Maybe you'll stop posting in iambic parameter?And on the HOV 3+ lanes
a Slate truck will need the optional SUV package.
No $7,500 tax credit, no HOV lane.
Remind me, why I should buy one.
For three years on my commute to work
my Yamaha V-Max got 40 mpg
and passed 1,000 bumper to bumper vehicles
as I cruised 11 miles of HOV lane.
I was spoiled.
Subaru brat just bolted (hard plastic) seats to the bed. There was nothing fancy about it; you're over thinking this / expecting too much from Subaru! lolI think rear facing bed seats would be difficult to fit. Just behind the rear wall of the "truck" configuration, there is a panel in the bed that gets removed to become a footwell, and the rear seat sits directly on the bed just behind that footwell, from what I've seen. A rear facing seat would have you stretching your legs towards the back of the bed. The battery probably starts behind that footwell, under the bed, so it's a fixed position.
Yup. Which only reinforces my point that it's possible - "Where there's a will, there's a way."The Subaru Brat bed mounted seats
was a workaround
to classify it as an SUV instead of a truck.
That's interesting. In ATL, they did away with the FREE HOV lanes as of Oct 1, so first you have to qualify for HOV lane (EV's still do) and then you have to pay a variable rate based on time of day and distance traveled...like others who have been paying to do so and AREN'T EV's or High Capacity.Yes. Houston has some HOV lanes
that require 3 or more riders
during peak hours.
Another instance of technology enabling increased government charges?That's interesting. In ATL, they did away with the FREE HOV lanes as of Oct 1, so first you have to qualify for HOV lane (EV's still do) and then you have to pay a variable rate based on time of day and distance traveled...like others who have been paying to do so and AREN'T EV's or High Capacity.
It’s cheap to use at 2am though! Bc the other lanes are…oh wait…they are mostly free too.Another instance of technology enabling increased government charges?
The federal authorization for states to allow zero emission vehicles to use HOV lanes without passengers is expiring, nationwide.That's interesting. In ATL, they did away with the FREE HOV lanes as of Oct 1, so first you have to qualify for HOV lane (EV's still do) and then you have to pay a variable rate based on time of day and distance traveled...like others who have been paying to do so and AREN'T EV's or High Capacity.
They are both…toll HOV. Used to score I85 lanes free with Peach Pass EV registration. No mas.The federal authorization for states to allow zero emission vehicles to use HOV lanes without passengers is expiring, nationwide.
Those ATL lanes might be different, as it sounds like they are toll lanes, but I'd double check before driving an EV solo there.