mwemaxxowner
Platinum Member
Meh. Now's a tough time for getting anything. I just waited 14 weeks for a tractor.
MY bad I was thinking it was a made in the USA car when making my prior post.No but I think you missed my point.
It takes time to get anything right now. It'd be hard to say whether that's just due to the way things are right now or because it's new.
My coworker ordered a Woodland Mills stump grinder and waited about 12 weeks for it.
i remember about 20 years ago one of the carmakers was in a deal with microsoft to supply the OS or something.New Mach E teething problems,
Ford apparently using buyers as Beta testers
Can't get in because the phone ap won't open the door
in a multi driver family and Ford only supplies 1 key.
apple car play won't work'
charge door opens on it's own and then the car won't drive.
Ford can't fix and attempting to reprogram it, "bricks the car where it sits" until a factory tech can arrive and do more invasive programming.
Automotive used to be relatively long-cycle, in terms of validating systems.i remember about 20 years ago one of the carmakers was in a deal with microsoft to supply the OS or something.
what a joke....can't get into car? contact your network administrator
i also remember dreading the day when the bit wienies takeover.
BIL bought a 2 or 3 year old Honda from a Honda Dealer not long ago.Ford can't fix and attempting to reprogram it, "bricks the car where it sits" until a factory tech can arrive and do more invasive programming.
Yep. the non opening door using a phone ap is entirely unacceptable.Automotive used to be relatively long-cycle, in terms of validating systems.
Test Engineering takes Time, and Money.
My Mom's generation was fond of saying "Your known by the company you keep". Also from that era "Lay down with dogs, Get up with fleas".
Tech figured out a long time ago that First Mover advantage (Musk the best known example today) trumps most everything, and, why pay/wait for Test Engineering to validate, when customers will do it for free..... Automotive has picked up more than a few bad habits from the Dog Flea Tech Hounds.....
I keep threatening to buy a Model A..... I better hurry up, as even w/o Covid, they are getting $$$. One thing I know I'd like there..... an A is probably easier to get parts for, than some 5-15 y/o modern cars.
I've forgotten the exact # from maybe 10 years ago. I was at an Embedded Hardware seminar, and the presenter referenced the Tens of Thousands of software threads running on a then-modern Audi. What he was talking about was just the Infotainment system.
Consumers literally have no clue about the scale of this complexity... and to be slightly objective about it, I can see why Development Engineering just throws it over the wall to Production today.... they run out of Resources/Schedule/Engineers PDQ.....
While flakey tech irritates me in general, I have a BIG problem with this ^ reality, when it comes to any life-safety systems.
Rgds, D.
Since the sun has a billion years of fuel in its tank you could call that perpetual motion I think.I would use a solar-powered tractor. It's a perpetual motion machine!
That is why software engineering was developed. There are ways to write and verify software that are best practices. This field is evolving. It is almost impossible to exhaustively test a completed application and verify that it will function properly under all conditions. That is why you combine best practices with testing. Hopefully you get close. Then it is off to the consumers for beta testingAutomotive used to be relatively long-cycle, in terms of validating systems.
Test Engineering takes Time, and Money.
My Mom's generation was fond of saying "Your known by the company you keep". Also from that era "Lay down with dogs, Get up with fleas".
Tech figured out a long time ago that First Mover advantage (Musk the best known example today) trumps most everything, and, why pay/wait for Test Engineering to validate, when customers will do it for free..... Automotive has picked up more than a few bad habits from the Dog Flea Tech Hounds.....
I keep threatening to buy a Model A..... I better hurry up, as even w/o Covid, they are getting $$$. One thing I know I'd like there..... an A is probably easier to get parts for, than some 5-15 y/o modern cars.
I've forgotten the exact # from maybe 10 years ago. I was at an Embedded Hardware seminar, and the presenter referenced the Tens of Thousands of software threads running on a then-modern Audi. What he was talking about was just the Infotainment system.
Consumers literally have no clue about the scale of this complexity... and to be slightly objective about it, I can see why Development Engineering just throws it over the wall to Production today.... they run out of Resources/Schedule/Engineers PDQ.....
While flakey tech irritates me in general, I have a BIG problem with this ^ reality, when it comes to any life-safety systems.
Rgds, D.
I've heard about making a temporary 240 by connecting two 120 lines from different outlets. I would have to do some research to figure out how to do that though.funny story. i just did a generator service call for one of my long time customers. he asked me if i could also install a 50 amp 240 outlet for future elect car charger. im not doing that anymore, but i gave him a referral. apparently, his BIL came for a visit from Seattle, and since there was no 240 outlet he plugged his elect car into a standard 120 outlet. left it charging for 2 days. when he left to go back home, he had to make 2 stops for recharging car. could not stay parked long enough to top off battery. took him forever to get back home. now BIL is pissed at this guy for not having a tesla charge station at his home.
go figure
But still, most outlets are only 20 amps. They need 50 amps for car charger. 80 amps for the soon to be ford lightning truck.I've heard about making a temporary 240 by connecting two 120 lines from different outlets. I would have to do some research to figure out how to do that though.
Independent critical thinking....... Or.......Count me in with the group that believes any fully electric car that could have a burn possibility, emergency need to enter OR exit the vehicle, and/ or be in an accident should have a mechanical way to open the doors. software be ------.
I bet the BIL will be a one time EV owner or a frustrated EV owner. The world is not keeping up with his expectations fast enough.funny story. i just did a generator service call for one of my long time customers. he asked me if i could also install a 50 amp 240 outlet for future elect car charger. im not doing that anymore, but i gave him a referral. apparently, his BIL came for a visit from Seattle, and since there was no 240 outlet he plugged his elect car into a standard 120 outlet. left it charging for 2 days. when he left to go back home, he had to make 2 stops for recharging car. could not stay parked long enough to top off battery. took him forever to get back home. now BIL is pissed at this guy for not having a tesla charge station at his home.
go figure
Humans, even educated ones, are often not good a doing the right thing(s). Part of the Problem - It can take consistent effort and discipline........ Eating Healthy and Getting Enough Exercise just for example......That is why software engineering was developed. There are ways to write and verify software that are best practices. This field is evolving. It is almost impossible to exhaustively test a completed application and verify that it will function properly under all conditions. That is why you combine best practices with testing. Hopefully you get close. Then it is off to the consumers for beta testing
The newer EV’s take what they get. They won’t take more than they’re rated for, but if you’re charging a Tesla from a 30 amp dryer circuit it will just take longer.But still, most outlets are only 20 amps. They need 50 amps for car charger. 80 amps for the soon to be ford lightning truck.