Comments by "Andre Gon" (@andregon4366) on "Donut"
channel.
-
4
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
@engineeringtheweirdguy2103 you really have no idea what you’re talking about do you?
Oh, so I don't know that discharged batteries will deteriorate in a matter of months if they aren't charged? (guess all battery manuals must be wrong then)
Apparently I also don't know that Lithium batteries have a tendency of exploding and bursting to flames if something goes wrong.
I also don't know that the lithium battery inventor and Nobel prize winner, John B Goodenough, disliked lithium batteries (because they have a tendency to explode and burst into flames) to the point of trying to make a safer alternative with Sodium based batteries. (since I haven't heard of it anymore, I assume it didn't go well)
I also don't know that lithium batteries electrolyte is a gel based substance that can't prevent lithium to create ramifications (like a tree root or branch) and reach the other side of the battery causing a short circuit. (which makes them explode and burst into flames)
I also don't know that proprietary batteries aren't as easily replaced as market standard batteries, especially if they're hardwired.
I also don't know that farmers are forced to hack their own equipment to repair it. Oh wait, I do.
Even medical equipment is getting to the point of not being repairable.
Let me emphasys on this one: Companies are making sure that MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, WHICH IS USED TO SAVE PEOPLE'S LIVES, CAN'T BE REPAIRED, putting people's lives at risk.
Companies are literally (as literal the word "literally" can get) putting people's lives at risk for the sake of profit. LITERALLY
While the EU is cracking down on repairability (although very slowly and inefficiently), the US is going the complete opposite way. With lobbyists working as hard as they can to prevent the Right to Repair bill to pass.
Guess I don't know any of this. And apparently, neither do you.
Have a quick google at the required servicing to keep a model 3 in warrantee over the 8 year timeframe. It’s zero. A blank list.
On paper, yes. In the real world the electronics are more prone to malfunction than mechanical devices.
And that's due a simple well known engineering factor: The more complicated something is the more points of failure it has.
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1