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Between the price of gas and electricity, how do we afford ammo! 
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Priorities!Between the price of gas and electricity, how do we afford ammo!![]()
Either your math is off or your jeep is a real gas hog. By your numbers it only gets 6.8 mpg. I don't think I'd drive that one either.My trip from Brookings to Portland and back was 719 miles, and I paid a total of $48.69, and spent 3hrs 11 minutes connected to a charger which I spent walking around like my doctor says I need to do to avoid DVT, eating, and paruseing gun counters.
I DO still have a dinosaur fueled vehicle, my jeep. Assuming $4 gallon gas this trip would have cost me $420.85 and I'd still have needed to stop to eat, and walk around.
Sounds about right, jeeps are bricks usually with low gears and big tires. Not exactly the poster child of fuel efficiency.Either your math is off or your jeep is a real gas hog. By your numbers it only gets 6.8 mpg. I don't think I'd drive that one either.
Its probably a few 30-45 minute stops, stops you'd probably (or your body would like you to) take anyway.To each his own, but I think on a long trip 3+ hour recharging stops would get old fast.
From here Portland is an all day drive and three thirty minute stops doesn't seem excessive. It must suck to not even have time to get out of the car, and this is from someone who spent a lifetime in a car - if you don't get out of the car enough you can have horrible health outcomes.Either your math is off or your jeep is a real gas hog. By your numbers it only gets 6.8 mpg. I don't think I'd drive that one either.
To each his own, but I think on a long trip 3+ hour recharging stops would get old fast.
Very true. But living in a car and taking a trip are two different things. I'll be taking a trip in a couple of months for the first time in ages where the time travelling is going to a big part of the fun. Usually, when I am going somewhere, travel time is wasted time. I can enjoy the scenery from a freeway almost as well at 80 as 55.if you don't get out of the car enough you can have horrible health outcomes.
That sounds like it was in "Limp Mode" (right there with you on the jokes!)This was four months before we passed a struggling Tesla in the hills of I-5 around Roseburg. The car was in the emergency lane with flashers on going about 20mph. I'm sure that was fun.
You seem to be making some unfounded assumptions. I never said I didn't have time to get out of the car. Just said I wouldn't want to take an EV on a road trip, due to the inconvenience of charging time. Again, to each his own.From here Portland is an all day drive and three thirty minute stops doesn't seem excessive. It must suck to not even have time to get out of the car, and this is from someone who spent a lifetime in a car - if you don't get out of the car enough you can have horrible health outcomes.

You don't want to charge all the way to 100% if you don't have to, it's to hard on the batteries for only a marginal benefit, Ideally you keep the charge between 20% and 80%. To answer the question though, it takes about an hour for a tesla super charger.conversation that lasted far too long with an engineer/Tesla owner a couple of years ago only got the answer of how long to charge to 80%, which was "about 20 minutes". I never got the answer to, "How long to charge to 100%?"
The charging time isn't an inconvenience it's stops you should be taking anyway.You seem to be making some unfounded assumptions. I never said I didn't have time to get out of the car. Just said I wouldn't want to take an EV on a road trip, due to the inconvenience of charging time. Again, to each his own.![]()
I don't mind stopping. I just like when it's at a time and place of my own choosing, not the car's. Plus, I hear that when you use your heater in winter (and I would presume also the AC in summer, although I don't know) it can significantly reduce your range. As well as the batteries losing 2.5% of charging capacity per year.The charging time isn't an inconvenience it's stops you should be taking anyway.

Trukinbear doesn't charge on public chargers very often, and does indeed pay extra highway taxes. His tag renewal is more than he paid for his first car. Trukinbear pats himself on the back for going off grid 20+ years ago, and insisting his son do the same, so he's really reaping benefits from investments he made long ago... and the sun. But you just go ahead and keep paying extra, just don't convince yourself you're doing it to protect the highway tax base. I'd say given the nature of this group, and the nature of the major political party most represented here that you already think you pay too much tax, but go on with that train of thought.I don't mind stopping. I just like when it's at a time and place of my own choosing, not the car's. Plus, I hear that when you use your heater in winter (and I would presume also the AC in summer, although I don't know) it can significantly reduce your range. As well as the batteries losing 2.5% of charging capacity per year.
And while @trukinbear is patting himself on the back for the money he is saving, he is basically freeloading off the rest of us with his publicly financed charging discount and his nonpayment of gasoline taxes, which fund the road system he drives on. And if he thinks the insatiable creature known as government hasn't noticed, wait 'till they slap on a milage driven tax, which his miracle machine will automatically report to .gov with its cell phone technology. They are already proposing such a tax at both the state and federal levels.
And while they force more people and government agencies into EVs, placing a greater strain on an already fragile power grid, and any new generating capacity is sucked up by AI data centers - yeah, sounds like a formula for success to me. But I guess the rest of us can put up with rolling blackouts so EV drivers can keep charging.
But, don't let me rain on your parade.![]()
If only there were a way to harvest the power of the sun that could be used to cover the large swaths of land dedicated to parking or a way to harness the power of the wind that doesn't block land use for farmland or better yet extract the power of the building blocks of the universe to generate clean safe cheap power.And while they force more people and government agencies into EVs, placing a greater strain on an already fragile power grid, and any new generating capacity is sucked up by AI data centers - yeah, sounds like a formula for success to me. But I guess the rest of us can put up with rolling blackouts so EV drivers can keep charging.
Who cares?The US government provides an estimated $31 billion to $35 billion annually in federal subsidies to the oil and gas industry through tax breaks, drilling incentives, and financial support. These subsidies often include decades-old tax deductions for drilling expenses, alongside newer federal pandemic relief and industry financing.
In 2024–2025, the U.S. government accelerated funding for EV infrastructure, notably announcing $623 million in grants in early 2024 to expand the national charging network. Additionally, renewable energy subsidies hit $15.6 billion in FY2022, with substantial ongoing investments from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and California's $1.4B–$1.9B Zero-Emission Transportation.
So which one is the tax whore?