Saturday, 12 August 2023

The China EV industry threat - could we see World car makers out of business? And a full return to Petrol and Diesel vehicles?

 

A new chapter in the Electric Vehicle folly -
potential collapse of the EV project and a future return to liquid fuels.

China is a 97% monopoly holder of access to the rare Earth metals used in production of Electric Vehicle batteries and for the Green industry. That should be worrying for the world's motor manufacturers and people who might buy electric vehicles.

The ability for China to 'turn off' and immobilise electric vehicles touted in the press recently is not new technology, this facility has been inside vehicle software for years. 

Some few years ago, a tractor that was ploughing a field in Britain stopped, the owner rang the dealer who said it had been remotely turned off because the owner hadn't made a payment. So this is a reality.

Imagine a theoretical scenario with the danger for the British motor manufacturers for example, that China 'dumps' a massive amount of cheap electric vehicles onto the Western markets, cheaper than the resident manufacturers can make them for in the first place.

Such a move could make these other manufacturers stop producing vehicles and essentially go out of business because they could not compete. Or they would have to go back to recommencing petrol and diesel production to survive.

This move would allow China then to set the price of their own produced EV vehicles for sale in the West at whatever price they choose, you would have no other purchasing choice except not to buy and go back to walking.

As such, then China could with effectively near complete market control, could choose as a geopolitical policy, not to produce electric vehicles and sit on the access to the required minerals so no one else can either. Or sell the minerals at a very high price if it chose to.

Thus, the West would be forced to again to start production of Petrol and Diesel vehicles from a point zero if it could start from the ashes of the EV folly.  

If the western motor industry collapses totally, China could then become virtually one of the only providers of motor vehicles and the result would be that the electric vehicle project could be eternally doomed, the street chargers then being little more than monuments to the stupidity of the whole project. 

China could decide that it would only produce liquid fuel vehicles and as such the EV market could almost collapse. In effect it could control most of our transport by default. 

No one seems to have woken up to this potential problem.

No one seems to have seen that the early technology of the EV is dangerous to pursue as a sole alternative to other forms.

The EV policy is being presided over by people who often of not have the technical ability to understand the great steps needed to drive alternatively.

It is easy to grab headlines by making bold statements of intent, but these are often at the expense of the technology to do so not being a proper solution that is ready to go.



Saturday, 5 August 2023

Watch Reviews 4U - The Write Time - the Longines Rollerball Pen

                                           

The Longines Rollerball Pen

You've got the watch so why not have the accompanying pen? I came across this nice Longines accessory on Ebay a while ago.

So, what is it like? Well, I was pleasantly surprised at how nice it is to use, it isn't just an exercise in extending the Longines portfolio, in fact like their watches, the rollerball pen is rather nicely understated.

I have a couple of nice Parker brand rollerball pens of a similar design which are slightly larger in size and a touch heavier in weight, I have used the Parker ones for compiling notes for book projects and they are very nice to use.

The Longines 1832 Heritage Collection in Black -
style and simplicity working to provide you with a classic look -
the design of the Pen echoes the Rollerball

The Longines Rollerball is quite minimalist, in the Bauhaus style, a style I like and something which the 1832 collection watches evokes too. The stark black accented by the chromed fittings really works nicely - on both the pen and the watch.

The Rollerball has a winged logo badge engraved on the pen cap end and the Longines name around the banding on the pen cap.

The pen uses conveniently available and inexpensive Schmidt 888 Rollerball Refills, this is a great selling point as you are not tied to an expensive and exclusive high cost refill only produced for a limited or one model of pen. The Schmidt 888 refills I found on Amazon are very reasonably priced.

Writing with the pen is easy and enjoyable, I found it a nicely appointed pen that was easy to use, not too heavy, not too large and coupled to the easily available refills at a great price, it is a win-win.

The Pen is contained in a leatherette cover and this is inside a draw string soft cloth pouch with the Longines name and Logo on.

I have seen new Rollerball pens for around 100 Euros, I managed to find some quite reasonably priced on Ebay.

Get one if you see one!