Monday, July 6, 2026

Mastering the BMW R 1300 GS Adventure

To ride the BMW R 1300 GS Adventure, you start with the saddle. At a stop, the bike automatically lowers itself by 30 millimeters to let your boots plant firmly on the dirt. When you hit 15 miles per hour, the hydraulic pumps lift the chassis back to its full height. It feels like the machine is greeting you with a polite bow before it takes off, eliminating the awkward struggle of tip-toeing at red lights so you can simply focus on the wind.

Under your left foot lies the new Automated Shift Assistant. Because there is no clutch lever on the handlebar, your left hand gets a permanent vacation. You simply click the foot shifter, and the internal electromechanical actuators slip the gears into place with perfect speed. During a steep hill climb in the Rockies, this system keeps your momentum going without stalling, making clumsy gear changes a thing of the past.

In the front cowl, a tiny radar sensor tracks the speed of vehicles ahead of you. It talks directly to the engine and the brakes to keep a safe distance on long highway stretches. If a car stops quickly, the motorcycle gently pulls the brakes for you. On the rear fender, another radar watches your blind spots and flashes a warning light in your mirrors. It acts like an extra set of eyes on busy roads. You are never riding alone.

What the Crowd Thinks of This Giant Beast

While these high-tech systems make riding effortless, the physical presence of the motorcycle still commands attention. Onlookers often stare at the massive 30-liter aluminum fuel tank with a mix of fear and confusion. They see a heavy machine that looks like a spaceship ready to conquer a desert.

Many people believe this bike is too heavy for normal riders.

But they do not understand that the low engine layout keeps the weight near the ground.

Once the wheels turn, the heavy feeling disappears.

The bike moves with the grace of a dancer.

Behind the Metal and the Magic Wires

To understand how such a massive machine achieves this surprising agility, one must look deep into its core. Inside the flat-twin engine, two massive pistons move left and right in a rhythmic dance. This Boxer layout balances the vibrations naturally without needing heavy balance shafts.

Beneath the cylinder heads, the ShiftCam system shifts the camshaft position to change how the valves open. This gives you smooth power at low speeds and a wild rush of speed when you twist the throttle hard. It is a mechanical masterpiece hidden under tough plastic guards.

Power meets control in every single cylinder stroke.

The Whispered Secrets of the Boxer Engine

While the mechanical heartbeat of the engine is widely celebrated, the integration of automated tech across the entire platform has stirred some debate. Some purists argue that losing the clutch lever ruins the soul of riding. But they are wrong.

Tests by Cycle World show that the electronic clutch shifts faster than any human finger can pull a cable.

And some riders worry that the radar systems will take away the fun of control.

But the system only steps in when danger is real. It lets you ride wild while keeping a safety net under your wheels.

Beyond resolving these debates, the seamless integration of the bike's computers unlocks practical, high-tech capabilities that go far telemetry boundaries:

  • Using the radar data to predict corner entries on tight mountain roads.
  • Using the onboard GPS to automatically adjust suspension stiffness before you hit a known gravel path.
  • Charging your laptop inside the heated top-fairing storage box using the integrated USB-C port during rainstorms.

Amazing Extras that Change Every Single Ride

These advanced capabilities are complemented by a suite of comfort features designed for daily usability. For the 2026 riding season, the bike features heated grips that adjust their warmth based on the outside air temperature. A small storage compartment right in front of the fuel cap keeps your phone dry and warm. The bright matrix LED headlight turns into the corners as you lean, lighting up dark curves before you even get there.

It makes night riding feel as safe as a sunny afternoon walk.

The Great Electric Driveway Battle Of 2026

The global electric vehicle crown is slipping from the giant of Austin, Texas. On July 2, 2026, Tesla announced massive second-quarter deliveries of 480,126 vehicles, easily beating Wall Street expectations of 406,600. Yet, the stock barely moved because a 1.48 trillion-dollar valuation demands absolute perfection.

In the real world, buyers are looking at Rivian and its new R2 SUV. With a tiny fraction of Tesla's size, the challenger from Irvine is eating into the territory of the aging Model Y. The battle for your driveway is no longer about raw speed.

It is about soul.

Peeling Back The Metal In Normal Illinois

Inside the massive manufacturing plant in Normal, Illinois, workers are completely rebuilding assembly lines to prepare for the R2 mid-market platform. This compact SUV abandons complex luxury gimmicks for clever storage and rugged utility. Under the floorboards lies a radical change: the company is switching to massive 4695 cylindrical battery cells, which pack more energy into a smaller space.

By partnering with Volkswagen in a massive five-billion-dollar joint venture, Rivian secured the cash needed to survive its near-term cash burn. But this is not about corporate handshakes.

It is about engineers in hard hats physically rewriting the software architecture of modern transport.

The old guard is terrified of this nimble machine.

Why Suburbs Are Dumping Tesla For Something New

This shift from sterile engineering to purposeful design explains why the driveway of a suburban home, which once served as a loud announcement of personal wealth, is undergoing a quiet rebellion. The Holly Index shows a growing movement against predictable luxury. My wife Holly has correctly predicted massive shifts in consumer spending, previously calling the rise of Lululemon and Apple.

But she recently ditched her second Tesla for a Rivian R2 reservation.

Consumers are tired of driving rolling computer screens that feel cold and identical.

In places like Marin County and Boulder, the new status symbol is a vehicle that looks ready to climb a mountain.

We want our purchases to feel adventurous, even if we are only driving to the local grocery store.

Unmasking the Secrets of the EV Power Struggle

This cultural shift is backed by a deeper technological realignment. Did anyone ever explain why the giant legacy carmakers are failing to build their own software? For years, industry insiders whispered about the absolute failure of Volkswagen's internal software unit, Cariad, which repeatedly delayed crucial vehicle launches. Here is what is actually happening behind the closed doors of the automotive elite:

  • Volkswagen's massive financial backing of Rivian effectively serves as an admission that they could not build a modern computer system on wheels themselves, relying instead on their rival's superior software platform.
  • Tesla lost its top manufacturing leaders to rivals this spring, showing that the talent pool is shifting away from Elon Musk's strict corporate culture.
  • Secret lithium supply agreements signed in South America this June suggest that Rivian is quietly bypassing traditional mineral brokers to secure its future.
  • Many engineers claim that the R2 platform can actually be built for thirty percent less cost than the Model Y, threatening Tesla's margins.

By looking closely at these corporate divorces, we see a messy, hilarious battle for survival where the underdog holds the best cards.

The High Stakes Race of Summer 2026

As the market looks past spring milestones toward the autumn crunch, the focus shifts to rapid factory execution. Throughout July 2026, Rivian is utilizing scheduled downtime at its Normal facility to integrate the new Bosch drive units into their updated assembly lines. By September, we will see if the federal government approves the new battery tax credit rules that could make the R2 even cheaper. The clock is ticking for everyone.

Hunting The Silent Spark: How To Find A Parasitic Battery Drain

A secret conversation happens under the hood of your quiet car. Even when you turn off the key, the metal heart of your machine stays warm with electricity. Modern cars carry up to eighty separate computers inside their steel frames. And these little brain boxes do not fall asleep the moment you park. You must wait forty-five minutes for the network to rest before you can measure the true battery drain. A healthy car should pull fewer than fifty milliamps when it is completely asleep.

With a standard digital multimeter, many people make the mistake of pulling fuses one by one to find the short circuit. Do not do this. Pulling a fuse breaks the connection, which wakes up the entire network of computers and ruins your test. But you can find the drain without pulling a single fuse. You simply measure the tiny voltage drop across the top of the fuse itself.

Every fuse has two tiny metal test points exposed on its plastic back. A tiny reading in millivolts tells you exactly how much energy is slipping away through that specific loop.

Inside your fuse box, you need to read the tiny voltage drops like a map. You match your millivolt reading to a standard chart for mini or maxi fuses to find the actual current draw. For example, a reading of two millivolts on a ten-amp fuse means you have a steady draw of over two hundred milliamps. That is enough to drain your battery to cold ice over a weekend.

Fix this by tracing the wire from that specific fuse to the part that refuses to shut down. Once you isolate the problematic circuit, it is equally important to examine how the vehicle's charging system interacts with the battery during normal operation.

The Secret Life Of Your Alternator And Battery

Through the battery cables, your car uses a smart charging system that controls the alternator through a local interconnect network. This means the engine computer decides when to charge the battery to save fuel during your morning drive. On short trips around town, your battery might never get a full charge.

And this leaves the plates inside the lead-acid casing open to chemical damage over time. You should use an AGM battery charger once a month to keep the plates healthy and strong.

Maintaining these complex systems and hunting down elusive drains often requires spending hours under the hood, sometimes late into the evening.

Why Your Neighbors Think You Are Crazy At Midnight

To the person watching from the kitchen window across the street, you look like a mad scientist looking for gold under your hood. They see the blue glow of your headlamp and hear the soft click of metal relays in the dark. They do not understand the quiet joy of finding the single wire that is stealing your spark. Some people call a mechanic at the first sign of a dim dashboard light.

You can choose to hold the copper wire in your own hands and tame the wild current yourself.

This willingness to personally tackle physical wiring highlights a shifting divide in the modern automotive repair industry.

The Hot Fight Over Wires Against Computer Screens

Among old mechanics, a physical wire is something you can touch, slice, and solder with a hot iron. But younger mechanics argue that modern electrical issues are almost always software errors that require a tablet to fix. At local repair shops, these two sides argue over whether to replace a wire harness or simply update the firmware of the body module. They debate if the physical copper is failing or if the code is just poorly written.

You can spend thousands of dollars on new parts when all your car needed was a quick system reboot.

To understand how vehicles evolved from straightforward wiring networks into these complex software environments, we must look back at a major shift in automotive engineering.

How We Ended Up In Modern Electric Car Diagnostic Wars

In the early days of car design, a simple copper wire connected your battery directly to your headlights through a heavy plastic switch. But during the automotive design shift in Munich in the late nineties, engineers created the controller area network to save weight on copper.

This system lets every computer talk over a single pair of twisted wires.

In May of 2026, at the Automotive Electronics Conference in Detroit, experts showed how easily these networks can get confused by a single wet sensor.

For further reading, check out the book Automotive Ethernet by Kirsten Matheus to see how close we are to total system changes.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Rear-Wheel-Drive Electric Cars: How Battery Weight Redefines Traction, Efficiency, and Winter Performance

In the quiet hours of a Tuesday morning, a heavy car moves down the street without making a sound. That car carries a massive battery pack flat along its belly like a sleeping cat. In a rear-wheel-drive electric car, this heavy battery changes how the tires touch the road. Because the weight sits so low, the rear tires grab the asphalt with a sudden, clean force when you press the pedal. You do not slip. You just move forward like a wind blowing through an open window.

Single-motor cars carry their power in the back to save energy. By leaving the front wheels free to just turn, the car does not waste power fighting its own steering. On a single charge, a rear-wheel-drive sedan can travel farther than its all-wheel-drive sibling. You get more miles out of the same lithium cells. It is like packing your suitcase perfectly before a long trip to Greece.

Slowing down in a rear-wheel-drive electric vehicle brings a strange physics problem. When you step off the gas pedal, the rear motor acts like a generator to charge the battery. Under this sudden slowdown, the weight of the car slides to the front tires. But the stopping force stays at the back wheels. This mismatch can make the rear tires slide on wet leaves if the computer does not think fast enough.

Despite these braking complexities under sudden deceleration, the physical architecture of a rear-wheel-drive electric car offers an elegant simplicity that challenges traditional automotive design.

A Simple Sandwich of Heavy Metal and Asphalt

Most people think rear-wheel-drive cars are only for racing. In the electric age, putting the motor in the back is just common sense. Stripped of unnecessary mechanical linkages up front, it is a simple, elegant way to build a machine.

While this clean layout streamlines the vehicle's construction, shifting the drive power entirely to the back alters how the car interacts with the ground beneath it over time.

How the Rear Tires Change the Forest

This setup changes how our roads wear down over time. Because these cars are heavy and push from the back, rear tires wear out much faster than front tires. Tire companies now make special rubber just for electric rear wheels. If we do not watch our driving, we will fill scrap yards with half-worn rubber. The quietness of the ride hides the heavy work the tires do every single day.

Although the increased tire wear demands extra attention, the rear-wheel-drive setup proves its worth when road conditions turn from wet asphalt to winter ice.

Why the Heavy Rear Axle Makes Ice Driving a Beautiful Lie

For decades, old drivers said that rear-wheel drive is a disaster on ice. They told us to buy front-wheel-drive cars for the winter. But they were thinking of old gas cars with empty trunks. In January 2026, the Swedish motoring group Vi Bilägare ran tests showing that modern rear-wheel-drive electric cars climb icy hills better than old front-wheel-drive cars. With the battery weight sitting directly over the drive axle, the tires find grip where none should exist.

Some traditional drivers still argue that front-wheel drive is safer because it pulls you forward.

They are wrong.

A balanced rear-wheel-drive electric car pushes you with the steady hand of a calm friend.

To sustain this smooth, reliable power delivery even in demanding environments, engineers must look beyond basic weight distribution to the advanced materials hidden within the drivetrain.

The Hidden Secrets of Electric Rear Axles

To get the most out of a rear motor, engineers use silicon carbide in their power units. These tiny switches handle electricity with almost zero heat loss. Because of this, your battery stays cooler on long highway drives. You can drive fast without worrying about the battery overheating. It is like having a cold drink on a hot summer afternoon.

Understanding these subtle shifts in traction, efficiency, and engineering can help you make more informed decisions as you transition to this new driving paradigm.

Your Next Steps in the Quiet Electric Revolution

  • Visit the upcoming Munich Motor Show in September 2026 to see the new generation of entry-level rear-wheel-drive platforms.
  • Test drive a rear-wheel-drive electric hatchback on a wet road to feel how the traction control manages the heavy battery weight.
  • Check your tire tread depth every six months if you drive a rear-wheel-drive electric car, focusing on the inside edges of the rear tires.
  • Read the latest winter tire comparison reports from Nokian Tyres to find rubber compound ratings designed specifically for heavy rear-axle loads.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Motorcycle Engine Secrets: From Two-Strokes to Ducati's Desmodromic Valves

The Heartbeat of the Steel Stallion

Inside the metal casing sits a piston that moves up and down like a frantic tin soldier. This movement relies on a tiny, controlled fire. When you twist the throttle, you let air and gasoline rush into a dark chamber. A tiny spark plug throws a miniature lightning bolt, causing a mini-explosion that forces the piston down and turns the wheels. This is the four-stroke cycle: suck, squeeze, bang, blow. It happens thousands of times every minute while you ride down the road.

Under the seat of older dirt bikes lies a different kind of magic called the two-stroke engine. These engines do not use valves to open and close the combustion chamber. They complete the entire power cycle in just two movements of the piston, making them incredibly loud and surprisingly light.

They smell like sweet, burnt oil because you must mix fuel directly with lubricant.

A two-stroke engine delivers power twice as fast as a four-stroke machine, giving the rider a wild, snappy burst of speed.

Stripping Down the Iron Horse

This transition from raw engine cycles to fuel delivery defines how a motorcycle wakes up. During the chilly mornings of July 2026, riders of classic Triumph Bonneville motorcycles still fiddle with carburetor choke levers to get their engines warm. Carburetors use simple air pressure to draw fuel into the engine, behaving much like a perfume spray bottle. Modern bikes use digital fuel injection systems developed by Bosch.

These small computers measure the air temperature and inject the exact micro-drop of fuel needed.

Electronic injectors make starting a bike in the cold instantly easy.

At the very bottom of the engine block turns the heavy crankshaft. It translates the straight up-and-down motion of the pistons into a spinning motion. In a Harley-Davidson V-twin engine, the two pistons connect to a single point on this shaft, which creates that famous, uneven potato-potato sound.

Inline-four engines, like those in the 2026 Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10R, line up four pistons in a straight row to spin the shaft with silky, high-pitched speed.

Your engine configuration determines how the bike feels in your hands.

The Secret Wars of Engine Designers

While engine layouts and fuel systems dictate a motorcycle's basic character, the quest for maximum power shifts the battle to the top of the cylinder head. For decades, engineers have fought over how to close engine valves. Standard engines use spring coils to pull valves shut, but high speeds make these springs float and fail. To solve this, Ducati uses a mechanical system called Desmodromic valves, where a metal arm actively pulls the valve closed.

This design sparked a massive design war in the MotoGP racing series.

Some engineers argue that pneumatic air-pressure systems are much lighter and safer, yet Ducati keeps winning races with their heavy metal gears.

  • But you can actually run a motorcycle on ammonia fuel today, as proven by researchers at Sophia University in Tokyo who successfully modified a Yamaha engine to burn carbon-free green ammonia.
  • By changing the timing of your spark plugs by a fraction of a millisecond, you can increase your fuel economy by ten percent without changing a single metal part.
  • Engineers at Aprilia recently showed that active aerodynamic wings on the front of the bike press the front tire down so hard that it alters how the oil flows inside the engine wet-sump during high-speed turns.
  • A secret patent filed by Honda in early 2026 reveals they are working on a supercharged two-stroke engine that uses clean direct-injection to meet strict eco-laws.

The Hidden Joy of the Desmo Valving

While these complex engineering systems dominate the professional racing circuits, they also offer a deeply personal experience for the home mechanic. On a warm summer evening, adjusting these mechanical Desmo valves yourself brings a strange, quiet peace. You slide tiny metal feeler gauges into microscopic gaps to measure the wear. This hands-on connection lets you hear the engine breathe with perfect clarity.

With a simple set of wrenches, you become the master of your machine.

You do not need a computer to fix a mechanical masterpiece.

Friday, July 3, 2026

Sylvester Roper's Steam Motorcycle to the Werner Brothers' Modern Frame Revolution

In the chilly spring of 1896, Sylvester Roper took his steam-powered bicycle to a dirt track in Boston. He was seventy-one years old. He flew around the track at forty miles per hour, scattering gravel and terrifying the local cyclists. Suddenly, the machine wobbled.

Roper suffered a sudden heart failure while riding, dying at the handlebars of his own creation.

This machine used coal and water to boil steam right between the rider's knees.

It was a loud, hot, shaking beast that smelled of wet ash and scorching oil.

While Roper championed steam, other inventors across the Atlantic were experimenting with a different source of power. Under the dark eaves of a garden workshop in Bad Cannstatt, Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach built a wooden skeleton with a gas engine in 1885. They called it the Reitwagen, or riding car. It had wooden wheels bound in iron, and it caught fire on its very first long test run because the hot engine sat directly beneath a leather seat. But they did not design it to be a bicycle.

They simply needed a cheap, small frame to test their new high-speed gasoline engine.

They actually bolted two small extra wheels to the sides to keep it from tipping over.

This experimentation quickly led to commercial ambitions. By 1894, two German brothers named Heinrich and Wilhelm Hildebrand partnered with Alois Wolfmüller to sell the first mass-produced petrol motorcycle. This heavy machine lacked a clutch or pedals, meaning you had to push it until it started and then jump on while it was moving.

To return the pistons to their starting place, the inventors used thick rubber bands hooked to the frame.

The water tank for cooling the engine also served as the rear fender.

It was a beautiful, clumsy monster that terrified buyers and quickly went bankrupt.

Despite the failure of these early commercial attempts, others persisted in refining the design. In the busy streets of Paris, two Russian-born brothers named Michel and Eugene Werner changed the shape of motorcycles forever in 1901. Before their invention, people bolted engines on front forks, under seats, or over rear wheels, making the machines top-heavy and hard to steer.

The Werners placed the heavy motor at the very bottom of the frame, right between the pedals.

This lowered the center of gravity and stopped the bicycle frame from bending under the weight.

Almost every motorcycle you see on the road today still uses this exact shape.

The breakthrough in frame design solved only half the battle; transferring that newly positioned power to the pavement presented its own set of mechanical hurdles.

How The Earliest Motors Turned Wheels

To make these early machines move, inventors had to solve a hard problem. They had to get power from a shaking piston to a spinning wheel without snapping the drive system. Instead of stiff metal chains—which were too rigid for the weak bicycle frames of the era—inventors relied on flat leather belts.

In the 1901 Werner design, a leather belt ran directly from the engine pulley to the rear wheel rim, offering enough slip to protect fragile engine gears when hitting bumps.

The rider used a lever to tighten this belt when they wanted to move. If you wanted to stop, you loosened the belt and let the engine spin freely.

It was a simple, manual system that required constant greasing and tightening.

Even when the drive belts held together, riders faced an even more volatile danger right between their legs.

The Constant Threat Of Fire and Exploding Fuel

Early fuel systems were incredibly dangerous. Inventors used "surface carburetors," which were basically metal pots filled with raw gasoline. The engine sucked in the fumes rising off the top of the liquid. If the motorcycle tipped over, or if the engine backfired, the entire tank of gasoline could catch fire instantly. This happened often, turning a simple Sunday ride into a blazing trap.

Despite these terrifying hazards, the promise of independent travel sparked a transportation revolution.

The Great Shift From Horses To Metal Steeds

Across the world, people looked at these loud machines with deep worry. Horses bolted in terror at the sound of the small gas engines. Yet, these early inventors showed people that they did not need animals to travel fast. The motorcycle became the first affordable way for a single person to travel long distances without relying on train schedules or expensive horse feed. It changed how workers reached factories and how letters traveled across countries.

This societal shift was only possible because of a parallel battle fought on the very roads these machines traveled.

Why Victorian Steam Toys Shaped Modern Highway Rules

During the late nineteenth century, bicycle riders fought for the right to use public roads, which were then reserved for horses and wagons. Before these motorized vehicles could truly thrive, they relied on infrastructure paved by their human-powered predecessors. The roads used by early steam and gasoline pioneers in cities like Boston had been hard-won by the League of American Wheelmen, who campaigned vigorously for paved surfaces.

This political push for smooth roads laid the physical groundwork for the first motorcycle boom. Without the political lobbying of early cyclists, the first motor riders would have sunk into deep mud. This connection proves that transport technology is only as good as the political power of its users.

To fully grasp the ingenuity of these pioneering designs, it helps to examine some of the specific mechanical quirks that defined the era.

Answers To Secrets Of Early Motorcycle History

Who invented the twist-grip throttle we use today?
Glenn Curtiss, who later became famous for building airplanes, used the twist-grip throttle on his early motorcycles around 1902. He started as a bicycle racer and built his own engines to go faster.

What was the purpose of the total loss oiling system on early bikes?
This system pumped clean oil through the engine once and then dumped it directly onto the road or the rider's boots. There was no oil filter or return pump to reuse the liquid.

GM Crowns Itself King While Shoving Giant Trucks Down America's Throat

On July 1, 2026, General Motors declared itself the king of the American road. They sold more vehicles than anyone else in the United States over the last three months, even though their actual sales fell compared to last year. They claimed the top spot before their main competitors even put out their numbers. Shrinking your business and calling it a win is a bold move.

This shifting market landscape is heavily influenced by Washington, as government policy drives what sits in our driveways. When politicians ended the seven thousand five hundred dollar tax credit for electric cars, buyers walked away from clean energy. This policy shift hit GM hard, showing how quickly green habits vanish without government cash.

With electric vehicle incentives drying up, massive gas-powered trucks keep corporate offices happy. Heavy pickups and giant SUVs make up the bulk of what GM sells, despite high fuel costs. Corporate leaders love these large vehicles because they carry the highest price tags and widest profit margins.

The Strange Logic of Less is More

This corporate preference for margins over volume explains why GM lost one hundred thousand vehicle sales this year, which is a seven percent drop from their 2025 peak. To sustain profitability despite lower sales volume, they keep inventories low on purpose to prevent prices from falling. It is a brilliant way to make customers pay more for less. By limiting the number of cars on the lot, they force buyers to compete for what is left, keeping corporate profits sky-high.

The Hidden Cost of High Margins

This artificial scarcity goes hand-in-hand with a shift in manufacturing strategy. By stopping the production of smaller, cheaper cars, automakers force us to buy giant trucks. GM dropped their affordable compact models to focus on high-margin luxury trucks. This strategy locks regular workers out of the new car market entirely. It also ensures that the average price of a new vehicle stays out of reach for most families.

How Giant Trucks Are Weaponizing Our Streets

As vehicle lineups expand in size, they pose a growing physical threat to suburban neighborhoods. On the streets of our suburbs, cars have turned into tanks. The massive fronts of these modern SUVs block our view of children crossing the street.

And yet, we keep buying them because we feel unsafe in anything smaller.

It is a giant, rolling arms race. Under the hood of these electric beasts, the technology is failing us. GM faced massive embarrassment when its new electric vehicle software caused screens to go completely black, leading to a temporary sales halt on the Chevy Blazer EV. The government highway safety group, known as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, has monitored these electronic bugs closely.

It turns out that building a giant computer on wheels is much harder than building a steel box. We are paying record prices to act as unpaid software testers.

If we do not demand smaller, safer, and simpler vehicles, our cities will turn into parking lots for broken rolling computers.

The Extreme Weight of Our New Fleet

Beyond software glitches, the sheer physical footprint of these modern vehicles poses a major threat to public infrastructure. Heavy batteries make electric trucks weigh twice as much as regular cars. The massive weight of these trucks crushes asphalt and destroys guardrails designed for lighter times. When a nine thousand pound electric truck hits a concrete barrier, the barrier breaks. Our roads are literally crumbling under the weight of our green transition.

The Disappearance of the Two Thousand Pound Car

This infrastructure damage is the direct result of a dramatic shift in what automakers choose to build. We used to have light, cheap hatchbacks. Now, the average vehicle weighs over four thousand pounds. Removing small options forces buyers into massive debt just to commute to work.

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Mastering the BMW R 1300 GS Adventure

To ride the BMW R 1300 GS Adventure, you start with the saddle. At a stop, the bike automatically lowers itself by 30 millimeters to let you...

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