• Jrockwar@feddit.uk
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    23 days ago

    Something I find incredibly weird about US company culture is how they talk about overtime like it’s a good thing.

    “Our employees worked weekends, days and nights to make this happen! We wouldn’t have succeeded without people who are willing to give up their personal lives!”

    I hope they not only succeed but get shares. Doing weekends or nights for a company you don’t (partially) own feels like a con.

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      23 days ago

      I was thinking about the US lately. Can’t remember why exactly maybe some friends popped up on my Facebook.

      But I decided it actually wouldn’t be that bad of a place to live. If it wasn’t for the toxic work culture.

      If they worked normal hours and had 20+ holidays it would be alright. Other shit annoy me and you would have to make sure you live in the nice areas but I could live there and enjoy it. But the work culture is an absolute no go. Wish they were like the Aussie. Show up do hard day of work fuck off for some beers. If the surfs good call in sick and end up seeing your boss in the line up. Work hard for a few months then decide fuck it and go to Bali for a weekend accidentally stay there for two months then decide you need to go back to work because travelling is too much effort walk into a job 1 week after landing home.

    • IMALlama@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      Find people who care about what they’re working on and they’ll go well beyond the extra mile. As an extra motivator, make it clear the company won’t be around if they don’t succeed. I’m sure these employees have shares, but tha only really matters if the company succeeds (extra motivation!). Unfortunately, there have been a ton of green/green-adjacent automotive “startups” that have struggled to gain a foothold. See also:

      (I’m sure many others)

      • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        23 days ago

        Fisker is nothing but a conman, always has been. His MO is literally to start a company, secure funding, make a personal fortune and then abandon the bankrupt shell and leave customers hanging.

      • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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        22 days ago

        Here are a few other interesting green automotive startups that didn’t make it:

        • Sono Motors’ Sion: Compact EV with solar panels, power sharing, intended to be easily repairable and included a detail manual. They had prototypes but never went to production. Now the company does niche solar applications.
        • Workhorse: Series Hybrid (think Chevy Volt) Pickup truck with onboard power for tools etc (was announced around or even before Rivian). Was a very pragmatic idea IMO. Later sort-of resold to Lordstown. Now company does some other things, like drones.
        • Lordstown Motors’ Endurance: EV Pickup Truck with hub motors. Made a few hundred, but they have been dragging it out long enough for Ford to make electric pickups. And the idea wasn’t too original even when it was announced.
  • capital@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Been following this company’s development for over a decade now. I really want them to succeed but I have major doubts.

  • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    A few things the cynics are missing.

    1. The engineers who are designing this car don’t have the political power to push for better mass transit.
    2. Even in ideal circumstances, there will still be a need for personal transport vehicles and infrastructure. Small cars will still be needed.
    3. Aptera has 31 employees as of 2023. If they’re working overtime, it’s because they’re letting the company do it. Maintaining good moral is way more important in small companies.
  • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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    23 days ago

    I’m excited to see them succeed. I love it when stuff is designed with function over form, and made practically. I’m a tall person, this is the only small electric vehicle I feel I could actually fit in

  • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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    23 days ago

    There’s something that people really fail to grasp with solar, and that’s the fact there is bugger all energy in the sun, and you need a huge surface area to get any meaningful energy.

    A home solar array often takes up a significant chunk of the roof area, and the amount of surface area a car typically has means that even perfectly efficient solar panels wouldn’t collect enough energy to significantly contribute to the vehicle’s range.

    There’s a good reason why vehicle manufacturers don’t bother adding them.

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      23 days ago

      Yes, but with a light and efficient vehicle, along with enough area covered in solar, it should be able to get you about 15 miles of free travel when left out on a sunny day. It has a battery. It isn’t just running on sunshine and lollipops.

          • ArtikBanana@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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            22 days ago

            The body weighs around 360kg, with a 60kwh battery it supposedly weighs around 800kg (the smallest and lightest option is 25kwh), with a drag coefficient of 0.13.
            In comparison to some of the most efficient cars - the Hyundai Ioniq 6 is around 1,860kg with a drag coefficient of 0.21. Tesla Model 3 is around 1760kg with a drag coefficient of 0.219.

            It’s going to be a whole lot more efficient than the average car just based on these numbers.

            Now it depends on how much of the car’s surface will be covered by the solar panel and what’s the panel’s efficiency.

            • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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              22 days ago

              The Honda civics in the 1980’s weighed around 800 or so kg as well. You know one of the reasons they got heavier? Crash ratings and safety features.

              So once again I’m calling bs that they will get 45 miles out of this. Even if they got it classified as a motorcycle and scape around the car safety requirements, it still won’t get a real world 45 miles a day from solar charging. Your math will never add up to that.

              • ArtikBanana@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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                21 days ago

                That’s a weird comparison to make. The Aptera is smaller and uses different materials.
                Afaik it’s going to be classified as a motorcycle in many states in the USA, but they’re still aiming for a high rating. I know they have crumple zones and a safety cell made from composites akin to F1 cars.
                Whether what they’re planning will be enough, we’ll only know for sure once they test it.

                The math works quite well as long as the information is accurate.
                Of course things can always turn up to be different in the end product.
                But from the information we have now, ~4 hours of good sunlight conditions will be enough for 43 miles.

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        22 days ago

        Yeah, this is why it’s dumb. When is a parked car parked ideally to capture sunlight? Just put the money into solar panels on a building or in a field, charge your car when parked, and you have a much better and cheaper product. The solar panels on the building can also be used to power other things, unlike the car. It’s such a stupid idea and will be very expensive to get custom panels for the car that aren’t super fragile and also efficient. Just spend that money and larger cheap panels. This is purely to get VC funding and nothing more. It’s a waste of time and energy.

        • piccolo@sh.itjust.works
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          22 days ago

          In america? Litterally everywhere. Even driving down the highway would get trickle charging.

          If your expecting to fully charge from the panels, youre gonna have a bad day. But every extra mile would overcome the cost over its lifetime.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            22 days ago

            Again, I said ideally. When will it ever outperform solar on a rooftop of the same size? How much more size could you get for the price?

            It would never overcome its opportunity cost, even if it recovers it’s cost (which you’re speculating on and have no idea of the cost). You could spend the extra money for a solar car, or spend the money for rooftop solar. Rooftop solar will always outperform it for the price, so you have a negative opportunity cost.

            • piccolo@sh.itjust.works
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              21 days ago

              Look at you owning a rooftop to put solar on.

              A lot of americans are renters and that number is unfortunately growing.

        • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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          22 days ago

          I mean, it’d be cool to get a couple miles of range here and there without having to plug in. Could make for a nice little errand vehicle in a smaller city where there aren’t trees or tall buildings to block light and you just park in a driveway or apartment parking lot. If say the battery itself would be big enough for an 80 mile range, I could see some people never having to plug this car in.

          It’ll come down to price, of course. If it’s cheap, it could be cool and useful. If it’s expensive, it’s a novelty and would have no practical reasoning to be purchased.

          • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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            19 days ago

            The base model has a 250mi range, and the biggest boi battery is estimated to get close to an 800mi range. The batteries are almost half the size of other EV batteries because of how efficient this vehicle is.

    • ramenshaman@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      Their tech isn’t just the solar, they’ve optimized the car solely for efficiency. They claim their car can get 10 mi/kwh, so with 700W of solar panels they can get up to 40 miles of charge per day with just the solar. By contrast, the solar panels that are available on the new Prius get 4 miles of charge per day.

      Now that their production-intent vehicles are just starting to be built up, I’m eagerly awaiting their actual test data that hopefully verifies their claims on efficiency, range, crash safety, etc. but we’ll see 🤞 I really hope they succeed.

      • quaternaut@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        Yes, the aerodynamics + solar panels is what makes this vehicle enticing, not just the solar panels alone.

    • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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      23 days ago

      Solar panels are also added weight, which reduces range. Any way you look at it, it makes more sense to have the solar panels at a base location you go back to.

      I guess an RV, or a camp trailer, makes sense to have panels on it, but that’s about it

      • oyo@lemm.ee
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        22 days ago

        Solar panels are incredibly thin and light. There is no reason not to include them.

        • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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          22 days ago

          Price. Large standardized panels are cheaper. Until you cover static otherwise unused space with solar, there’s no way this car is a better use of money.

      • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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        23 days ago

        There’s also things like Sentinel mode on Teslas that use power.

        My main gripe is people think a solar car will never need to be charged, or only on trips, and that’s just not the case.

        • ramenshaman@lemmy.world
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          22 days ago

          Aptera claims to be able to get 40 miles a day via solar. Most people drive less than that per day.

  • Aniki 🌱🌿@lemmy.zip
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    23 days ago

    It’s also a bit strange to see a production-intent build of a solar electric vehicle without any solar panels. Still, Aptera shared that technology will be implemented next alongside the SEV’s production-intent thermal management system and exterior surfaces.

    This thing is pure vaporware. My new Leaf isn’t.

    • TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.com
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      21 days ago

      No one is trying to take away your Leaf, though.

      Let them push the envelope. Failing is a required pavestone on the road to almost every success story.

    • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      Im not saying it isn’t, but fitting custom curved prob special solar panels on a test vehicle does not sound cost efficient, especially when you can test the solar panels separately perfectly fine.

      Cars are complex to construct properly even without drivetrains, plenty to test there.

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        22 days ago

        True, but my understanding is the amount of solar energy that hits an area the size of a car multiplies by the max possible solar energy conversion is still far below what’s needed to power a car. Sure, you can continue to charge it while parked, which is cool. However, you could also put cheaper non-custom panels on a building and then plug your non-solar electric car into it to charge while parked, and the building panels will have significantly better solar exposure and be cheaper per panel.

        If your goal is making something effective that reduces carbon output, an EV and solar on a building is much better. If you’re creating junk to get VC funding, this is what it looks like. If this comes to market at all, it’s not going to make any waves, except maybe for how impractical it is.

        • quaternaut@lemmy.world
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          22 days ago

          You’re taking for granted the fact that many people don’t have the luxury of modifying their house/condo/apartment to install and maintain solar panels. Nor is it guaranteed that they have a garage/driveway to charge their car. With the Aptera, you wouldn’t have to deal with the hassle or inability to install solar panels because you would be able to passively charge it anywhere it’s sunny (i.e. while driving as well). So I disagree that this is just an objectively worse option than charging with rooftop solar, especially because of how competitively priced the Aptera will be compared to standard EVs.

          • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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            22 days ago

            Youd probably have a better time designing a popup thing for the top of a car that has solar panels. Then you dont need to deal wigh the body shape of the car while still being able to maximize the output to a decent degree depending on how complex you want to make it.

        • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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          22 days ago

          Oh, I agree with you there (well, not in the tech itself, why not both, have panels on buildings and on some cars – plenty of people drive only a few thousands of kilometres/miles per year & still need a car).

          I’m just saying that as engineer I would start testing them separately, in lab conditions first to get the basics & correct obvious initial faults, then separately outside.
          As management I however would insist that engineer has to find a way to glue whatever solar panels they can find to the prototype if there is gonna be a press release.

          I didn’t read much what they are doing/going for tho, so can’t say much about that.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            22 days ago

            Why not both is because most people don’t have unlimited money. It’s about opportunity cost. It’d be better to buy a cheaper EV and better rooftop solar than and expensive EV that has mediocre solar charging.

            For sure they should test them separately if they’re doing this though, or at least not use custom ones for the prototype. You can buy small panels for a reasonably good price, and they could just stick those on the car for a proof of concept. The problem with this is it’d prove that the amount of power required is way more than is going to be generated. If they can talk about concepts then then people can still wonder “what if…” If they actually implement it then it makes it obvious there’s no reasonable path to a good market and they lose FC funding.

            • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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              22 days ago

              In a free market and under current western capitalism the final consumer price (or entire consumer market supply for that matter) isn’t directly linked to features.
              Ie they will sell you at max price as little as they can, not at a cost based price.
              (Anyway, a cars worth of solar panels is such a negligible cost in relation to cars base price or options lists that it doesn’t matter that much)

              And I don’t ever think you need any kind of prototype or testing to show how much solar energy can a surface of a car produce and how much travel distance does that represent - to ballpark it that is just a simple online search (you have enormous quantity of solar panel efficiency data, per latitude, as well as actual electric car consumption rates).
              Bcs of that obvious common sense & various types of other solar cars out there I really doubt anyone is getting deceived here on solar mileage. The company does not claim they invented any revolutionary new solar panels (I doubt they hide the wattage spec they intend to install), nor hide the car (it’s a design 10+ years old, the point of which is that it has about a 0.1 drag coefficient, so about half of that of the sleekest other cars today). Their goal here is to put the existing design into production, so more of a logistical challenge - their prototypes need to prove they can build cars (to establish a production line), not to prove any overall concept of a solar car itself.
              Additionally you can already get Hyundai Iconiq 5 with a solar panel sunroof for years now, it ads a mile/kilometer per day in real life (for people with a couple of miles/kilometre commutes that’s actually noticeable). But for decades you could get some car models (Toyota & Audi at least) with a solar panel sunroof, mostly they just powered the 12V battery with it to run auxiliary systems (like ventilation, AC).

              I think you might have jumped to the conclusion this company is trying to sell solar cars with unlimited (outside?) range.

              • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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                22 days ago

                I think you might have jumped to the conclusion this company is trying to sell solar cars with unlimited (outside?) range.

                No, I jumped to the conclusion that it must be less effective than the alternative of rooftop solar + conventional EV. There is no world in which this is better. Rooftop solar will always have better solar access, and conventional EV will be cheaper because of effeciency of scale. This design is limited to powering the car only, and will never be as ideally situated as rooftop solar. The opportunity cost of this car will be worse than rooftop solar + EV. Sure, for people with unlimited money it might sell, but most of us don’t have that and have to compare cost to value and choose the best option for that.

                • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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                  22 days ago

                  Sorry, but what sort of conclusion is that? I don’t understand, it’s divergent things.

                  Lots of tech that cars offer I can also have at my house, like a sound system or massage chair.

                  Car prices don’t reflect constriction costs.
                  Cars won’t be more or less expensive bcs of 200$ of solar panels.

                  Also people with budgets constraints dont buy new cars, why would they?

                • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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                  22 days ago

                  I have rooftop solar, but only for the house because I can’t reach my car to charge it in the street.

                  The car sits outside for days (I work from home), so in my case this would be great.

                  This is the 1st I’ve seen of this car, so haven’t read any other details, but I’d be surprised if external charging wasn’t possible.

  • ramenshaman@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Lots of people here criticizing Aptera who clearly haven’t researched the company or the tech.

    • Ross_audio@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      Trains are easy and they’re easily electrified already. So putting solar on the trains won’t have any advantage.

      Rails are the difficult part of railways. They never seem to put them between my house and my work. They’ve put something called a road in between instead.