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nicholas

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Posts posted by nicholas

  1. On 4/16/2024 at 2:19 PM, carolinaboy said:

    Tesla laid off 10% of their workforce. Don't know if that was company-wide or at a plant in Austin. Haven't had a chance to read the article.....just saw a headline.

    Company wide (reportedly around 14k workers affected). 

    Just a couple months ago I was of the opinion that Tesla would be virtually guaranteed to survive the ongoing shift to EVs.  Now, I'm honestly not sure.  Musk has rapidly gone way off the rails, and might single-handedly torpedo Tesla if his ridiculously obscene compensation package is reinstated.  He already fired the entire Supercharger team in addition to huge cuts in other departments.

    The longer Musk is in charge at Tesla, the more uncertain its future is.

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  2. 11 hours ago, DCMetroRaleigh said:

    I think I’ll comment. It makes no sense to end it on the east short of Lilesville, when it could easily connect to the new Rockingham Bypass a few miles farther east as a continuous freeway through most of Anson.

    It looks like there are a pretty minimal number of driveways and intersection on US 74 between Lilesville and the Rockingham Bypass.  Seems like it would be more cost-effective to just upgrade that existing section to interstate standards.

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  3. 40 minutes ago, Hushpuppy321 said:

    We know that Dundon wants MLB in Raleigh mostly (90%+)  and/or Charlotte (10%-) if all else fails but is it possible that Tepper throws his hat in the Ring last minute to score an Expansion Team?   I know he’s busy with NFL & MLS currently but we’re talking about possible MLB Expansion in the early 2030s.  It’s possible he could feel ready by then or would he be in the throes of Stadium Building/Renovation?

    I think a serious bid by Tepper would depend heavily on how successful the Panthers and FC are over the next several years. Especially if public funds are involved (which I sure they would be). He hasn't done anything to endear himself to locals and I don't think he will garner much support until he calms down and his current teams start winning.

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  4. 1 minute ago, KJHburg said:

    for those who don't remember this was once one of the finest steakhouses in Charlotte.   It was quite the place back in the day 1970s 80s Charlotte.  Our answer to Raleigh's Angus Barn (which is still there and serving steaks and is packed as usual)

    When did it close?  I can't ever remember seeing it appear to be open for business.  I'm guessing the owners unknowingly picked what became one of the worst spots in Charlotte for a nice steakhouse.

  5. That is fine if traffic is already mostly at a standstill, but if the open lane(s) can continue to serve the volume of traffic then people need to merge in a manner that lets traffic keep moving.  A lot of drivers aren't courteous enough to let others zipper merge at the end of a lane.

    I am continually astounded by the number of people who drive around with their phone in hand.  Especially newer cars that have Bluetooth and navigation.  A couple days ago I passed three pretty new cars back to back to back on Graham St that were all driving below the speed limit and all piloted by people playing on their phones.  Obviously each car was an automatic which I do not think people should be allowed to drive except in the case of physical necessity.

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  6. On 4/27/2024 at 11:28 AM, blt23 said:

    I’d also love to know how much time is being allotted to switch ends at a seemingly stub-end station in Goldsboro. 

    This is what I've seen floating around the internet.  A new connection arcing around to allow passenger trains to continue traveling through in the same direction.

    goldsboro.thumb.jpg.beedf164add7b36aa19b6d4b1431289d.jpg

    I'm mainly disappointed that the plan is to only build to a class 4 level, especially considering the amount of track that will have to be completely rebuilt and how much of it runs dead straight through the middle of nowhere.  Obviously I don't expect trains to go blowing through small downtowns at mach 5, but 80 mph seems too slow.

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  7. On 4/23/2024 at 8:36 AM, smeagolsfree said:

    A pretty good read from Fox Business.

    Car dealers throw cold water on electric vehicles versus gas options: ‘I wouldn’t feel safe’ (msn.com)

    I think that the goal of 50% sales of EV's by 2030 is totally out of play at this point in the game and the Biden administration knows this. My next car will not be an EV. At best it will be a hybrid, probably the new Honda CRV hybrid when I decide to buy as I just bought a new CRV at the end of 2022.  I am not convinced an EV is the best for me due to the long road trips I take. Again, I am like KHJBurg; with my road trips. I, however, will drive from Nashville to Miami in one fell swoop. I do not want to be bothered to stop every two hours to charge my car. I put a urinal in the car and go, go, go.

    50% is a literally comically unrealistic number at this point. We're reaching the stage where economic realities start to take over from well-intentioned but delusional policy.  Ford's EV division just reported a loss of $1.3B (about $130k per vehicle) in Q1 of this year, and pretty much every other EV maker except Tesla is also losing big money on each unit.

    The sooner we stop continuing to cater everything to cars, the better.  Most people don't even like cars or enjoy driving, and it makes everything suck for the few of us that do.

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  8. On 4/12/2024 at 11:05 AM, kermit said:

    There is a significant chance the Red Line will use those tracks

    I've always heard that the Red Line was going to follow the tracks along Graham St and potentially have a station at Camp North End.  If it follows that route then I don't see how or why it would need to use the spur through NoDa?

  9. Right on cue...the Porsche Macan EV:

    https://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/a60565604/2024-porsche-macan-ev-drive/

    Priced close to the Model X but is a little smaller than that (and for now is lacking any obscenely powerful battery options to take on the Plaid).  However the build quality and fit/finish will almost certainly be several notches above Tesla, and even though EVs are as exciting as a toaster I'm sure the Porsche will be more "engaging".  I think the biggest question is how big of a sustained market is there for $80k+ EVs.  For reference Tesla usually sells 20k-25k Model Xs a year here, and Porsche has consistently seen similar sales figures for its ICE Macans.  I don't get the impression that a majority of traditional Porsche buyers are interested in EVs, but it will probably bring in a healthy amount of new buyers who don't want to take a chance on a similar vehicle from a startup.

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  10. On 4/1/2024 at 8:13 AM, russwd said:

    I drive that way most weekends to visit family and I agree with you... progress is slow, and many sections seem to go months without progress.  This construction method sucks.

    That being said, there is a long stretch between Spartanburg and Gaffney that appears to be nearing completion with only cones keeping traffic out of the fast lane *PASSING LANE* near the new center wall.

    fixed

  11. On 4/14/2023 at 6:19 PM, jednc said:

    There was also a Kroger in Hickory back in the 1980's. It probably made it into the 90's, but I'm not sure when it closed.

    Late response but Kroger had a presence around Raleigh even into the late 2010s.  The Triangle never really had any notable homegrown grocers survive the suburban era, and the biggest players from what I remember in the early 2000s were Food Lion, Harris Teeter, and Kroger.  When I was a child my parents mostly shopped at Food Lion and Kroger, which at the time were the two closest grocery stores to our house.  There were actually still a couple of Winn-Dixie stores still scattered around as well (the main one that comes to mind was located where Hendrick Toyota Apex is now on US 64).

    From the early 2000s, Harris Teeter and Walmart expanded pretty rapidly (with Aldi, Trader Joe's Lidl, Lowe's Foods, Publix, Wegmans, and Whole Foods all rapidly growing their presences by the late 2010s), while Kroger was much more modest.  It was rare to see a new or even updated existing Kroger store, and by the mid-2000s most of Kroger's stores were starting to feel outdated, and many of those were located in moderately neglected shopping centers in less desirable parts of town.  By comparison Harris Teeter's stores were substantially nicer.  The only newer Kroger I can recall was at the intersection of Raleigh Blvd and MLK Jr Blvd; it must have opened sometime in the mid-2000s and had a fuel center at the corner of the lot, which was the first grocery store gas station I remember noticing as a kid.  That store did not survive long and closed sometime in 2012 or 2013, and the gas station was demolished as well.  That space is now a Rose's.

    I believe one of the final Kroger stores in North Carolina was in Garner where the Lidl and Harbor Freight Tools stores are now.  It was open until late 2018.  There was also one at the intersection of Falls of Neuse Rd and Strickland Rd in North Raleigh.   It closed sometime in 2017 or early 2018.  Surprisingly (given the wealth of the surrounding area) Food Lion took over that spot a couple years later.

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  12. ^With EV credits and dealer/factory incentives that is one of the least expensive vehicles in America, and despite that basically no one is buying them.  I doubt Vinfast could even give away many of those for free based on how bad the reviews have been.  I only give them a couple of years before withrdrawing from the US market.

    Most of the upstart EV companies will disappear in the next few years.  Canoo is seemingly on its last legs as of this writing.  They recently bought up some of the assets of Arrival which went bankrupt, but had an office in South End for a while.  Fisker is also on the brink of collapse.  Lucid is losing obscene amounts of money on each unit sold.  Rivian likely has the best chance to survive but is also losing money on each unit sold (just not as much, relatively speaking).  Polestar has the support of Volvo and gobs of Chinese funding so it is probably safe, and obviously Tesla isn't going anywhere.

    I do think Tesla is underestimating its impending competition though.  Especially from Porsche.  Aside from multiple blatantly misleading Cybertruck publicity stunts, Tesla has sat on its hands for several years now.  In roughly the same timeframe, Porsche has greatly improved its Taycan EV sedan and has multiple additional EVs well into development, including a Macan EV crossover and a 718 Boxster EV "sports" car.  Porsche has a history of under-promising and over-delivering, whereas Tesla only seems capable of doing the total opposite.

    3 hours ago, tozmervo said:

    What jumped out at me is that they don't have any government safety ratings yet. Are they allowed to sell to consumers and/or operate on highways without those? 

    From what I understand it can take time for governmental agencies to adequately test new vehicles. 

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