this post was submitted on 15 Jul 2024
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Solarpunk Travel
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Community for those focused on sustainable travel. Our society's current levels of energy intensive and frequent travel are not compatible with life on a finite planet. We advocate for long-term slow travel to see the world, and low energy local travel to deeply experience your community. Green washing free zone.
related to sustainable travel:
- !trains@midwest.social β open to all train chatter (but note the instance is centered on the midwest USA)
- !rail@feddit.uk β UK Rail and Trains
- !ukpublictransport@feddit.uk β UK public transport
related to travel generally:
- !travel@eviltoast.org β general travel
- !main@lemmy.globe.pub β general travel (this whole instance devoted to travel but note there is an instance-wide no politics rule there)
- !traveltips@feddit.uk β Europe focus
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The amount of power they can generate on a car is truly impressive. And as poVoq says, those old cars are generally lighter, which helps with range.
A downside of most older cars, unfortunately, is safety is pretty massively compromised. The T2 and T3 Volkswagons are significantly better than some other vans from that era, but they are woefully inadequate in a head on offset crash compared to modern vehicles. Since they do not have crumple zones, any high-speed crash is almost certainly a death sentence.
Warning, car safety tangent incoming:
Vans and trucks in particular (in the US, at least) were way behind sedans/wagons when it came to safety features like airbags, collapsible steering wheels, reinforced doors, etc. I personally wouldn't recommend any US brand made before 2004, since the 90's federal safety mandates didn't apply to them. You can see the massive difference between this 2001 f150 and a 2004 f150 here. Even after that period, avoid all Dodge vehicles like the plague, just terrible in crashes.
For cars, wouldn't recommend any US or Japanese passenger cars made before 1994-ish. 1996 was when most major safety features became federally mandated. Though even after that period, how well a vehicle crashes is highly dependent on the specific model. A Ford Taurus from 1996 was quite excellent for that era, while a different model Ford from that same year could be a death trap.
I would make an exception for that 1994 cutoff date with certain European vehicles, such as Volvo, Mercedes, BMW, and Saab, as they took crash safety much more seriously even back in the 80's, and tended to do quite well. Still not as good as a good modern car, but probably still fairly survivable.