A friend bought one of those $4,000 lectric mowers. Battery failed after just over a year. New battery over $1,500. The net net of it all is the lectric generates more greenhouse gases if you factor in the mining of the minerals for the batteries and the failure rates.
I’m not against lectric, just let the people decide. Actually have a Milwaukee 18v mower that works well. Wouldn’t pay the retail price they ask but found it on fake book market place for half the retail price. Just use it for trimming, actually the wife does. She prefers the 15 yr old gas mower LOL.
Yes, different strokes for different folks and different power sources for different uses.
Too many people get hung up on and all are none situation I want to push their ideas on to everybody.
I was super excited back in the '80s when they rechargeable drills came out even though the first ones were quite lackluster until you got into Milwaukee and makita's..
They quickly became just as strong as your corded drills but the convenience of not needing the cord.
Sure, it's annoying when you're doing something over a long period of time and you have to have three batteries to cycle them through the charger so you can go indefinitely but the convenience outweighs the aggravation most of the time.
Try cutting a vehicle in half though with a rechargeable sawzall. It just doesn't cut it, pun intended.
I did this a couple of years ago and I thought I could pull it off with my three battery packs and my Diablo blade but I ended up going in the shed and getting the harbor freight plug in sawzall.
Also back in the 80s when the toy RC cars were popular, I hated the battery powered once even though I quickly got into rechargeable batteries and then the better ones on the race circuit had rechargeable packs.
They even had fast chargers that charge them so quickly it would often damage the cells or kill the battery pack because they were so hot you could barely touch them because it was all about keeping these cars on the little race track circuits in the parking lot of hobby stores etc.
I quickly decided that gas was the way to go because you had full power all the time!
I also had some size 30 and size 60 helicopters that had small engines in them that ran on that expensive stuff from the hobby store.
Now, everybody wants everything to be battery powered or electric and some things just don't work as well.
Back to cars, there are certain things that will be far more convenient with a battery powered car.
Not that they all do this now but they are all capable of it, you can have resistance heating and get the temperature for your defroster up to temperature in about 5 seconds!
People with Tesla's normally don't worry about this because they leave them plugged in at night so they put them into warm up mode and the car warms up everything depending on your settings I assume, without draining any of your battery because you unplug it and then leave.
I don't really need all of that and then again we've had remote starts on cars that were aftermarket add-ons for decades and then around 2005 to 8 most cars started coming from the factory with an option of remote start so there's that.
That waste fuel though and even if you don't care about that, it does waste range that you will have to go to the station sooner to get more gas whereas having the vehicle plugged in in your garage or plugged in at home while it's warming up doesn't decrease your range at all because you're still plugged in.
I do wonder about how many watts a Tesla pools in a warm up mode and I'm guessing it's probably around 800 to 1400 but I could be way off.
I've always found it quite annoying in the winter time that our vehicles take so long to warm up.
Even if the windows are clear of snow etc, even with heated seats, and now they have heated steering wheels, it's still cold when you get in and the fog etc on the windows can be annoying and there is no heat blowing out of the vents for a good three or four minutes.
This should easily be conquered with a battery powered car but my guess is they won't go nearly as far as I would giving it resistance heating comparable to the electric heating for backup in a heat pump system or just an electric air handler in your home where you literally have hot air coming out 5 to 8 seconds after the buttons pressed.
I understand that resistance heating pulls one of the highest amounts of battery power but doesn't matter when you're still plugged in and it's a price I'd be willing to pay for under a minute or so to get it comfortable.