• NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone
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    21 hours ago

    There’s a street I cross in the morning that becomes a clearway during commute hours. I take a grim satisfaction in watching the tow trucks take away yank tanks, because of course their humans believe the rules apply to everyone but them.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 day ago

    Under the Citizens Air Complaint Program, they can record idling trucks or buses, report them and keep 25% of any fines, which typically range from $350 to $600.

    This seems pretty common sense.

    • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      19 hours ago

      I mean, bare minimum that’s over $80 per report. Even if you only get one per hour, that’s still fantastic money by most metrics. That’s like $14k per month, or ~$170k per year. And that’s just the bare minimum fine.

      • cenzorrll@lemmy.ca
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        3 hours ago

        Per fine, not report. So there’s the “did they actually get fined” portion of it. But still, That’s a nice bonus if only one report goes through a week, for maybe an extra hour of time spent if you regularly bike commute, walk, etc.

      • outhouseperilous@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        18 hours ago

        Best i can do is a trip to ireland where i go to republican bars and talk to every old dude i see, especialky if he’s missing a hand. #lifegoals

        Fuck cars!

  • Plaidboy@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Wish we got a more complete understanding of the truckers’ side in this article - why is it so hard to turn off your engine instead of idling?

    The guy quoted in the article says that some trucks need to operate their lift gates 15 or 20 times in a day. First of all, turn on your engine to operate the gate and then turn it off when you’re done… Secondly, if it is impacting business too much to take that extra time to turn the engine on and off, invest in an auxiliary power source to operate the lift gate.

    Maybe I’m missing something?

    • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Former trucker. If it’s hot or cold AF it sucks not having a or heat. If it’s a hot day, it’s way hotter on blacktop surrounded by hot engines.

      It can be a pain to turn it on and off a bunch of times per day, I know it sounds minor, but when you’re trying to keep track of a bunch of things, making sure the right cargo comes off or on in the right order in the right way, hitting multiple docks or stops in quick succession. Trying to claim the space you need and trip plan (a lot of people don’t realize how difficult it can be to get a truck through a city, especially East Coast cities).

      Then you get somewhere and hop out of your truck to check in, thinking it will take 30 seconds. Talk to whomever you may need to, clear obstacles and eyeball the space you need to get your trailer into. You’ll run into clueless, apathetic and just all around useless fucks at every corner. The sort of people that make glaciers seem on point. 30 seconds can turn into 30 minutes real quick.

      It’s a tough gig, and having an army of mercenary profit driven people out there looking to make a buck off the guy delivering literally everything you need to survive that’s not air (and sometimes even that too) is kinda bullshit.

      • Mniot@programming.dev
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        1 day ago

        There’s a lot of externalizing of costs going on. The trucks are idling because the drivers are operating at the slimmest possible margin under the assumption that idling doesn’t cost anything.

        What we actually would want to get to is that idling does have a cost (environmental, health, pleasantness of the area, etc). And that cost ought to be passed up the chain so that the various goods being shipped are more expensive.

        But without a more centrally-managed economy, the implementation is to put all the pressure on the truck drivers and leave them responsible for passing that pressure to the next step up the chain. It doesn’t work out very well in practice because the drivers need to make a bunch of capital expenses for something like adding a cab AC and adding a batter-powered lift, but they’ve been operating at low margins so they’re not in a position to do it.

        • Headofthebored @lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          I think I seen some calculation where it said that an engine uses the same amount of fuel to start as it does to idle five minutes. I don’t know if that was average, a specific engine, or if it referred to gas or diesel though.

          • shoo@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            I think that used to be true on older cars, but with modern passenger cars emissions/fuel use for start up is about the same as 10s of idle. No clue if that’s true for these big diesel vehicles tho.

            Idling diesel is supposed to be very bad but long haul trucks are better at it because they need to keep refrigeration running. Either way, something like 2 minutes of idle is almost universally worse.

        • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Local deliveries should be happening in electric vehicles. And 90% of long range trucks should have been a train. Go back in time a few decades and get the godless MBA having fucks out of the railroad industry.

          Boom! Y’all should elect me king of everything, just solving problems left and right!

          • Mesophar@pawb.social
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            8 hours ago

            You’ll have my vote for king as soon as you provide the time machine to enact your plan

            • ViatorOmnium@piefed.social
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              3 hours ago

              Local deliveries can be fixed in a few years with proper regulations, and that’s giving a generous time span for businesses to adapt.

          • grue@lemmy.worldM
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            23 hours ago

            Local deliveries should be happening in electric vehicles.

            Including cargo bikes, not only electric box trucks.

      • stinerman@midwest.social
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        1 day ago

        My understanding is that turning off and on a diesel engine is not great for it or something like that. Sorry, my grandpa was a mechanic and I’m half remembering something he said.

        • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Ya it’s more wear and tear. It was more true with older engines than newer ones. Newer trucks have a more complex starting mechanism that’s easier on the engine.

      • outhouseperilous@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        20 hours ago

        Yeah that sucks, but that truck should be a train on a rail spur, and if we can punish anyone involved in making it not that, i am in favor.

      • Rob T Firefly@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        There are also older and jankier trucks still around which need the engine running for things like the lights and/or the hydraulic loading gate in the back to operate. Both these things are non-negotiable safety needs when loading or unloading a truck.

    • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      My grandpa drove a semi truck;

      The A/C was part of it, some truck stops even had a thing called “IdleAir” that was like a window unit so you didn’t have to leave your engine running. For semis nobody wants to sleep in a sunbaked box with no air.

      But according to him, for the really big engines, turning it off and on causes more wear and tear than leaving it running. So back in the day when diesel was still very cheap compared to gas they all got in the habit of leaving it on all the time.

      Even the cops leave their cars on all the time where I am from.

      • CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        Cops will leave their engines running because they may have to go into service at a moment notice. Not sure if I entirely agree the half second to fire up is going to slow their response considerably, but I’d error on the side of an exception for emergency equipment.

          • burntbacon@discuss.tchncs.de
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            4 hours ago

            They do at the scene of the fire, and EMS leaves their ambulances running on scene as well. Cops leave their cars running while out and about, and usually off if they’re parked at the station.

            More to the original point though, I’ve never seen cop cars, fire trucks, or ambulances idling at their respective stations. Not a clue what SOOP sees in his area.

            • Soggy@lemmy.world
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              3 hours ago

              I’m fine with on-scene idling because the expectation is that emergency services need to be fast and reliable. (Also I’m pretty sure that fire trucks, the big ones anyway, have a lot of extra machinery that needs to be powered)

          • Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 day ago

            While I certainly agree with your overall point, I’d guess that firefighters have someone who’s job it is to start the engine/truck while their fellows are donning their gear.

            • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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              1 day ago

              Let’s be honest though; Push-to-start exists. There is zero reason they can afford all their SWAT bullshit and can’t afford to make a car that auto starts when whoever is carrying the fob gets in.

                • Cort@lemmy.world
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                  22 hours ago

                  Also, fire trucks don’t have a key to start. You set one knob to on and twist the starter knob.

    • zurohki@aussie.zone
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      1 day ago

      If you’re loading and unloading 20 times a day, you’re doing local delivery and should probably be in an electric truck in the first place.

    • CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I’ve often wondered why trucks can’t have a stop+start system integrated like many cars have these days. Wouldn’t need to be a conscious action to kill the engine, just something that happens automatically when they park up.

      • SippyCup@feddit.nl
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        1 day ago

        That is wear and tear on your engine, and the meager benefits you get from that are far offset by the maintenance costs.

        For example, my not so fuel friendly car has, over the course of 3 years, shut itself off at stop lights for over an hour and a half.

        Through doing this an entire gallon of fuel has been saved.

        Over 3 years.

        It’s engine down time is usually less than 10 seconds.

        I get that it feels like this is a benefit if you have all of the cars everywhere doing it, but this ain’t it. Even environmentally, the extra batteries we need to produce will be more harmful than the miniscule exhaust will be.

        Service trucks will put many, many more miles on them in that 3 years than I will. Their idle time might be a great deal more if they’re leaving it to idle while they go try to make a delivery. But, two things: those systems are ridiculously easy to turn off, by design, and diesel engines really don’t like working that way. The wear and tear would be worse, more expensive, and more harmful.

        I’m not saying throw your hands up and give up. I an saying that the service vehicles are the ones we actually should be making exceptions for. Even in a consumer car free society, we’ll still need the service vehicles to do work.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          3 hours ago

          Some newer diesel engines have features where they can reduce down to only running a single cylinder when parked/idling to keep the electrics running as expected to greatly reduce fuel consumption and emissions while idling which might help as that trickles into fleets

          But yeah in reality these service trucks should be smaller electric vehicles for local delivery, or even better they should be electric trains pulling power directly from the grid. Heck I’ll even take diesel electric trucks with a pantograph to use power from an overhead wire instead of burning Diesel while in cities. Imagine if our roads had big networks of overhead wire to power trucks and buses from! Imagine if every hill on a highway had a section of overhead wire for trucks to power themselves off of while climbing. Realistically every transit mix will require some amount of trucks and buses so we might as well minimize their impact while we imagine a better world

        • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          If every car in the US had auto stop and drove similar to yours, it would have stopped 190,000,000 pounds of CO2 from going into the atmosphere in those 3 years.

          Even environmentally, the extra batteries we need to produce will be more harmful than the miniscule exhaust will be.

          Extra batteries aren’t required for Auto-stop. If battery wear was significantly faster due to the feature it wouldnt matter, batteries are much more recyclable than burnt gas.

          I had auto-stop on my last car, and the battery made it 9 years before I finally had to replace it, and when the feature wasn’t working (too cold out) it made a noticeable impact on my fuel economy, around 3-5 mpg.

            • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              You’re also assuming that it’s only working at traffic lights. My auto stop would activate when the car was slowing down under 10mph. It also activates in car washes and when the car is parked.

              But hey, fine, if saving 190 million pound of CO2 from entering the atmosphere buy turning off idling engines isn’t the answer, what would you do to save that much CO2 from running ICE vehicles instead?

              • Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                4 hours ago

                You’re locking in on the wrong thing.

                In 60000 miles, the above poster reports one gallon of gas was saved. That’s 0.05% assuming 30mpg. We don’t need hundreds or thousands of changes that each net us tiny results, we need big changes that can happen quickly and net tens of percentage points of improvement. Yes, small changes are not literally nothing, but solutions need to look like “40% fewer cars on the road” sorts of things if we want to actually accomplish anything at all.

                The world doesn’t have time or space for us to make these minor, rounding-error changes. I know the argument will be “every little bit helps” but we collectively need to start making massive changes, and stop thinking of this as an incremental problem. We should still make improvements and strive for better efficiencies, but the practical reality is that those changes are too small, too slow, and too late.

                • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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                  3 hours ago

                  solutions need to look like “40% fewer cars on the road” sorts of things if we want to actually accomplish anything at all.

                  I think the worst part with this is that this can be achieved overnight be mandating remote work for office workers. We already know exactly what the impacts of remote work are because the entire white collar workforce went remote 5 years ago. Let’s do that ASAP because the only people who don’t benefit from remote work are commercial real estate investors

                  My imagined legislation would impose a new commute tax on businesses with office workers working in office. This tax would be proportional to the number of office workers, and would be introduced alongside a new tax incentive for remote office workers. If the office worker is permitted to work remotely 4 workdays a week the tax break effectively zeros out the commute tax cost for that worker. 3 days a week reduces the commute tax break by 3/4 for that worker, etc. Force shitty bosses to pay for their anti-worker RTO plans. The tax income would be directly applied to road and public transit infrastructure since the significantly reduced rush hour traffic would change traffic patterns and we all know how road maintenance has been struggling for funding on recent decades

                • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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                  3 hours ago

                  You’re locking in on the wrong thing.

                  Every car made in the last 10 years can use auto-start and stop without any additional hardware. It’s practically free, just a little bit of code to shut off spark and fuel under certain conditions. I’m also fairly sure the commentor just googled “how long does the average person spend waiting at stoplights every day” and used that as an estimate for the fuel savings (practically free fuel savings I might add again). Auto-Stop works at the drive-thru, it works in carwashes, it works while waiting to pick up your kids at school, it works when you run into the house to grab something you forgot. I drove a 2015 Honda CR-Z with Auto-Stop for 9 years, and when the feature wasn’t working (it disables when it is very cold out) it dropped my fuel economy about 3-5mpg, and that was for a fairly small (1.5L) motor. The savings are much greater for larger, more fuel hungry engines.

                  Again though, the feature does not require a new component, or special fuel, or interaction from the driver. We’re buying, burning, and wasting that extra fuel for no reason at all. No matter how small an amount it is, it’s worthwhile to save it when it costs us literally nothing to do so.

        • Eheran@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          You save 2 to 3 % on average and up to 7 % in pure city traffic.

          Where are you that red lights are less than 10 seconds? Not many cars are going to get through a green light of below 10 seconds.

          • SippyCup@feddit.nl
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            1 day ago

            That just isn’t supported by real world data. Manufacturers may claim that but they make a lot of claims that only apply to factory testing conditions.

            • Eheran@lemmy.world
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              22 hours ago

              Real world testing comes to the same conversion. 10 % saving in pure city traffic can be expected.

              Only stopping for 1.5 hours on red lights over 3 years makes you an super extreme outlier. Now you don’t specify the total distance in those 3 years, so perhaps you just don’t drive at all, but realistically people drive something like 10’000 km per year, average speed around 50 km/h, time spent driving about 30’000 km / 50 km/h = 600 h. To only get to 1.5 hours at red lights would mean 10 seconds per hour of driving. I hope that makes it clear how unrealistic YOUR number is.

        • CaptDust@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          Yeah I’m not thinking so much stopping at lights and in traffic for this application, but something like if the parking brake is engaged and 15-30 seconds pass, then engine turns off. As the trucker in this thread noted, sometimes they’ll hop out expecting a quick stop and it balloons into 15 minutes of idle waiting on other people. Then there’s the drivers who will let the truck idle while getting loaded/unloaded just for climate controls… And thinking at scale saving even just a gallon, multiplied across a whole fleet, could be a big impact.

          Of course there’s more thought to put in for secondary systems, but just strikes me as something that should be considered.

    • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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      1 day ago

      Jokes aside, this is a pretty rad program.

      Under the Citizens Air Complaint Program, they can record idling trucks or buses, report them and keep 25% of any fines, which typically range from $350 to $600.

      Even if you aren’t doing it 6-9 hours a day like this guy is, getting a cool $75-$150 for making a report while out of the house anyway doesn’t sound bad at all.

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        This bounty hunterish thing is wild for me, I actually don’t know what to think about it. Good or bad?

        • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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          1 day ago

          Given it’s targeting businesses violating a city ordinance that’s in place to reduce pollution, I don’t see an issue with it. If it was people snitching on other citizens for minor violations or something, I’d be against it.

          I guess the qualifier for me is, is the law something that’s in place for public good? If so, it should be enforced.

          • grue@lemmy.worldM
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            23 hours ago

            I guess the qualifier for me is, is the law something that’s in place for public good? If so, it should be enforced.

            That’s supposed to be the case for every law.

  • als@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    Idling is illegal here often but I see vehicles doing it all the time. Would love if a scheme like this existed in the UK

    • ByteOnBikes@discuss.online
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      21 hours ago

      It also depends if they want to enforce it.

      A lot of things are illegal to do in the US but ignored, but someone has to actively enforce it. Which is a police problem on its own.

  • ieatpwns@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Not sure why the meter maids aren’t doing this instead of turning the people against each other

    • ByteOnBikes@discuss.online
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      21 hours ago

      Where I grew up, meter checkers were getting threatened with assault for writing up parking tickets.

      The current city I’m in, the meter checkers never leave their cars. They take a photo of the offense, and mail their tickets.

  • YurkshireLad@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I guess some trucks need to idle their engine to keep the refrigerator running so food doesn’t spoil?