or shopping. Where I live people use these vehicles on the highway and e-bikes have legal restrictions and documentation. Good luck reaching the minimum required speed with an unlicensed self built ebike.

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    Yet another example of how pretty much every problem is, at its heart, a zoning problem:

    • Microplastics? Too much driving, because trip origins and destinations are too far apart to be walkable.
    • Greenhouse gas emissions from cars? Too much driving because not enough walkability.
    • Greenhouse gas emissions from housing? Poor efficiency because too many single-family homes exposed on all sides instead of high-density housing with shared walls.
    • Greenhouse gas emissions from concrete production? Using way more of it than we really need to build huge amounts of unnecessary parking (and much wider streets than we’d need for bikes + transit + only delivery vehicles).
    • High housing prices? Not enough housing density.
    • Obesity? Sedentary lifestyles, i.e., not enough gym of life.
    • Racism? Redlining.
    • Wealth inequality? (Among other things), protecting rich landowners from market forces by eliminating competition from multifamily developers that would build out the land to its highest and best use.

    See also, this video: The Housing Crisis is the Everything Crisis. He almost gets it, but fails to connect that very last dot, which is that the housing crisis is itself caused by bad, density-restricting zoning!

    • Salvo@aussie.zone
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      <sarcasm> but if more people were walking, they would all be run over by tiny men in Dodge Ram250s</sarcasm>

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        You’re not entitled to choose otherwise unless you’re actually willing to pay for it. Zoning laws that force an oversupply of single-family homes are effectively a subsidy of that lifestyle, and it’s high fuckin’ time for that subsidy to end!

        In other words, if you own a house in the suburbs, you might think you’re a rugged individualist who bought at fair market value, but you’re actually a damn welfare queen and don’t even realize it.

  • Clent@lemmy.world
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    If we had those flying cars we were promised, this wouldn’t be an issue.

    • Droechai@lemm.ee
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      There are some vehicles that go on iron wheels, on a special kind of iron road that are very efficient. Only bad parts are costly initial investment and difficulties to scale up if the existing network gets overloaded (such as the Swedish rail system who has been over “maximum” capacity for a long time which has put needed maintenance on hold at many places)

    • moonbunny@sh.itjust.works
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      Maybe there’s some kind of a wheel, like a metal wheel that could just glide across narrow metal surfaces that could follow a set path….

    • Akasazh@feddit.nl
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      Well the was this idea of propelling trains through a vacuum tube system.

      Unfortunately it’s being developed by a shithead and misappropriated by the car industry to hamper railway development in the us

      • sinkingship@mander.xyz
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        I somehow doubt they would have less particles from friction. They usually use a cushion which touches the ground.

        The imagination of a busy intersection with common people driving hovercrafts is funny, though. Or imagine driving on slopes.

    • ___@lemm.ee
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      Hyperloop theoretically, practically who knows.

  • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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    There is no alternative suggested. The purpose of this movement is to tax heavy EVs. I think that makes it distraction.

    The smaller the EV the more range per kwh, and so smaller batteries are needed which makes them more affordable. It is not unreasonable to tax heavy vehicles, but the punch line that motivates this piece is “EV’s bad”. They could have recommended micromobility for example.

    • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      imho we should tax any vehicle that puts an inordinate strain on the roads. ultra-heavy EV’s like cybertrucks and hummers are ridiculous and inefficient, and the purchases knew it when they bought them.

      but also the cummins diesel powered pavement princess my colleague drives BY THEMSELVES TO THEIR OFFICE JOB day after day, I think that should have to pay an excise tax.

      work vehicles certainly deserve cutouts, but they need to be work appropriate vehicles, not just jacked up asshole haulers.

      • humanspiral@lemmy.ca
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        work vehicles certainly deserve cutouts

        That thinking is what got us SUVs. Work vehicles earn income, and so probably don’t need cutouts.

    • Sonori@beehaw.org
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      It would be funny though if some environmentalist managed to make the tax properly technology agnostic though. Mostly if you can keep them from being exempted anything that hurts EVs goes double for pickups.

      Of course we both know gas cars get exempted whenever this sort of thing passes because it’s never actually about vehicle weight and road wear so much as how can we slow the decline in gasoline demand for a few years, but it’s nice to imagine that silver lining.

  • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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    whatever happened to the green tire technologies that get announced by the big mfg and then never come to market… like the mushroom based materials

    • assassinatedbyCIA@lemmy.world
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      Usually stuff like that is just a distraction so companies can do greenwashing while delaying the implementation of real solutions. I’m going to guess that’s the case but, I haven’t really looked into it.

  • darthsid@lemmy.world
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    The other day I was wondering how miraculous tires are - fucking balloons lifting the heaviest vehicles on land.

  • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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    Electric cars are not THE solution.

    This is why I raised the topic of airless tires a while back. They’re not the solution, but they last longer than traditional tires. Initially they were rated to last a lifetime, but that’s not profitable so they put an end to that.

    • Nougat@fedia.io
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      That does not address the issue at all. The problem is that tires wear, and the particles of tire rubber that are shed are the microplastics.

      • kinkles@sh.itjust.works
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        A tire that lasts a lifetime would shed less particles than one that needs replacing every so many miles all the tires used in the same timeframe, would it not?

        • Nougat@fedia.io
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          Here’s the problem with tires.

          If you want long treadwear, you use harder material. But then you get worse traction.

          If you want good traction, you use softer material. But then you get worse treadwear.

          If you want a car to perform safely on public roads, its tires necessarily need to wear away as they are used. Electric vehicles are presently even worse on tires, as they weigh so much more than ICE vehicles.

        • pearsaltchocolatebar
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          The reason tires need replacing is because they’re relatively thin. Airless tires aren’t wear-less tires.

          Not to mention that airless tires make for a horrible ride.

          • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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            Actually earlier prototypes were wear-less, from both companies that were developing them.

            As for the horrible ride, from what I’ve seen, that’s not a problem. But even if it was perhaps that should be solved by other aspects of the car.

            • grue@lemmy.world
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              There is, fundamentally, one measurement that defines everything about the performance characteristics of a car: the amount of force it can impart on the road (and vice versa). This single measure defines its limits of acceleration, turning and braking. And what determines how much of that force is available?

              The tires, and the coefficient of friction of the rubber compound they’re made of, which is directly related to how quickly they wear. Every possible solution that makes tires wear less will also make cars perform worse.

              …Well, short of drastically reducing weight (i.e. making a bicycle instead of a car).

              …Or swapping them out for steel and running the thing on rails (i.e. making a train instead of a car).

            • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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              2 days ago

              They’re not prototypes, they exist and they’re called tweels. They’re only really useful for low-speed industrial equipment where ride quality is a low priority.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          The amount of time a tire lasts ultimately has fuck-all to do with whether it’s airless or penumatic; it has to do with how much traction it provides and how large/heavy a vehicle it’s supporting. Any tire that is good at its job of providing traction to a big, heavy vehicle like an automobile (and SUVs / EVs / EV SUVs only make this worse) is going to pollute a fuck-ton compared to, say, a bicycle tire or the steel wheel on rail public transit.

        • andyburke@fedia.io
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          Not if the way it lasts a lifetime is by being made of the same material that wears off but being made of more of it. 🤷‍♂️

          • kitnaht@lemmy.world
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            Rubber is quite literally the sap of a rubber tree. Latex. They mix other materials in with it, but this is one instance where I don’t think the rubber is the issue.

            It’s the fillers they put in the rubber; Nylon, Rayon, Polyester, etc.

            Tires are about 25% steel fibers, another 30%ish filler materials, and Rubber (either synthetic or natural)

      • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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        I ride motorcycles and tires have always been a major issue with riders because of cost. Bike tires wear out fast even though it’s a lighter vehicle and tends to put on less mileage.

        The main culprit that most industry insiders have suggested is that motorcycle tires are purposely designed to not last as long because its so easy to market crappy tires to the vast majority of riders. All you need is have marketing campaign of racers and racing tires and then stamp the name on a tire and sell it to young guys who want to ride as fast as possible … they’ll pay hundreds year after year for tires that only last one season but supposedly give them great performance.

        I ride moderately on a 1998 BMW K1200, a fast sport touring bike and I put on moderate mileage every summer … I’m not a long distance rider … yet I have to change my tires just about every year.

        Fortnine, a Youtube channel dedicated to motorcycle riding did a great description of this …

        https://youtu.be/hEZeR9E3JyY

        The giveaway is that you could put a small car tire on a motorcycle and it would last ten times longer … whereas you place a motorcycle tire on a motorcycle tire and it will last for a far shorter time.

        Motorcycle tires are designed to not last as long … fast riders can argue that better tires do not last as long and I agree with them … but for moderate riders or just Sunday riders with low mileage, there is no need to have motorcycle tires last for such a short period of time. It’s all meant to sell as many tires as possible for no reason other than to make someone money.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          The trouble is that motorcycles are generally way higher-performance than cars (in terms of e.g. HP/weight ratio), so putting low-friction, long-lasting tires on them is irresponsible. It’d be like putting Prius tires on a Lamborghini: sure, you could drive the thing responsibly and within the performance limits of the tire, but it’s missing the point of the vehicle.

          Now, if more motorcycles were built sensibly – with much less horsepower – then I’d expect the tires to last a decent amount of time. For example, do 49cc scooters have the tire wear problem you’re complaining about? I’m willing to bet the answer is “no.”

          • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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            This is where the debate constantly diverges to extremes … either have sensible long lasting tires … or high performance racing tires … but nothing moderate in between.

            Manufacturers are more than able to produce a reasonable motorcycle tire that would have enough performance and would last far longer. There just isn’t any incentive to do it. It makes them far more money to make tires that don’t last as long and at this point, I think everyone knows that, we are just not able to do anything about it.

            Like my 1998 BMW … it’s an ancient machine at this point and it was originally a performance bike when it was new and would have benefited from a high performance tire … but its 26 years old and I really don’t trust it to go fast any more but I love the look of the bike and I enjoy riding it. I maintain and service it myself but there are far too many old parts on it that there will inevitably something that will fail and I really don’t want that to happen at speed. All I need is a good decent tire, not a tire that is meant for the race track for a modern newer bike.

            • grue@lemmy.world
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              Like my 1998 BMW … it’s an ancient machine at this point and it was originally a performance bike when it was new and would have benefited from a high performance tire … but its 26 years old and I really don’t trust it to go fast any more

              I guarantee your '98 BMW is still way faster than my '90 Miata, and even that is still a sports car that still deserves and requires decent tires. Therefore, yours still does too.

              I wasn’t being hyperbolic when I used 49cc scooters as an example – I really do think that’s pretty close to the limit of how much power a motorcycle can have and still reasonably use long-wearing, not-very-grippy tires.

          • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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            The contact area compared to the weight ratio is not that different from any other vehicle … a bike weighs less so it has less contact … a car weighs more and so needs more contact with the road … a truck weighs a lot and needs even more contact with the road.

            The end result is always the same … the technology is there to make a motorcycle tire last far longer and the same with car tires … the problem is is that there is no financial incentive to make a long lasting tire that would be better for the environment.

            • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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              I know motorcycle tires need replacing fairly frequently, but I had no idea it was a racket. Although, I’d think they’d generally need to be softer for maximum traction on two wheels.

              • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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                2 days ago

                The whole traction debate only makes sense if you start getting into racing speeds and riding on a fast race track. For the average rider, we’re only riding at normal highway speed (at least we are supposed to) and guys like me like our riding lifestyle enough to never get into crazy speeds because we baby our bikes, we don’t want to create any more variables to put our lives at risk and we’re cheap and don’t want to wear out our tires.

                If I knew of a manufacturer that produced a cheap $100 tire that could last four or five season of my light moderate riding … it would be the only tire I would buy. But there are so many manufacturers, types, subtypes, models, years, design, material of tires out there that’s it’s a constant science to try to figure out what is real and what isn’t. I usually don’t have the time to research it all nor do I have the resources that I just end up buying the same Metzeler tires because I don’t want to order the wrong tire and I definitely don’t want to install the wrong tire either.

      • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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        2 days ago

        Tires are a part of life. We can make small changes until we improve public transport infrastructure across the world or we can continue as we have done and drive this planet to extinction.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Tires are not “a part of life!” Humanity did just fine without them until not much more than a century ago, despite not having much public transit back then, either.

          You know what the real difference, and the real solution today is? Walkable, dense zoning.

          • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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            2 days ago

            I would love to force everyone to walk their kids to school, but things are fucked. Sadly it takes a while to teach us to unlearn things. Even iny borough in London, they’re dragging their heels on licensing ebikes and that hurts everyone.

      • PrimeMinisterKeyes@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        For those who didn’t read the article or aren’t following EU politics, Euro 7, passed in April, explicitly addresses the need for reining in pollution from brakes and tires. Some more information here:

        The position adopted by the European Parliament improves the European Commission’s proposal by extending the scope of tyre abrasion limits to all tyres and not just those fitted on Euro 7 vehicles. It also directly links Euro 7 to the work that is being done in the UNECE World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations (WP. 29), which will set global rules regarding a test method and limits for tyre abrasion.

        There’s a new Euro standard “major version” every 5.8 years on average, so here’s hoping that my outdoor furniture will soon not become completely blackened within a year after the last cleaning.

    • kitnaht@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It has nothing to do with being “not profitable”; they couldn’t find a way to engineer the tires to not be unstable at speeds above 45mph. They sell airless tires commercially today, but it’s mostly for farm equipment that moves slowly.

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Helping one problem and not helping them all means it’s better to do nothing according to a lot of people. If you are anti cars that’s one thing, but to specifically aim it at EVs is clearly just targeted propaganda as always.

      Yes we put 100 years of research into gas powered cars, 15 years of research (or less by most companies) and the weight isn’t the same yet so they want to toss all advantages of moving to them.

      Look at things like the Telos Truck. 4,400 pounds, 4 doors, small and can fit a 8’x4’ sheet of plywood if needed in the bed.

      Length of a mini Cooper, so it fits in smaller parking spots, weighs less than the average ICE truck, costs less than the average ICE truck and will have less impact on tires people worry about here, while not shipping oil across oceans and causing cancer to the people in the vicinity.

    • cally [he/they]@pawb.social
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      2 days ago

      A lot of people think that. The solution to car pollution is less cars and more forms of transport. It’s trains. I like trains.

    • Mihies@programming.dev
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      2 days ago

      Binary view is a poor one. EVs have a lot of benefits and also some drawbacks. As everything in the world, they are not perfect. The trick is that they have much more benefits than drawbacks.