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Tesla to Texas: How Do You Like Us Now?

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  • Chili
    replied
    Originally posted by BP View Post
    The evap system is designed to function when the engine is running. Depending on the vehicle the tank may either be pressurized or have a vacuum on it. That and there is a potential for ESD (electro static discharge) and with a running engine it's way more common.
    Seems like you wouldn't want to stir up the possible debris in the the tank while it's running too. Clog up the filter faster? IDK, just seems like that would be an issue.

    Leave a comment:


  • BP
    replied
    Originally posted by CJ View Post
    Can someone explain to my why it's bad to leave your car running while you're pumping gas?
    The evap system is designed to function when the engine is running. Depending on the vehicle the tank may either be pressurized or have a vacuum on it. That and there is a potential for ESD (electro static discharge) and with a running engine it's way more common.

    Leave a comment:


  • CJ
    replied
    Can someone explain to my why it's bad to leave your car running while you're pumping gas?

    Leave a comment:


  • The King
    replied
    Originally posted by CJ View Post
    You can't even pump your own gas in NJ, you have to rely on attendants to do that. Of course you can't buy your own car without a dealer.
    Union attendants of course.

    Leave a comment:


  • Chili
    replied
    Originally posted by CJ View Post
    You can't even pump your own gas in NJ, you have to rely on attendants to do that. Of course you can't buy your own car without a dealer.
    Oregon too:



    ...Jason lives in New Jersey, where the state legislature decided in 1949 that "because of the fire hazards directly associated with dispensing fuel, it is in the public interest that gasoline station operators have the control needed over that activity to ensure compliance with appropriate safety procedures."

    Higgins lives in Oregon, where a similar law was passed in 1951, supported by a whopping 17 declarations rationalizing the prohibition of "any person other than the owner, operator or employee [of a dispensary where class 1 flammable liquids are dispensed at retail]" from using "pump, hose, pipe or other device for dispensing the liquids into the fuel tank of a motor vehicle or other retail container." Violating this law would get Higgins slapped with a $500 fine.

    In plain English: New Jersey and Oregon don't trust people to not blow themselves up while pumping gas, and would rather leave the job to professionals (gas station attendants), who undergo rigorous training where they learn that it's bad to smoke while pumping gas, bad to leave the car running, and bad to put gas anywhere except a car's fuel tank or other approved containers...

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  • CJ
    replied
    You can't even pump your own gas in NJ, you have to rely on attendants to do that. Of course you can't buy your own car without a dealer.

    Leave a comment:


  • BP
    replied
    Christie needs campaign money.

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  • The King
    replied
    Originally posted by Broncojohnny View Post
    Thanks for the life story, bro. Just FYI, no one here really gives a shit.
    I second that opinion.

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  • Chili
    replied
    New Jersey Becomes Third State To Ban Tesla’s Direct Sales Model

    Just saw this:

    Today the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission passed a rule that will end Tesla's direct sales of cars to consumers. Tesla, a manufacturer of all-electric cars, does not lean on dealerships to sell its vehicles as other car companies do.


    New Jersey Becomes Third State To Ban Tesla’s Direct Sales Model

    Today the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission passed a rule that will end Tesla’s direct sales of cars to consumers. Tesla, a manufacturer of all-electric cars, does not lean on dealerships to sell its vehicles as other car companies do.

    The rule goes into effect in April.

    New Jersey is the third state to ban the practice of selling cars directly to consumers, joining Arizona and Texas in preventing their residents from easily buying a more environmentally friendly ride. The New Jersey Coalition of Automotive Retailers was in favor of the rule change, unsurprisingly.

    Tesla is furious, claiming in a blog post released today — in advance of the meeting in which the rule change was enacted (which Tesla was informed of yesterday) — that Governor Chris Christie’s administration had “gone back on its word to delay a proposed anti-Tesla regulation so that the matter could be handled through a fair process in the Legislature.”

    The company also alleged that New Jersey had been sitting on the “renewal of [its] current dealer licenses without indication of the cause of the delay.” Given that delay, and the quick change in the wind from a legislative discussion to a squashing of its model, it appears that Tesla has just run face-first into New Jersey politics.

    Tesla’s shares slipped 1.85% in regular trading.

    New Jersey residents can still buy Teslas, but will likely have to leave the state to do so, which is a burden. Tesla is looking to expand its manufacturing processes this year, to allow it to sell more of its Model S sedans. However, if more states follow in the footsteps of New Jersey et al., the company could have to scale back its growth plans.

    I don’t doubt that moves to block Tesla sales are merely short-term pauses — raise your hand if you actually think that local dealer groups can hold back the tide of change. But they are setbacks to a company that operates on a quarterly, and not half-decade, reporting cycle.

    Leave a comment:


  • racrguy
    replied
    Originally posted by Lajntx View Post
    If I woke up tomorrow and my boss demoted me to that, then I`d look him in the eye and tell him......

    " Sure, I have a work ethic and within 2 years I`ll either be promoted up due to managing the best P&L numbers in the system..... Or I`ll quit and form my own business and put yours out within that time. "

    However that ( just like your last wet dream ) will never happen.

    I worked in pizza places when I was a teenager and in college. Even after college I still did delivery because it was an easy way to make a couple hundred in quick cash on the side without working hard. Higher gas prices ended that though.

    You on the otherhand, I dont know if you would be motivated enough to come off that fryer and move up to the big bucks because that might mean you might have to make use of other thinly veiled sarcastic comments from the movie "Coming to America"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKYl6y8qGqw
    Do you enjoy making those on the left look like idiots?

    Leave a comment:

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