defrost 4 hours ago

It is possible to modify an EV to drive for several hours under salt sea water .. but it does take a bit of effort and talent.

'Rust bucket' 1978 LandCruiser converted to EV to drive 7km under water across Darwin Harbour — again

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-07-22/underwater-drive-darw...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TD5uuUAhCY

    On July 29th 2023 the underwater driving world record was broken by the Mudcrab Landcruiser. The team drove the heavily modified electric powered Landcruiser 7kms & 30 metres underwater across Darwin Harbour with 30 divers rotating behind the wheel.
SoftTalker 4 hours ago

Homeowners with powerwalls or similar will have the same issues in floods. I would never have one of those in my house. Outside well away from house, maybe.

  • dzink 3 hours ago

    The Powerwall 3 has a thick metal shell and the front is glass sealed with o-rings and screws that are single use because of water-tight silicone sealant as well. The metal shell can rust quickly (I’ve seen one with tape on it rust under the tape within days of first rain after water got under the wrinkled tape.) If Musk is smart he will try to one-up the Chinese EV company that is running videos of one of their EV Land Rover wannabes roaming around a lake and make the Teslas and batteries waterproof in the next iteration or even this one. The hurricane will dampen their sales in the south fast otherwise.

    • bryanlarsen 3 hours ago

      There are lots of videos of Teslas in lakes too. But salt water for days is a harsher environment than fresh water for hours.

shepardrtc 4 hours ago

They're going to have to waterproof them like they do with Jeep 4xe's. Well, excuse me, they SHOULD waterproof them. But I don't think someone will like the extra cost.

  • bryanlarsen 3 hours ago

    Tesla batteries are waterproof already. But the combination of dissimilar metals, voltages, salt water and the need to be able to vent gas will make holes in anything very quickly. It would have been fine submerged in fresh water.

bamboozled 4 hours ago

As much as I love Electric cars, this part of them freaks me out a little. You could say it's a minor problem, but Electric cars haven't reached saturation point. In future events (which will become more frequent), what happens then ?

A whole carpark will go up because of flood waters in the basement?

  • nomilk 3 hours ago

    It’s not too uncommon for a water pipe burst to flood an entire level of an underground car park. Granted, that’s a huge writeoff/mess before factoring fires from electric cars, but if a partially flooded car park caused a few hundred EVs to combust, it could possibly set the whole building alight, which would take an already big problem and make it 10-100x worse, and very life threatening.

  • yazzku 4 hours ago

    I've seen a gas car light up just as well. That was also years ago and I don't know if shit has improved, nor am I an expert on the matter. But humidity may accumulate near the battery and explode either way, gas or electric. A gas car in the garage will take down your house just as fine. The gas in the tank is irrelevant here.

    Disclaimer: I am also not a Tesla fanboy. But articles like these are rather dishonest in how they present the "information".

    • shepardrtc 3 hours ago

      There's a difference between the battery in a gas car and the lithium batteries in EVs. Lead-acid batteries are not inherently flammable, and they won't burn underwater. Lithium-ion, on the other hand, reacts with water to produce hydrogen gas and can undergo a thermal runaway. They also produce oxygen during the combustion process so they will burn underwater.