Submitted by Sorin61 t3_zrmt3i in technology
Comments
RnDanger t1_j141zmy wrote
This seems to me like they want to stir controversy out of nothing because Republicans will see their ads
Ground2ChairMissile t1_j146in8 wrote
For the UK version of PC Magazine? Hardly the target audience.
The reason they wrote the story (which isn't even in their coverage field) is that any and all news on electric vehicles does great in Google Discovery SEO.
boundbylife t1_j157uxa wrote
Okay, but then why the negative tone?
Here's a positive spin on the same headline: "USPS to Kickstart EV Inititave by Electrifying Delivery Fleet"
port1337user t1_j166jeo wrote
Because that's all people click on nowadays, we're very much a culture that prefers to be outraged. Where have you been the last decade? Do you even pay attention to news outside of reddit??
merien_nl t1_j14e6lo wrote
Makes sense. Since the article is not about PCs nor is it about the UK.
port1337user t1_j166bx5 wrote
Republicans definitely seek out PC news on UK websites, we got em now gang!
nailszz6 t1_j159pfb wrote
Liberals don’t like socialism either.
dperry324 t1_j1463m0 wrote
It used to be that the USPS operated solely off of revenue from postage.
Blu3Army73 t1_j146ki5 wrote
And all the other services that the government neutered them of like banking, loans, and some legal services
Ok-Welder-4816 t1_j1662fi wrote
Canada Post just got loans back. Hoping they're being fair about it and not predatory.
dperry324 t1_j14gl0h wrote
Not sure why the downvotes. Was just stating a fact. Former USPS carrier here.
Djinnwrath t1_j16trl1 wrote
Because the fact on its own can be misleading and not representative of the whole picture.
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Konras t1_j156xh7 wrote
That is a bait for people to think government is subsidizing private company. I almost though so myself before I checked Google what USPS stands for and who owns it.
Ok-Welder-4816 t1_j166byd wrote
Some are public that you wouldn't expect, too. Don't know if you guys have Purolator in the states, but it used to be a private courier here in Canada and now is either majority or wholly owned by Canada Post.
RnDanger t1_j141v3f wrote
USPS to Save Billions in Federal Funds by Electrifying Delivery Fleet
FIFY
Ok-Welder-4816 t1_j166pd1 wrote
Well, there is an initial large capital outlay that, hopefully, will save money in the long run.
Almost certainly it will, but for all we know the US could get taken out by a giant meteor before the investment gets made back. So at least in the short term, it's "spending".
vacuous_comment t1_j14fppt wrote
Fuck yeah, electric delivery vehicles are a no brainer.
We get the Amazon Rivians delivering to us now.
raygundan t1_j166b0o wrote
I don't even know when it started for our area-- been seeing the same truck type for a while, but it wasn't until I just happened to be outside when one was pulling away that I realized they weren't just "a regular gas cargo van with amazon branding" like I'd assumed.
kronicfeld t1_j14tijz wrote
What other funds would they use
Cam599 t1_j15cg05 wrote
Same funds they use to replace trucks normally.
smallfrie876 t1_j16c4ll wrote
So federal funds
Sambalogna t1_j17dhw7 wrote
They actual operate entirely off of postage by their customers. Such as contracts with Amazon.
DBDude t1_j14s59a wrote
If anything is begging to be electrified, it's final leg shipping. Daily routes aren't long, and they can charge overnight. And by that I mean vehicles designed from the ground up to be electric so they can take advantage of the technology, not whatever it is the USPS bought.
professor_mc t1_j16aqh6 wrote
The USPS is mostly buying vehicles that were designed to their specifications so they were designed to be electric or ICE from the ground up. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Next_Generation_Delivery_Vehicle
DBDude t1_j18txuv wrote
You can't really design something for both and be optimal for both.
Banea-Vaedr t1_j13up7a wrote
Sure, yea. Alright. Do it. That sounds like the right choice to me. Saves money, at least.
Sawsall t1_j16jq6z wrote
LOL! You ever seem what it takes to replace a lithium battery pack at about 60-70K miles????
do_you_even_ship_bro t1_j16oj1x wrote
EVs have lower maintenance costs over their life. And they can charge at the office.
bobjr94 t1_j16wei7 wrote
Federal regulations says they must last 80K miles, most cars are warrantied to 100k or longer. There are teslas on the road with over 200k miles or more on their original batteries. 400k on prius taxies and ubers.
How far does a postal delivery van go in a day 20 miles, 30 miles ? A small 35KW battery could do double that, in 10 years if it's lost 15% capacity it could still do it.
Free_Dome_Lover t1_j15gw2r wrote
Don't forget that they held open bidding to build this new electric fleet and they wound up choosing a company affiliated with the Postmaster that has never built an electric vehicle before who immediately pivoted to building a high efficiency gas truck instead.
nyaaaa t1_j17vu9r wrote
To be fair, the "second" option is a 150 person company which retired its truck after producing 40 because it didn't meet customer specs.
So no idea who came in third, or what their product would look like.
There is a struggling excellent electric power train and battery maker that pretends it can assemble cars as well, on the market who would be the perfect fit for whoever to make them electric instead.
RoboNyaa t1_j160byr wrote
Best part of the upgrade? They'll finally have AC.
MpVpRb t1_j16e3ld wrote
Postal delivery is the PERFECT use for EVs
Too bad they ignored Tesla, GM, Ford, etc and gave the contract to a fukkin' defense contractor. Worst choice ever!
raygundan t1_j166nr8 wrote
Makes sense... the longest route in the US is less than 200 miles long, and it probably isn't even relevant since it's one of the rural routes driven by a carrier using their own vehicle.
If anything was tailor-made for EVs, it's the short-to-medium range stop-and-go of a delivery route. No idle losses, regenerative braking between the many stops, predictable distance, daily return to a central location where charging can be handled.
Edit: A little more googling says that the average route is only 24 miles, and that nearly all of them are less than 70 miles. We should have gone electric for the average postal route 30 years ago... even boring old lead-acid batteries could have managed that!
johnjohn4011 t1_j14v99h wrote
Sounds like a good job creator to me - why not? As if full on privately owned corporations don't receive gazillions in aid through tax breaks.
jdjcjdbfhx t1_j16d2w0 wrote
I wonder how the conservatives will twist this
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Fragrant_Onion7021 t1_j16ml12 wrote
Didn’t they JUST replace a ton of their trucks and people were like why the fuck did you get gas models and not electric?
poocoocoo t1_j17850z wrote
Great now can I actually get my packages?
1PooNGooN3 t1_j17dtj4 wrote
Does this money come from the BILLIONS of dollars that the usps was required to pay in to the fed for pretty much no reason? “Pre-funding”
Seuros t1_j185qrh wrote
They will explode and burn the mail. mark my words.
[deleted] t1_j14gdkr wrote
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bmlbytes t1_j14h7oj wrote
Unfortunately the current fleet is WAY past it’s service life.
natsnoles t1_j14hgof wrote
No where in this article does it say they aren’t doing that. Although it also doesn’t say if they are. Kind of weak on the details.
za419 t1_j17478j wrote
The current mail truck fleet is a design that's 40 years old and ended production almost 30 years ago. At this point, the most impressive thing about them is that they still run...
I don't think we should feel bad about retiring a vehicle that old
merien_nl t1_j13z6z2 wrote
It is a service of the Federal Government, why put in the headline it will use federal funds for this. Isn't that obvious?