There are a lot of jobs that electric cars are not great for, but for most police, electric makes more sense than gas. Police cars spend hours just idling to run the electronics, then when they do need to drive, they need to accelerate quickly. Plus, in most instances, not a lot of range is necessary.
Until you need to go long distances, electric battery powered cars aren’t the future because they aren’t reliable enough. Gas will run out eventually, so we need to find something sustainable and reusable, like hydroelectric power.
@@SuperShyGuyBros54321fuel cell electric cars are the future, you're right dude. When it's the truth in a couple decades, I'll come back to this comment 😂
@@SuperShyGuyBros54321we won’t run out of gas during our or the next generations lifetimes. I doubt for a very long time after that as well. It’s mostly about global warming and natural disasters.
My first job was at a carwash and usually the opening shift would end up with a squad or 2 going through. we would vac the front and then pressure wash the back seat to clean out any of those fluids mentioned.
@@-gh7lq “probably won’t happen”? It happens currently, ever read news bruh? Also it’s $100k of tax payers money even before doing any of the required modifications. That’s not a future you want to live in.
a model S plaid can go well over 200mph, but in plice chases there is a speed limit where no matter how fast your car can go you have to cancel it because its dangerous, so the only thing that matters is acceleration and range not top speed
Do the cars automatically go into park once the car is stopped and the door opens? I see cops jumping out with the car rolling away and they have to jump back in to put it in park.
2 days ago I rode in the Tesla model s plaid and OH MY GOSH it is UNBELIEVABLE, I didn't know you could get the same feeling as a roller coaster BUT IN A CAR
This is entertaining as usual and you clearly have a love for the brand, but for now that Chevy is the only one that has been given the very critical "Pursuit Rating". Taking anything from the showroom and painting it black and white opens up a whole bunch of legal troubles for any department. Anyone involved in a crash or the Officers driving will be in court trying to answer why they were driving an unproven vehicle.
You've said in CT review videos that you won't consider buying / owning CT and yet in this video at final impression you'd like to own it. So what's your make Dan 🤔
people underestimate how much the bateryy holds, it looks like its not much because the motors eat A LOT of power but if there were no motors you could power an average house for a couple days
I wonder how long the battery would last because i know at least California Highway patrol keeps their cars running their whole shift whether writong reports at the office, getting a lunch break andbstuff so their systems are up and dint have to reboot and so they are ready to go at any time
Electric police vehicle is a terrible idea in my opinion. They have lot of lights going on,sirens bla bla, each consuming power from the battery. In a long chase, these electric vehicles stand no chance against a petrol vehicle. Thee police battery will say "battery extremely low, shutting down" whilst the petrol vehicle will keep running.
Lights and sirens will have basically no effect whatsoever on battery life, moving a car takes so much more energy. In all of history there has basically never been a police chase over 50 miles. They have plenty of range.
@@Jackham13 I don't know how is it in US but in Europe it's completely different :D. People in my country are racing with the police and managing to escape from the police. Even tho, the government have bought brand new BMW with 400 hps, people are still speeding and not afraid of the police. That's why I think the electric police cars are a terrible idea, at least for now as their batteries will die quicker than the petrol car fuel to run out.
@@ValentinSt again, that’s Speed over short distance, not long distance. Electric will outperform gas over anything less than say 100 miles. Police chases aren’t 100 miles so electric is great.
Mr Valentin, petrol cars have battery on them and they have 12-volt car battery has a capacity of 35-75 Ah, which is equivalent to 420-900 Wh. With EV they have 50 kWh to 100 kWh. Now 1 kilowatt hour (kWh) = 1,000 watt hours (Wh). So somewhere in Europe your being taught that kWh runs out before watts maybe go back to your school and ask for a refund.
Second idk much on how patrols go in Europe but in the states average cop patrol radius is 50-100 miles . Most of the electric cars milage is 200+ miles more than enough for typical patrol and second most of the cops spend their petrol cars idling to do crime scene investigation or paper work which is why most of the cars police department sell they only have 60k miles on the odometer but over 50k to 100k idling to give you more perspective every hour of idling is equivalent to 33 miles of driving . Idling is not an EV issue as battery perfer that over bring driven
man those electric police cars ain’t it fr batteries dying in 20 mins and dudes in gas-powered dodge chargers just dusting the cops left and right like “y’all really thought these quiet whips could keep up?” 😂
I can honestly tell you as a former cop that electric cars are no where near ready for duty use. Also any firefighter or police officer will tell you that EV crashes are the worst thing to deal with. Hands down no and a serious waste of tax payer money.
Because serious crash of 40mph causes most batteries to be damaged and the fumes from the damaged batteries spill out toxic flammable acid. Which is hard to put out and causes intense fires. Usually a hazmat team also has to come out to help secure the scene. The normal methods for car crashes do not work for securing the flammable toxins like they do with oil and gas cars.
Tesla…Fragile wheels, need some more protection under the battery, taped over cameras to hide the BS traffic stops. Would like to see it pit some heavy vehicles
That is absurd right wing propaganda. Seems like specifically right wing political outlets is pushing specifically 5k to 10k miles tire life nonsense. It's true on High performance sticky tires like Michelin Pilot Sports 4S and on EVs with over 500hp the are showing much worse tires lifespan. About 1/3 less tire lifespan. But that is not relevant to Police Cars which have very different tires and wheels setups. Rough guess it should be about 15-20% less tire lifespan than their ICE equivalent.
Which basically never happens for a EV Police Patrol car. This is NOT an idea, there are already hundreds of EV Police cars on the road witch proven track record. You are ignoring real world facts.
@@Neojhun maybe I am. However you can’t deny that battery powered police cars are more likely to need a recharge during the day, especially when they are running all over the place. The fact is gas cars spend less time refueling, far less and likely last longer. You are ignoring real world facts.
@@elpryor they are not more likely to need a recharge, also police cars spend 98% of the time stopped and idling wasting Gas and polluting while doing nothing
Maybe look up PlugShare, problem is Public Charger are put in poorly visible location often just in the corner of car parks. There is literally few hundreds of public charger locations within 40 miles radius of me. "NOT 1 charging station" is an absurd lie.
But it very much is a truck regardless of your aesthetic opinion. It weirdly has a proper 6'3" ft truck bed with not much intrusion from the wheel well. Was not expecting that.
Not in today's Eva they will give you full power until 5% also you're acting like its gonna be 1 ev there gonna be at least 5 in a chase so the numbers are against you and they have helicopters so you can't really night and they know were your going so the can cut you off 😂
Teslas don't loose much power all the way down to 30% battery life. Even at 30% battery life you still have over 350hp from the performance models. Sure you won't have max performance, but it's still very powerful. You assumption that they lose most of their power is just massively wrong. Gas cars are the ones that can not keep up. Most ICE cars on the road simply won't be able to out accelerate a peformance EV. FYI Maintaining high-speed in the real world is very difficult. Way more slowing down for obstacles will happen. Your entire comment is baseless assumptions. EVs are very much NOT the future. They are the present and Now.
You are delusional, literally no one has said that. Seems like forcing EVs to conform to existing ICE police car equipment has been quite difficult. Yet they somehow achieved parity.
Soo far that has not happened. Model Y dual motor non performance has no problem keeping up with S197 Mustang for over 30 minutes. It was only called off due to risk factors. The Model Y still had plenty of range left. These are the real world facts, not your baseless assumptions.
HEADLINE: Police car battery runs out while pursuing a dangerous criminal in a Toyota Prius. Pursuit to resume after 45 minutes of fast charging. Stay tuned for updates!
REALITY: Police car easily catches up with it's incredible acceleration and pit maneuvers the stolen car due to its very sturdy and low center of gravity
A yes because Fuel cost and maintenance cost for idling engine hours is soo much cheaper. FYI Model Y fully kitted out is about $6,000 more than Ford Explorer Interceptor not fully kitted out. Seems like V6 engine Ford is a waste of tax payer money.
'Cop' didn't want to be on camera - is a violation of constitutional law, a violation of your rights. This is just one reason, no... Cops have no business having EVs - unless they start manufacturing their own vehicles. Cops definitely drive more than seven miles a day.
"'Cop' didn't want to be on camera - is a violation of constitutional law, a violation of your rights." Cop asking not to be on camera is not a violation of any law. Now if he was asking for a controlled substance, that would be a violation of law. "Cops have no business having EVs - unless they start manufacturing their own vehicles." Using your logic, Cops have no business having any car that they do not manufacture. Nonsense. "Cops definitely drive more than seven miles a day." Do you have the statistical data from the Pasadena Police Department that shows how many miles per day on average are driven in Police Vehicles? I wonder how intelligent this person is.
Learn the constitution, 'genius.' A cop asking for a controlled substance is a valid and legit question, pending the purpose of the interaction, what the cop might ('think') (s)he smells... Obviously my mention of cops having no business having EVs is something you fail to correctly comprehend. Police departments need to start manufacturing their own vehicles. There's valid reason for it, even if people like you don't 'get it.' Obviously you failed to hear, in this video, he said cops drive seven miles a day. "Duh!" I'm obviously more "intelligent" than you!
@@BrianJoslyn When I said, "Now if he was asking for a controlled substance, that would be a violation of law.", it was for personal use. Which you did not seem to understand. I did not say it was a sting operation. I said he was asking for it just like he was asking not to be on camera. A cop is a person. A person can ask not to be on camera. Just as a person can ask someone for dope. That is the analogy. Hope you do not misunderstand this also. And a person is not breaking any law asking not to be on camera. I cannot believe someone that claims to be intelligent would not understand this. SMH
You're so UNintelligent you don't even realize the fact that I know damn well what you meant. When a cop is in uniform as well as plain clothes but known as or introduces him/her-self as a cop, they can not refuse to be recorded - audio and video. A cop violates the first amendment when (s)he refuses to be on camera. A 'person,' other than any uniformed or known government official, can ASK to not be on camera - and isn't in violation of the law by doing so, but the constitution still permits anyone recording to record anyone. "Hope you do not misunderstand this also." "I *can *not believe someone that claims to be intelligent would not understand this."
@@BrianJoslyn I looked up Pasadena CA on the map. it is very small. Perhaps they do only drive 7 miles per day on average. I am pretty sure Dan was not making up the statistics. They came from somewhere. So, I remove my DUH from that comment of yours and instead put the question of, "Do you have the statistical data from the Pasadena Police Department that shows how many miles per day on average are driven in Police Vehicles?"
@rancid216 I doubt they eat tires under normal driving conditions. But when driving heavy footed, any car will eat tires. As for the battery, I have been told they last a long time if they are not charged to the max and do not get too low on charge before recharging them.
Your videos are so interesting to watch. But I do miss the “What’s inside”
And The STAR, LINCOLN!!!!
He grew up and moved on with life, Dan should rebrand himself as the tesla guy or Tesla Fam
That model y looks good!!
To be fair, these do look cooler than your average Ford Explorer cop car
I have to agree with you on that 😉
@@RyanMichaleGuttman99no
ew hell nahhh
There are a lot of jobs that electric cars are not great for, but for most police, electric makes more sense than gas. Police cars spend hours just idling to run the electronics, then when they do need to drive, they need to accelerate quickly. Plus, in most instances, not a lot of range is necessary.
No they don't
Until you need to go long distances, electric battery powered cars aren’t the future because they aren’t reliable enough. Gas will run out eventually, so we need to find something sustainable and reusable, like hydroelectric power.
@@SuperShyGuyBros54321fuel cell electric cars are the future, you're right dude. When it's the truth in a couple decades, I'll come back to this comment 😂
@@SuperShyGuyBros54321we won’t run out of gas during our or the next generations lifetimes. I doubt for a very long time after that as well. It’s mostly about global warming and natural disasters.
My first job was at a carwash and usually the opening shift would end up with a squad or 2 going through. we would vac the front and then pressure wash the back seat to clean out any of those fluids mentioned.
Now This is what the future of tech is supposed to look like in the near future! Great Job on creating this video Dan! 👍
What if that Cybertruck hits a pedestrian in a police chase?
@@jivewig That probably won't happen
@@jivewig What if any vehicle hit a pedestrian?
@@-gh7lq “probably won’t happen”? It happens currently, ever read news bruh? Also it’s $100k of tax payers money even before doing any of the required modifications. That’s not a future you want to live in.
@@jivewig what if any car hits a pedestrian, wtf, all plice cars have the same front
I live in the town next to South Pasadena. We see the Tesla one driving around all the time. Fun to see more about it.
So I know they are fast off acceleration, but what's the top speed
my model 3 rwd can touch 140 and the model Y performance you see as the police car in the video can touch 155 miles per hour.
a model S plaid can go well over 200mph, but in plice chases there is a speed limit where no matter how fast your car can go you have to cancel it because its dangerous, so the only thing that matters is acceleration and range not top speed
These police cars look so sick
“I could get used to driving a police car” and i want to see more of you and the family! I love you’re videos!
Do the cars automatically go into park once the car is stopped and the door opens? I see cops jumping out with the car rolling away and they have to jump back in to put it in park.
For Chevy cars yes and some have after market set it up that way. It also makes it where if door is opened it shuts off siren.
i think every modern car has that especially EVs
i just checked ur whats inside channel and was almost heartbroken to see it left behind than i remembered to check your family channel
2 days ago I rode in the Tesla model s plaid and OH MY GOSH it is UNBELIEVABLE, I didn't know you could get the same feeling as a roller coaster BUT IN A CAR
I think the model Y would make a perfect police car. The range is just enough for a shift, and the on the road performance is next level.
Great to see these up close! Thanks
THANKS DAN 🤗 SHARING THIS 💚💚💚
I’ve seen the blazer in the wild on my road trip ! 😉
UK has had electric police cars, ambulances/DR vehicles for a few years now.
Welcome to my city, I hope you enjoyed yourself!
Teachers pay for their own school supplies, but sure, get every PD a tesla
@@tomhoblin4571 no Tesla sucks
Im a little sad you didnt talk more about the advantages of an eletric police car
ask chat gtp it will summarize everything for you, cons too if you want
Take Every Single Last Accessory🤣
This is entertaining as usual and you clearly have a love for the brand, but for now that Chevy is the only one that has been given the very critical "Pursuit Rating".
Taking anything from the showroom and painting it black and white opens up a whole bunch of legal troubles for any department.
Anyone involved in a crash or the Officers driving will be in court trying to answer why they were driving an unproven vehicle.
I imagine them trying to pit maneuver a car and then aeb kicks in 😅
Its beautiful 😍
now imagine the ct is as common as model3 ....is it still cool or us it a cyber fridge on wheels
All fun game till the person run goes off-roading and you got to try catching them
Why haven’t you posted anything on the main channel?
Had worked at Whelen, great company to work for
One good thing to is that if they setup pin to drive no random person can run and steal the car anymore.
Wow was that intro cool.
You've said in CT review videos that you won't consider buying / owning CT and yet in this video at final impression you'd like to own it.
So what's your make Dan 🤔
I am interested in how much range is lost because of the police kits
It doesn't work like that even in gas cars it runs off of the small 12v battery the big battery has way more than that
people underestimate how much the bateryy holds, it looks like its not much because the motors eat A LOT of power but if there were no motors you could power an average house for a couple days
Negligible amount of Electricity would be consumed by the cop car electronics. It's measurable but not enough to care.
Looks like the police force from the future
I wonder how long the battery would last because i know at least California Highway patrol keeps their cars running their whole shift whether writong reports at the office, getting a lunch break andbstuff so their systems are up and dint have to reboot and so they are ready to go at any time
EVs dont really idle unless youre running the AC, hot weather youre looking at about 2%/drain per hour
Yeah idle patrol car seems to be the use case where EVs would excel at.
is that tint legal :P
Still won't catch up to the beat-up Civic pushing 500HP 😂
what?
Welp the 500hp Civic would have to find traction in the real world, not a prepped drag strip.
Electric police vehicle is a terrible idea in my opinion. They have lot of lights going on,sirens bla bla, each consuming power from the battery. In a long chase, these electric vehicles stand no chance against a petrol vehicle. Thee police battery will say "battery extremely low, shutting down" whilst the petrol vehicle will keep running.
Lights and sirens will have basically no effect whatsoever on battery life, moving a car takes so much more energy. In all of history there has basically never been a police chase over 50 miles. They have plenty of range.
@@Jackham13 I don't know how is it in US but in Europe it's completely different :D. People in my country are racing with the police and managing to escape from the police. Even tho, the government have bought brand new BMW with 400 hps, people are still speeding and not afraid of the police. That's why I think the electric police cars are a terrible idea, at least for now as their batteries will die quicker than the petrol car fuel to run out.
@@ValentinSt again, that’s Speed over short distance, not long distance. Electric will outperform gas over anything less than say 100 miles. Police chases aren’t 100 miles so electric is great.
Mr Valentin, petrol cars have battery on them and they have 12-volt car battery has a capacity of 35-75 Ah, which is equivalent to 420-900 Wh. With EV they have 50 kWh to 100 kWh. Now 1 kilowatt hour (kWh) = 1,000 watt hours (Wh). So somewhere in Europe your being taught that kWh runs out before watts maybe go back to your school and ask for a refund.
Second idk much on how patrols go in Europe but in the states average cop patrol radius is 50-100 miles . Most of the electric cars milage is 200+ miles more than enough for typical patrol and second most of the cops spend their petrol cars idling to do crime scene investigation or paper work which is why most of the cars police department sell they only have 60k miles on the odometer but over 50k to 100k idling to give you more perspective every hour of idling is equivalent to 33 miles of driving . Idling is not an EV issue as battery perfer that over bring driven
omg thats you're using it
Awesome videos sorry I’m soo late
This biggest issue with EVs as police cars... Most larger agencies share car through the shifts.
Aren't some batteries able to do 20-80% in like 30 minutes with larger chargers? I'd assume these would never be charged past 80%
They do look futuristic, but nothing can match the roaring of an engine. Look at those unprotected rear windows. Just one kick and the suspect is out.
They are good, but only for in city police, that only go to civil calls/complaints
so 99% of what police do
I think Model S would be best for police cars because it has the biggest battery and the best performance
You should come to Europe and drive some europe-only cars. Like the Renault Scenic or Megane. Curious to your opinions about those!
That tent is illegal. Way way way to dark.
They definitely wouldn’t wast time giving me a ticket for that.
the doors with frameless windows, won't be used for arresting criminals, right? think about it, if someone kicks that window..
When are you opening the Zach statue?
I can't believe they are using the stock handles.
Tho can an electric police car handle a high speed pursuit? That lasts hours ?
We did not need to see that 7:38
Well, three words: Electric Law Enforcement.
man those electric police cars ain’t it fr batteries dying in 20 mins and dudes in gas-powered dodge chargers just dusting the cops left and right like “y’all really thought these quiet whips could keep up?” 😂
Yes. It's common sense.
I live in new your and noticed some of the the police presents use the mustang Mach E
it doesn't matter about the car only about the driver. 130mph, them cops don't want to take it there.
What about the model S and tesla roadster😢😢😢
Why won't Tesla submit their vehicles to the 2 agencies in the country that do the police vehicle testing, Ford and Chevy did, so why not Tesla?
Hi Dan
You guys are still posting. Wow I’ve been gone for two years.
We got electric police cars before GTA 6
??? DUH
New York had the electric Mustang
Are Electric Police Cars The Future they are here now - some UK police forces been using them for 7 years+ now
6:11
I can honestly tell you as a former cop that electric cars are no where near ready for duty use. Also any firefighter or police officer will tell you that EV crashes are the worst thing to deal with. Hands down no and a serious waste of tax payer money.
Why?
They crash just like any other car my guy
@@mcsike7264 yeah, and why are they “no where near ready for duty use”?
@@Jackham13 idk ask him there faster handled better and have more torque and tek
Because serious crash of 40mph causes most batteries to be damaged and the fumes from the damaged batteries spill out toxic flammable acid. Which is hard to put out and causes intense fires. Usually a hazmat team also has to come out to help secure the scene. The normal methods for car crashes do not work for securing the flammable toxins like they do with oil and gas cars.
This will never work for Big city. If you want to know why. You have three shifts .. and each shift may have two of free time to charge the cars ...
But they already are being used in Big Cities. Your assumptions are wrong.
Tesla…Fragile wheels, need some more protection under the battery, taped over cameras to hide the BS traffic stops. Would like to see it pit some heavy vehicles
Image if they made a police model s plaid no one is safe
Second comment!! 🎉
No, you are third.
hiii
Hey first comment
don’t electric cars eat tires the way police drive the tires might last 5k to 10k max other then that they could be good cars
That is absurd right wing propaganda. Seems like specifically right wing political outlets is pushing specifically 5k to 10k miles tire life nonsense. It's true on High performance sticky tires like Michelin Pilot Sports 4S and on EVs with over 500hp the are showing much worse tires lifespan. About 1/3 less tire lifespan. But that is not relevant to Police Cars which have very different tires and wheels setups. Rough guess it should be about 15-20% less tire lifespan than their ICE equivalent.
ah yes, great idea. except for when a chase starts and they run out of battery...
I am hoping this is a joke
dense comment
Which basically never happens for a EV Police Patrol car. This is NOT an idea, there are already hundreds of EV Police cars on the road witch proven track record. You are ignoring real world facts.
@@Neojhun maybe I am. However you can’t deny that battery powered police cars are more likely to need a recharge during the day, especially when they are running all over the place. The fact is gas cars spend less time refueling, far less and likely last longer. You are ignoring real world facts.
@@elpryor they are not more likely to need a recharge, also police cars spend 98% of the time stopped and idling wasting Gas and polluting while doing nothing
EMP 😂
they need ioniq 5n police cars
I'm seeing many Teslas out there, but NOT 1 charging station🤔
Most are conveniently charged at home. But I have seen many charging stations. They should show up Google Maps.
Maybe look up PlugShare, problem is Public Charger are put in poorly visible location often just in the corner of car parks. There is literally few hundreds of public charger locations within 40 miles radius of me. "NOT 1 charging station" is an absurd lie.
AY why do you quit your old channel? It has a lot of subs you should go back.
Dan, I wouldn't even put the Cyber Truck into the "TRUCK" category. One thing is ugly AS F__K!!
But it very much is a truck regardless of your aesthetic opinion. It weirdly has a proper 6'3" ft truck bed with not much intrusion from the wheel well. Was not expecting that.
You wont be able to out chase a gas car. It keeps losing power and performance the longer it runs. They are not the future as long as gas cara exist
Not in today's Eva they will give you full power until 5% also you're acting like its gonna be 1 ev there gonna be at least 5 in a chase so the numbers are against you and they have helicopters so you can't really night and they know were your going so the can cut you off 😂
Teslas don't loose much power all the way down to 30% battery life. Even at 30% battery life you still have over 350hp from the performance models. Sure you won't have max performance, but it's still very powerful. You assumption that they lose most of their power is just massively wrong. Gas cars are the ones that can not keep up. Most ICE cars on the road simply won't be able to out accelerate a peformance EV. FYI Maintaining high-speed in the real world is very difficult. Way more slowing down for obstacles will happen. Your entire comment is baseless assumptions. EVs are very much NOT the future. They are the present and Now.
3 comment
no, you are 6th
funny when a non law enforcement person thinks 90% of standard features in a police vehicle are exclusive to the electric version
Funny, I missed where he said any of these features are unique.
You are delusional, literally no one has said that. Seems like forcing EVs to conform to existing ICE police car equipment has been quite difficult. Yet they somehow achieved parity.
... high speed chase, then police car battery dies, like old Energizer commercials🤣🤣
8:14
Soo far that has not happened. Model Y dual motor non performance has no problem keeping up with S197 Mustang for over 30 minutes. It was only called off due to risk factors. The Model Y still had plenty of range left. These are the real world facts, not your baseless assumptions.
W first
HEADLINE:
Police car battery runs out while pursuing a dangerous criminal in a Toyota Prius. Pursuit to resume after 45 minutes of fast charging. Stay tuned for updates!
Yes. Because police can afford to stop for even a minute in the middle of a police chase when they run out of gas...
REALITY:
Police car easily catches up with it's incredible acceleration and pit maneuvers the stolen car due to its very sturdy and low center of gravity
It was a joke...@@jensalan
@@jensalan gas cars have about 3-4 times the range
@@TedJMyou think gas cars have 900-1200 miles range per tank? Do you live under a rock?
THE ANSWER IS NO
The answer is it Already works in the real world for many years already.
Waste of tax payers money
A yes because Fuel cost and maintenance cost for idling engine hours is soo much cheaper. FYI Model Y fully kitted out is about $6,000 more than Ford Explorer Interceptor not fully kitted out. Seems like V6 engine Ford is a waste of tax payer money.
'Cop' didn't want to be on camera - is a violation of constitutional law, a violation of your rights. This is just one reason, no... Cops have no business having EVs - unless they start manufacturing their own vehicles.
Cops definitely drive more than seven miles a day.
"'Cop' didn't want to be on camera - is a violation of constitutional law, a violation of your rights."
Cop asking not to be on camera is not a violation of any law. Now if he was asking for a controlled substance, that would be a violation of law.
"Cops have no business having EVs - unless they start manufacturing their own vehicles."
Using your logic, Cops have no business having any car that they do not manufacture. Nonsense.
"Cops definitely drive more than seven miles a day."
Do you have the statistical data from the Pasadena Police Department that shows how many miles per day on average are driven in Police Vehicles?
I wonder how intelligent this person is.
Learn the constitution, 'genius.'
A cop asking for a controlled substance is a valid and legit question, pending the purpose of the interaction, what the cop might ('think') (s)he smells...
Obviously my mention of cops having no business having EVs is something you fail to correctly comprehend. Police departments need to start manufacturing their own vehicles. There's valid reason for it, even if people like you don't 'get it.'
Obviously you failed to hear, in this video, he said cops drive seven miles a day. "Duh!"
I'm obviously more "intelligent" than you!
@@BrianJoslyn
When I said, "Now if he was asking for a controlled substance, that would be a violation of law.", it was for personal use. Which you did not seem to understand. I did not say it was a sting operation. I said he was asking for it just like he was asking not to be on camera. A cop is a person. A person can ask not to be on camera. Just as a person can ask someone for dope. That is the analogy. Hope you do not misunderstand this also. And a person is not breaking any law asking not to be on camera.
I cannot believe someone that claims to be intelligent would not understand this. SMH
You're so UNintelligent you don't even realize the fact that I know damn well what you meant.
When a cop is in uniform as well as plain clothes but known as or introduces him/her-self as a cop, they can not refuse to be recorded - audio and video. A cop violates the first amendment when (s)he refuses to be on camera.
A 'person,' other than any uniformed or known government official, can ASK to not be on camera - and isn't in violation of the law by doing so, but the constitution still permits anyone recording to record anyone.
"Hope you do not misunderstand this also."
"I *can *not believe someone that claims to be intelligent would not understand this."
@@BrianJoslyn
I looked up Pasadena CA on the map. it is very small. Perhaps they do only drive 7 miles per day on average. I am pretty sure Dan was not making up the statistics. They came from somewhere. So, I remove my DUH from that comment of yours and instead put the question of, "Do you have the statistical data from the Pasadena Police Department that shows how many miles per day on average are driven in Police Vehicles?"
Electric police cars will work just fine when you are spending tax payers money for charging and repairs.
EVs are very low on maintenance. So there is not much to repair.
@@danielnelson9411 I understand they eat tires, which cost a lot, and then you have the battery replacement.
@rancid216
I doubt they eat tires under normal driving conditions. But when driving heavy footed, any car will eat tires.
As for the battery, I have been told they last a long time if they are not charged to the max and do not get too low on charge before recharging them.
Watch me drive electric Skateboard sitting down like a car with a trailer behind on vacation. Enjoy
Tesla rocks!!!
Hi Dan