Hot! Euro 7 = bigger engines


Too bad none of these German executives has balls as big Elo...

Oh, I have absolutely no doubts that Elon Musk is a genius. His ability to think forwards and embrace outside-of-the-box endeavors is indeed remarkable. And I also have no doubts that Elon Musks' erratic behavior torpedos the integrity required in order to negotiate mutually beneficial cooperations. I'd feel more than uneasy were I a potential business partner, in a constant state of apprehension regarding any sort of contractual integrity involving Elon Musk. I'd certainly make sure that I had the most competent legal counsel at my disposal.
 
Trump says —- ‘hold my beer’

Why? If anything Trump is exactly what the EU abhors. "How dare him?!"

If Donald Trump were a vehicle, he would be an orange GMC Sierra Denali 2500 Duramax V8 turbodiesel in metallic orange with chrome wheels and flying the American flag. Nothing wrong with that, btw. Certainly way better than Greta Thunberg's Tesla, which is full of rubbish and smells just like a rubbish dump.
 
Why? If anything Trump is exactly what the EU abhors. "How d...

"...if Donald Trump were A VEHICLE..." ?

Now THAT'S an interesting concept. I'd envision something like...THIS:

r6yuewrgtdfgrgrgrgrgrgrgr.webp


If you squint a bit...the roof resembles his head.
 
The roof would have to be gold as well. What car is that btw...

Some excruciatingly ugly limited-production P.O.S. from the 1970s' courtesy of a company called Mohs Automobiles. Built on a modified International Harvester Scout chassis. Pretentious, gluttonous, slow.
 
Interesting article about the future of Europe's aims for Zero Emissions from the below site. A detailed downloaded file can be found on the website which has more technical info about Euro 7 and beyond.

Source - Road to Zero: the last EU emission standard for cars, vans, buses and trucks | Transport & Environment

transportenvironment.org/publications/road-zero-last-eu-emission-standard-cars-vans-buses-and-trucks

Road to Zero: the last EU emission standard for cars, vans, buses and trucks
Four years on from the Dieselgate scandal, Europe is in the process of setting a new pollutant emissions standard for light and heavy duty vehicles. The future ‘post Euro-6/VI’ (informally called ‘Euro 7/VII’) norm gives the EU the opportunity to eradicate pollution from road transport, regain technological and regulatory leadership, and align standards with its new ‘Zero Pollution Ambition’ and the objective of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. In this briefing, T&E sets out its blueprint for the post-Euro 6/VI standard.

asphalt-dark-dawn-endless-531321.webp


Europe is currently in the middle of a global health crisis triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the health, safety and job security of workers are rightly a priority for lawmakers. This makes the objectives of post-Euro 6/VI more important than ever. Public health experts warn that polluted air probably makes people more susceptible to viruses and the World Health Organisation has stated that climate change will likely increase the occurrence of infectious diseases.

Although the latest Euro 6d-temp/6d standards have somewhat reduced emissions from new cars, progress has been limited. Vehicles with combustion engines - diesel, petrol or natural gas - are still not clean when all pollutants or driving conditions are taken into account. It is time to prioritise public health, the environment and zero emissions technology innovation. For the post-Euro 6/VI standard, the EU’s priorities must be:

1. Euro 7 should be the last EU emissions standard. It should set the EU vehicle emission limits to the lowest level globally and define a clear roadmap to zero-pollution:



pollution-limits.webp

2. It should regulate all pollutants that are harmful to public health and the environment. It should include smaller particles, ammonia, NO2 and others that are currently not regulated.

3. Euro 7 should improve testing, approval and certification of vehicles to make sure emission limits apply under all possible driving conditions.

4. It should ensure that emission limits are met throughout the whole lifetime of the vehicle. Right now the EU has generally the lowest emission durability requirements globally.
 
Maybe instead of interfering with the engines, the EU pass a law saying that all cars sold in Europe must have side head and torso protection (take that Alpine...) and that cars sold in Europe would have to pass the EuroNCAP tests including an small overlap crash test of the driver's side and the passenger side like the IIHS already does. No car would be allowed to be sold in Europe if it had an scored poorly in the S.O.C.T.

The problem, however is that suggesting the EU to worry about safety, would make all of its little dictators happy and priapic with anticipation... So they would vote ridiculous laws like forcing car makers to limit top speed at 180 km/h.

I mean the Ford Fusion used to be limited at 180 km/h...

md-cc1574d9-5f04-4e31-acbd-a82717ebdfb4.webp


That Mercedes Sprinter sure F'd that Fusion pretty good... Damn!

Anyway, see that Volvo? It doesn't matter if you limit your cars at walking pace, people still are going to die in your cars. The Fusion driver control thought it would be a good idea to speed in the rain. Seemed like a fun idea until he aquaplaned and spun towards the Sprinter.
 

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