cars

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===============/c/cars================

Hexbear's premier community for the discussion of and questions about cars, motorcycles, and other low occupancy transit. Share your thoughts, discuss cars under communism, and ask questions about maintenance.

Anti-car posting is not permited. Train good car bad and all, but it's not what this comm is for.

founded 3 years ago
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The Nissan Sakura 2025 is the best-selling electric car in Japan—driver assistance, auto parking, fast charging, bidirectional power, and acres of charm. The killer stat: It only costs $17,000. [Wired article inside]

Nissan Sakura 2025 Review: Price, Availability, Specs | WIRED

Electric cars are not yet big in Japan, making up about 3 percent of sales. However, Japan’s government has announced plans to increase the percentage of EVs and PHEVs in passenger car sales to up to 30 percent by 2030. For now, the Sakura, despite its diminutive length of 3,395 mm (about 11 feet), happens to be Japan’s best-selling electric car.

[...]

Sadly, so far Nissan has shown no desire to sell the car outside Japan, although a few secondhand examples have ended up in right-hand drive markets such as New Zealand.

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Any other average miata/mx5/roadster enjoyers here?

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spoilerOn the first Sunday of spring, surrounded by row houses and magnolia trees, I came to a horrifying realization: My mom was right. I had been flipped off at least 17 times, called a “motherfucker” (in both English and Spanish), and a “fucking dork.” A woman in a blue sweater stared at me, sighed, and said, “You should be ashamed of yourself.” All of this because I was driving a Tesla Cybertruck.

I had told my mom about my plan to rent this thing and drive it around Washington, D.C., for a day—a journalistic experiment to understand what it’s like behind the wheel of America’s most hated car. “Wow. Be careful,” she texted back right away. Both of us had read the stories of Cybertrucks possibly being set on fire, bombed with a Molotov cocktail, and vandalized in every way imaginable. People have targeted the car—and Tesla as a whole—to protest Elon Musk’s role in Donald Trump’s administration. But out of sheer masochism, or stupidity, I still went ahead and spent a day driving one. As I idled with the windows down on a street in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood, a woman glared at me from her front porch: “Fuck you, and this truck, and Elon,” she yelled. “You drive a Nazi truck.” She slammed her front door shut, and then opened it again. “I hope someone blows your shit up.”

Earlier that day, my first stop was the heart of the resistance: the Dupont Circle farmers’ market. The people there wanted to see the organic asparagus and lion’s-mane mushrooms. What they did not want to see was a stainless-steel, supposedly bulletproof Cybertruck. Every red light created new moments for mockery. “You fucker!” yelled a bicyclist as he pedaled past me on P Street. The diners eating brunch on the sidewalk nearby laughed and cheered. Then came the next stoplight: A woman eating outside at Le Pain Quotidien gave me the middle finger for a solid 20 seconds, all without interrupting her conversation.

The anger is understandable. This is, after all, the radioactive center of DOGE’s blast radius. On the same block where I was yelled at in Mount Pleasant, I spotted a hand-drawn sign in one window: CFPB, it read, inside of a giant red heart; and at one point, I tailed behind a black Tesla Model Y with the bumper sticker Anti Elon Tesla Club. But the Cybertruck stands out on America’s roads about as much as LeBron James in a kindergarten classroom. No matter where you live, the car is a nearly 7,000-pound Rorschach test: It has become the defining symbol of the second Trump term. If you hate Trump and Musk, it is a giant MAGA hat, Pepe the Frog on wheels, or the “Swasticar.” If you love Trump and Musk, the Cybertruck is, well, a giant MAGA hat. On Monday, FBI Director Kash Patel called Tesla vandalism “domestic terrorism” as he announced a Tesla task force to investigate such acts. Alex Jones has trolled Tesla protesters from the back of his own Cybertruck, bullhorn in hand. Kid Rock has a Cybertruck with a custom Dukes of Hazzard paint job; the far-right podcaster Tim Pool owns one and says he’ll buy another “because it will own the libs”; and Kanye West has three. Trump’s 17-year-old granddaughter was gifted one by the president, and another by Musk.

When I parked the car for lunch in Takoma Park, where I support federal workers signs were staked into the grass, I heard two women whispering at a nearby table: “Should we egg it?” (In this economy?) Over and over again, as pedestrians and drivers alike glared at me, I had to remind myself: It’s just a car. And it’s kind of a cool one, too. It can apparently outrace a Porsche 911, while simultaneously towing a Porsche 911. Or it can power a house for up to three days. My day in the Cybertruck wasn’t extremely hard-core, but the eight onboard cameras made city driving more bearable than I was expecting. Regardless of what you do with it, the car is emissions-free. “The underlying technology of the Cybertruck is amazing,” Loren McDonald, an EV analyst at the firm Paren, told me. And the exterior undersells just how ridiculous it is. Just before I returned the car on Monday morning, I took an impromptu Zoom meeting from the giant in-car touchscreen. It has a single windshield wiper that is so long—more than five feet—that Musk has compared it to a “katana.”

After 10 hours of near-constant hazing, I navigated to an underground parking lot to recharge the truck (and my battered self-image). Someone had placed a sticker just beneath the Tesla logo: Elon Musk is a parasite, it read. Still, even in D.C., I got a fair number of thumbs-ups as my Cybertruck zoomed by the areas most frequented by tourists. Near the National Mall, a man in a red bandanna and shorts yelled, “That’s awesome!” and cheered. Perhaps it was an attempt at MAGA solidarity, or maybe not. Lots of people just seemed to think it looked cool. One guy in his 20s, wearing a make money, not friends hoodie, frantically took out his phone to film me making a left turn. Even in the bluest neighborhoods of D.C.—near a restaurant named Marx Cafe and a Ruth Bader Ginsburg mural—kids could not get enough of the Cybertruck. One girl in Takoma Park saw me and started screaming, “Cybertruck! Cybertruck!” Later, a boy spotted the car and frantically rode his scooter to try to get a better look. Just before sunset, I was struggling to change lanes near George Washington University when two teens stopped to stare at me from the sidewalk. I was anxiously checking directions on my phone and clearly had no idea where to go. “Must be an Uber,” one said to the other.

By 9 p.m., I’d had enough. I valeted at my hotel, with its “Tibetan Bowl Sound Healing” classes, and got a nervous look from the attendant. I can’t blame anyone who sees the car as the stainless-steel embodiment of the modern right. This week, a county sheriff in Ohio stood in front of a green Cybertruck and derided Tesla vandals as “little fat people that live in their mom’s basement and wear their mom’s pajamas.” But it is also a tragedy that the Cybertruck has become the most partisan car in existence—more so than the Prius, or the Hummer, or any kind of Subaru. The Cybertruck, an instantly meme-able and very weird car, could have helped America fall in love with EVs. Instead, it is doing the opposite. The revolt against Tesla is not slowing down, and in some cases people are outright getting rid of their cars. Is it really a win that Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona exchanged his all-electric Tesla sedan for a gas-guzzling SUV?

Then again, Republicans aren’t buying the Cybertruck en masse. It is too expensive and too weird. Buying any Tesla might be a way to own the libs, but the right has proved maddeningly resistant to going electric. “Your average MAGA Trump supporter isn’t going to go buy a Tesla,” McDonald, the EV analyst, said. Before the car shipped in November 2023, Musk predicted that Tesla would sell 250,000 a year. He hasn’t even sold one-fifth of that in total—and sales are falling. (Neither Tesla nor Musk responded to a request for comment.)

Musk made a lot of other promises that haven’t really panned out: The Cybertruck was supposed to debut at less than $40,000. The cheapest model currently available is double that. The vehicle, Musk said, would be “really tough, not fake tough.” Instead, its stainless-steel side panels have fallen off because Tesla used the wrong glue—and that was just the most recent of the car’s eight recalls. The Cybertruck was supposed to be able to haul “near infinite mass” and “serve briefly as a boat.” Just this month alone, one Cybertruck’s rear end snapped off in a test of its towing power, and another sank off the coast of Los Angeles while trying to offload a Jet Ski from the bed.

The Cybertruck, in that sense, is a perfect metaphor for Musk himself. The world’s richest man has a bad habit of promising one thing and delivering another. X was supposed to be the “everything app”; now it is a cesspool of white supremacy. DOGE was billed as an attempt to make the government more nimble and tech-savvy. Instead, the cuts have resulted in seniors struggling to get their Social Security checks. So far, Musk has only continued to get richer and more powerful while the rest of us have had to deal with the wreckage. Let that sink in, as he likes to say. The disaster of the Cybertruck is not that it’s ugly, or unconventional, or absurdly pointy. It’s that, for most people, the car just isn’t worth driving.

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Truck1 Polska (www.truck1-pl.com)
submitted 3 weeks ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Sprzedaż nowych i używanych pojazdów ciężarowych

Dowiedz się więcej na https://www.truck1-pl.com/

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I swear to god, every discussion/video I find online relating to Chinese automotive stuff is just filled with the most racist, vile, generalizing stuff imaginable. Especially true on reddit-logo , you see the most smug comments and posts there.

Anybody here know of any good sources?

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Can anybody speak with confidence about the ending letters in a Manufacturer Part Number (MPN?)

The instrument cluster seems to have half way died in an old Jeep. I can find eBay listings for old instrument clusters for the same make and model. The pictures look the same as mine but there are differences in the MPNs listed and what my dead cluster has.

eBay examples:

  • 56009727AC
  • 56009727AD
  • 56009727L

Current borked cluster: 56009727J

Would these all be interchangeable? Does the letter mean anything important when it comes to finding a replacement?

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Kind of annoying bro hosts but USians are missing out on some crazy EVs

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spoilerTesla’s stock price continues to show volatility in early March trading, falling 0.9% in premarket activity after two days of gains. This follows Monday’s steep 15.4% drop that marked the company’s worst trading day in nearly five years.

The electric vehicle maker saw its shares rebound 7.6% on Wednesday and 3.8% on Tuesday. These gains came after President Donald Trump’s public commitment to purchase a Tesla Model S during a White House event with CEO Elon Musk.

Despite the recent uptick, Tesla stock remains down almost 50% from its mid-December record high. The current price hovers around $245.75 in premarket trading.

First-quarter delivery estimates are creating significant concern among investors. Wall Street’s consensus for Q1 sales initially projected around 430,000 vehicles. Recent estimates have dropped closer to 360,000 units.

This would represent a notable decline from the 387,000 cars Tesla delivered in the first quarter of 2024. Investors typically expect to see growth rather than contraction in delivery numbers.

The reason behind Tesla’s sales decline has become a point of contention. Bulls attribute much of the slowdown to production changes, particularly the Model Y update currently underway.

Data from China illustrates this impact. Tesla sold just 8,000 Model Ys in February, according to Citi analyst Jeff Chung. This represents a sharp decline from the 2024 monthly average of approximately 46,000 vehicles.

Musk’s political activities alienating potential buyers

Bears have a different perspective. They suggest CEO Elon Musk’s increasing political activities are alienating potential buyers globally. Musk’s role as head of the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has generated controversy.

Registration data from the U.S. supports concerns about declining demand. S&P Global Mobility reports that Tesla’s U.S. registrations dropped to 43,411 in January, an 11% decrease compared to the previous year.

While Tesla maintained its leading position in U.S. market share at 42.5%, this figure represents a substantial 12 percentage point decline from a year ago. Meanwhile, total EV registrations in the U.S. grew by 14%.

Looking at individual models shows mixed results. Model Y registrations fell 26% in January compared to last year, with 23,898 units. This decline coincides with the ongoing product changeover at Tesla’s factories.

Model 3 sales showed strength, with registrations jumping 19% to 14,004 units. This increase follows the launch of the updated Model 3 early last year.

Tesla’s premium vehicles faced steeper declines. The Model X and Model S saw sales plunge in January, down 45% and 38% respectively.

The Cybertruck recorded 2,807 registrations in January, slightly below its monthly average of around 3,300 units. The distinctive pickup has faced price cuts, lease deals, and production reductions in 2024. Sales down 45% in Europe

International markets show even steeper declines. Tesla sales dropped 45% in Europe in January and plunged 49% in China in February.

Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas maintains a Buy rating on Tesla stock with a $430 price target. His analysis includes a bear case of $200 and a bull case of $800 per share.

Jonas believes several potential catalysts could boost the stock. These include the launch of a self-driving taxi service in Austin later this year and a “Robot Day” showcasing Tesla’s AI-powered humanoid robots. Analyst maintains a Buy rating

CFRA analyst Garrett Nelson also maintains a Buy rating. He notes that Tesla “is well positioned to weather the consumer backlash with its $36B+ of cash, industry-leading gross margins, and lesser exposure to tariffs relative to other automakers.”

The road ahead remains unclear. As Morgan Stanley’s Jonas observed, “We see scope for the shares to test our $200 bear and our $800 bull case within the next 12 months.” For investors, this suggests continued volatility in Tesla stock through 2025.

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We had the fire cybertruck and now the water cybertruck. Will we get one for each element by the end of the year?

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kitty-birthday-sad tfw you want a tiny electric city car but brandon says no

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Maextro S800 (www.youtube.com)
submitted 2 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

The Maextro S800 (Chinese: 尊界S800; pinyin: Zūnjiè S800) is a battery electric full-size luxury sedan manufactured by JAC Group under the Maextro brand in collaboration with HIMA, Huawei's multi-brand automotive alliance. It is positioned as a flagship vehicle of HIMA.

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I drive a 2006 Scion xA. The battery has been a problem child almost as long as I’ve had the car (that I also live in the car is probably an added stressor—charging shit, etc.), so bad that I’ve considered buying a new one. But then I realized something: the battery is probably just really low. It usually dies because I’ve left the headlights on again, and I usually bring it back to the world of the living by hitting it with my jump box.

Then I throw the lights back on, and plug my phone in, etc. I don’t think the poor thing has much of a chance to charge up before me or one of my stupid friends kills it again.

I know almost nothing about cars. I know that the battery charges by way of the alternator, which converts the raw power of the engine into electricity. So when I’m driving, or just revving the engine or even just idling, the battery is charging? Is that right?

And another question: is it bad for the car to just sit there idling? Someone who claims to be a car guy told me that.

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This is embarrassing, but what should I do about this? I got distracted for like half a second because I thought I saw something on my mirrors, which caused me to veer a little bit onto the curb of the road. The car jumped a little (I don't think I mounted the curb just hit it or grazed it). I was going roughly 60km/h.

Instantly embarrassed, I went to park to look at the the car and didn't notice any damage (didn't hear anything off too). It's an old 1998 Corolla II, so it's light and small as fuck. Should I go to the mechanic anyway? I assume something misaligned even if I can't tell.

I don't really have money for it until the end of the week though (no credit card either), and probably can't book anything till next week. Will it be fine until then?

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