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[return to "New tires every 7k miles? Electric cars save gas; tire wear shocks some drivers"]
1. bryanl+51[view] [source] 2024-01-29 13:05:39
>>rntn+(OP)
Looks like an astroturf campaign, with essentially the same story popping up around the country.

>>39159783

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2. stavro+R1[view] [source] 2024-01-29 13:10:20
>>bryanl+51
I've been seeing a lot of anti-electric stories recently, even here. A lot about how Hertz has been selling their electric cars (mostly unrelated to them being electric, but because they see a lot of scrapes and scrapes are costlier for them to fix on the electrics they have), about how the market is cooling down, etc.

Seems like some interests are threatened by the prevalence of electric cars.

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3. thefz+34[view] [source] 2024-01-29 13:24:57
>>stavro+R1
You can't engine-brake with an electric engine (with a combustion car, downshifting will force your car to be slower when going downhill, basically) so in mountain regions with ups and downs there's way more braking leading to massively increased tyre wear.
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4. dgacmu+z6[view] [source] 2024-01-29 13:38:52
>>thefz+34
First, you can: many electrics have a regenerative braking mode that you can engage that will provide some amount of "engine braking"-equivalent slowing down. And on some of them you can select how much slowing is applied. It's very similar to manually selecting a gear.

Second, huh? How does engine braking reduce tire wear at the same speeds? Brakes do not contact the tire. It reduces brake wear...

Gentle braking reduces tire wear but that's possible with either mode.

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5. thefz+aX1[view] [source] 2024-01-29 21:49:34
>>dgacmu+z6
Absolutely not the same thing.

> Brakes do not contact the tire. It reduces brake wear...

When braking you are basically limiting the tyre's rotation leveraging the tyre's stickiness to slow you down, and ultimately wearing it down. This is why where there is no abrasive surface under your car, i.e. snow, stopping down is harder. Or just accelerate to 100Kmh and then stomp on your brakes, then notice how they are all worn out where they contact the ground.

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