this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
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I'm not sure how other EVs do it, but the Nissan Leaf can be put into neutral, since it uses a single motor under the hood. I'm sure putting motors in the wheels complicates things, but I would think the coast idea would work.
You can put teslas in a Tow mode too but that would mean the owner was aware a tow truck was coming to turn the car on and set it on tow mode. If they didn't, the car needs to be on skates and needs to be lifted up entirely where no wheels can spin.
I guess the other difference is that the Leaf is front wheel drive only, so as long as the truck lifts the front wheels there's no risk to anything going wrong.
Personally I like it when EVs aren't too different from regular cars, the leaf is basically a Nissan Rogue, but instead of a gas engine there's an electric one, and instead of a gas tank there's a battery pack.
If so, why not turn on the car alarm and put the vehicle into tow mode on detecting an overcurrent?
In fact, Teslas have very loud external speakers in lieu of horns. They could just say "you are towing the car wrong. Please stop and consult the manual" on repeat at 100 decibels
Not a bad idea. Shouldn't be too hard to program in.
No truer words have been spoken by someone who has never worked on the system in question. Knowing Tesla, there is probably some arcane bullshit in the code preventing this from happening.
Just a few if else statements, how hard could it be amirite