Tesla Garbage

11 months ago
71

A known fact .
Batteries are affected by temperature.

Take ur cell phone put it outside see what happens.

Same effect on a lighter. Chemical or gas is affected by temperature

Why old car batteries have problems starting gas vehicles in the winter

A Tesla is definitely not for northern Canada. Its a brick. Absolutely worthless. Alaska forget about it.

-15C to -45C The tesla and all electric cars are useless.

The hot desert will cause other issues like fires.

Electric cars suck.

Story is below. Lithium hates the cold and heat.
Fact......

I found myself on one of those platforms, shivering under one of those lamps, last Saturday (Dec. 30) as the temperature dipped to 3 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 16 degrees Celsius). I'd just come from lunch, during which I'd hijacked one of the restaurant's outlets to charge my phone up to 100 percent of its battery capacity; my next destination was downtown, in an area with which I was unfamiliar, and I was making sure to have my GPS at hand for guidance. And yet, when I pulled my device out of my pocket on that platform to check my route, the charge had already plummeted: The readout in the top-right corner of my screen blinked red, "1% ...1% ...1%." Moments later, the device was dead.

Why?

The short answer is that batteries rely on chemical reactions to work, and freezing temperatures slow or stop those reactions.

Lithium-ion batteries, the commonplace rechargeables that power much of our modern lives and live inside almost every cellphone, discharge electric current as individual lithium ions move through solution from one end of the battery (the anode) to the other end (the cathode). When the battery is drained, all of those ions are embedded in porous graphite in the cathode. When it's fully charged, they're all embedded in the anode, according to Ann Marie Sastry, co-founder and CEO of Sakti3, a Michigan-based battery technology startup, who spoke to Live Science for a past article.

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