Fairly certain it set off another car.That's crazy.
Was that solely the EV, or did it set another car off?
There is a federal regulation on the size of batteries you can bring onto an airplane. Many laptop makers could put a significantly larger/longer lasting battery in laptops but due to the risk of them exploding and burning on an airplane, they can't. Thats always frustrated me since I refuse to fly anymore; if I want a laptop with a battery twice as big I can't have one because someone could take it on an airplane.Supermarket in NYC apparently burned down after electric scooter caught fire. We all have these batteries in our home.
Screw them, says the libtards.Because of the cost for replacement batteries on EVs, any accident damage that does anything to the battery insurance companies total the car. Also I read that the old gas guzzlers are being shipped to Africa.
Heavy electrolysis to the batteries and everything metal around them: Tavarish's latest McLaren restoration has a super corroded battery but that was salt water for a few days. It'll come as no surprise, but batteries and water generally do not mix. If an ICE car gets totaled in a flood with a black mark on its title forever, so do EV's.One topic of discussion I've never heard is how do these batteries react to water? With all the flooding going on across the country, inquiring minds want to know.