I got the snows on the van just in time.We had frost on the ground here this morning too but luckily no snow especially considering I will not have my winter tires on before late next month.
I got the snows on the van just in time.We had frost on the ground here this morning too but luckily no snow especially considering I will not have my winter tires on before late next month.
Preach.In my defense - I've pretty much always thought this way. Every vehicle that I've ever purchased I've hoped (I suppose quixotically) would last forever. Except maybe a couple of the rusty shitboxes I owned back in the 80's and early 90's...
Would it normally be plugged in so you cold pre heat?
Today was a more typical winter day, albeit with a lot of driving.Yeah, this is worst case for sure. Normally it'd be in my 50-55 degrees-in-winter insulated and somewhat heated garage, and would be plugged in for the pre-heating. In that circumstance it might do 25% worse efficiency for the trip overall.
I got the snows on the van
Re these thoughts, in my parallel thoughts-from-me thread on NASIOC I got these data:I don't like the Hankook winter tires on the Tesla
I switched from Michelin X-Ice 3s to Hakkapellita R3s for ice racing. Night and day difference.
Nokians must be witchcraft.
The Hakka 8’s on wifevan are really good.
Back in the day the Subaru was rocking Hakka 4 studded tires and they were amazing. The difference between them and the X-Ice2s that I went to was the same difference as an all-season vs. a winter tire.
Cliffs Notes: Nokians are the hot ticket still.Agree 100% with [my thoughts on Hankook traction issues].
Hankook winter tires have good grip accelerating and braking, but add in some yaw and their performance drops off quickly. Braking around a corner will lead to some raised eyebrows (at the very least).
Hakka R2/3 will offer more grip when the steering wheel is turned, and break away with more predictability.
FWIW I was pretty impressed with the Goodyear Ultragrips I had on my C63. They performed very nicely, and handled wet slush very well.
Plan has been executed. Dumped all my calculated excess money from this month to Betterment yesterday (a little held back for mortgage closing costs out of caution although I have a pretty good handle on what they should be). No prepayment on debts, no paying off of the Land Cruiser's loan.As mused about in the quoted passage above, I am going to spend at least a half year from now directing all excess monthly cash to Betterment (my taxable investment account): No early payments on debts until I figure out the long term cashflow effect of the 15 year mortgage refinance + resumption of 529 contributions + the small monthly reduction in auto loan payments post-refinance.
Cliffs Notes: I shall be dumping money into my taxable account this upcoming week then drawing it down over the next 6 months, watching it closely.
Nota Bene for finance-nerdy types: Cashflow estimation isn’t a trivial problem because a) bonuses that are now split up biannually are a pretty large part of my total compensation, b) FICA taxes resume come Jan 1, and c) 401(a) contributions resume come Jan 1—the latter 2 have their own annual caps that reset with the new tax year. (For the pedants in the audience there’s also another small variable-over-year component from the Additional Medicare Tax, but that’s not capped, per se, but rather has an income floor after which it applies.)
I ended up oscillating in the past few days, up when I ate 3 meals per day x 2 days (with lots of carbs! Italian for one) over the weekend, dropping back down after my 66 hour fast. I ended this month with a last official weigh-in at 231.2 lbs.My goal for the end of October was 230 lbs. I weighed in post-skiing at 229.6 today. It was not a representative weight since I'm fasted since last night and skied for 2 hours, but with Sunday's indeterminate length fast to consolidate things I'll be solidly/truly under that bar for the month.
On to the next goal, 220 by end of November…
I could not believe, when I was shopping around, just how remarkably shitty the MPG figures were on brand new tacomas. Like, only 2-3 gallons better than my 21 year old wrangler was getting, and with lower torque and HP figures. How is that even possible with 2 decades of technological improvement?
Note the one marque that's not like the others over this timepoint. The starting points for each largely reflect what portion of their sales is light trucks--no one is that different.
Toyota has fancy tech. See direct- and port-injected engines on the Lexus LS since 2007. But for their bread and butter models, if it sells they keep on shoveling out the same crap.I could not believe, when I was shopping around, just how remarkably shitty the MPG figures were on brand new tacomas. Like, only 2-3 gallons better than my 21 year old wrangler was getting, and with lower torque and HP figures. How is that even possible with 2 decades of technological improvement?
I am 100% for the above.Medicare for All will save money by bringing down the staggering administrative costs for insurers in our current system. As the experts I asked to evaluate my plan noted, private insurers had administrative costs of 12% of premiums collected in 2017, while Medicare kept its administrative costs down to 2.3%. My plan will ensure that Medicare for All functions just as efficiently as traditional Medicare by setting net administrative spending at 2.3%.
Little nervous from this... note the calling out of a CT scan('s performance and interpretation).Studies have continued to show that it’s not how much people use the health care system, often referred to as “utilization,” but rather how much people pay that drives our high spending. Compared to other high income countries, Americans simply pay more for health care. We pay more for physicians and nurses. We pay more in administrative costs. We pay more for prescription drugs.
A heart bypass surgery that costs nearly $16,000 in the Netherlands costs an average of $75,000 in the United States. A CT scan that costs $97 in Canada costs an average of $896 here. And in the United States hospitals can charge new parents for holding their newborn after delivery.
I'm ok with Medicare rate reimbursement. It'd be a slight cut relative to the current mix, which at my practice is slightly over 40% government payors (Medicare, Medicaid the bulk), but if no care is written off for indigent care and our side administrative costs go down as well...Under my approach, Medicare for All will sharply reduce administrative spending and reimburse physicians and other non-hospital providers at current Medicare rates. My plan will also rebalance rates in a budget neutral way that increases reimbursements for primary care providers and lowers reimbursements for overpaid specialties.
This is a baby step from fee for service towards capitation. I think we need to go that route eventually and am on board.We will also shift payment rates so that we are paying for better outcomes, instead of simply reimbursing for more services. We build on the success of value-based reforms enabled by the Affordable Care Act, including by instituting bundled payments for inpatient care and for 90 days of post-acute care. Instead of paying providers for each individual service, bundled payments reimburse providers for an entire “episode” of care and have been shown to both improve outcomes and control costs. These bundles help ensure that a patient’s different providers all communicate because they are all tied to the same payment.
This all sounds good to me.Under Medicare for All, the federal government would have real bargaining power to negotiate lower prices for patients. I will adopt an altered version of the mechanism outlined in the Lower Prescription Drug Costs Now Act which leverages excise taxes to bring manufacturers to the table to negotiate prices for both branded and generic drugs, with no drug exceeding 110% of the average international market price, but removes the limit of the number of drugs Medicare can negotiate for and eliminates the “target price” so Medicare could potentially negotiate prices lower than other countries.
Ok...Medicare for All puts all health care spending on the government’s books. But Medicare for All is about the same price as our current path — and cheaper over time. That means the debate isn’t really about whether the United States should pay more or less. It’s about who should pay.
I asked top experts — Mark Zandi, the Chief Economist of Moody’s Analytics; Betsey Stevenson, the former Chief Economist for the Obama Labor Department; and Simon Johnson — to examine options for how we can make up that $11 trillion difference. They conclude that it can be done largely with new taxes on financial firms, giant corporations, and the top 1% — and making sure the rich stop evading the taxes we already have.
That’s right: We don’t need to raise taxes on the middle class by one penny to finance Medicare for All.
This sounds super reasonable to me. @dan-o note the second quoted paragraph if that's relevant to your business.To calculate their new Employer Medicare Contribution, employers would determine what they spent on health care over the last few years and divide that by the number of employees of the company in those years to arrive at an average health care cost per employee at the company. (Companies would count part-time employees towards the total based on the number of hours they worked during a year.) Under the first year of Medicare for All, employers would then take that average cost, adjust it upwards to account for the overall increase in national health care spending, and multiply it by their total number of employees that year. Their Employer Medicare Contribution would be 98% of that amount — ensuring that every company paying for health care today will pay less than they would have if they were still offering their employees comparable private insurance.
[...]
Small businesses — companies with under 50 employees — would be exempt from this requirement too if they aren’t paying for employee health care today. When either new or existing firms exceed this employee threshold, we would phase in a requirement that companies make Employer Medicare Contributions equal to the national average cost of health care per employee for every employee at that company. Merging firms would pay the weighted average cost of health care per employee of the two firms that are merging.
I'm ok with this, not being the targeted group, but am still wary about the 1% target on my back from above.If we’re falling short of the $8.8 trillion revenue target for the next ten years, we will make up lost revenue with a Supplemental Employer Medicare Contribution requirement for big companies with extremely high executive compensation and stock buyback rates.
Ok...So where does the rest of the money come from that allows us to eliminate premiums, deductibles, copays, and most out-of-pocket spending for every American? Four sources: (1) better enforcement of our existing tax laws so we stop letting people evade their tax obligations; (2) targeted taxes on the financial sector, large corporations, and the top 1% of individuals; (3) my approach to immigration; and (4) shutting down a slush fund for defense spending.
Again with the ok since not targeted group bit... there are a few more proposals in a similar vein in the document that follow.For example, a small tax on financial transactions — one-tenth of one percent on the sale of bonds, stocks, or derivatives — would generate about $800 billion in revenue over the next ten years. The tax would be assessed on and collected from financial firms, and would likely have little to no effect on most investors.
Ah. <moves to edge of seat>Finally, we can raise another $3 trillion over ten years by asking the top 1% of households in America to pay a little more.
Ok, so not really a 1% thing but a 0.1% kind of thing... except for this tax as you go capital gains proposal. Not sure I agree with that, but it's kind of like yearly property taxes in a sense, I guess. Hmm.My Ultra-Millionaire Tax, a 2-cent tax on the wealth of fortunes above $50 million, tackles this head on. Under this tax, the top 0.1% — the wealthiest 75,000 Americans — would have to pitch in two cents for every dollar of net worth above $50 million and three cents for every dollar on net worth over $1 billion. [...]
Today, I’m going one step further. By asking billionaires to pitch in six cents on each dollar of net worth above $1 billion, we can raise an additional $1 trillion in revenue and further close the gap between what middle-class families pay as a percentage of their wealth and what the top one-tenth of one percent pay. [...]
Under a “mark-to-market” system for the wealthiest 1% of households, we will tax capital gains income (excluding retirement accounts) annually, rather than at the time of sale, and raise the rates on capital gains to match the tax rates for labor income.
Instead what I plan to do is to test ~50 g effective carb (total - fiber) meals eaten at 9 AM with a variety of foods that I can find readily and that I might eat, i.e. bread, rice +/- cooked in coconut oil, bananas. I will test pre-meal, then at 30 minute intervals out to 120 minutes because from that chart from the Cell paper some interesting differences might only be seen at 30 minutes. (Having a continuous glucose monitor would be ideal but this is what I have.)
I'll continue this for as long as it interests me, and will log these data.
'tis all over the web.Where did you find the info that the TI Edition version of the watch has better glass? I have not been able to find any info on that?
[T]here exist data regarding late model SUVs' RTIs that one can find on the web with just a little bit of legwork. [...]
Inside Line's figures, noting that higher is better in this test:
It has been a few years, so what better time to update my little list of Ramp Travel Indices of stock vehicles via Edmunds' reporting?! (I can't head out to get Thai until about an hour from now due to babysitting the scanner--patient on there getting gadolinium now, and that's my purpose to be here physically.)Body on frame construction, published fording ability, and huge scores on the ramp travel index mean squat when even approaching a trail would rip off the fascia [of the 2016-current Lexus LX 570].
Supposedly if you buy a new e-golf from CA in CO, you'll get one for about $12,500 after fed and co tax credits...
Both of them did end up with significantly more capable EVs, at least. 35.8 kWh nominal, 32 kWh usable. Commuter car only.
Both of them did end up with significantly more capable EVs, at least. 35.8 kWh nominal, 32 kWh usable. Commuter car only.
This. Range of mine is almost double, although I have a friend from out of state that might buy one through me for his CA commuter car...
I chose not to wait for the Mini-e for exactly this reason.
I saw one recently... looked more mid-size. Doesn't any manufacturer make a small *anything* any more?^^^^^^
Intrigued by new Ranger and Bronco. Soft spot in my cold, dead heart, for small trucks.
Yeah, far from sufficient for RV-platform use at this point... but for the myriad Amazon/DHL/UPS/FedEx delivery uses that's probably plenty, especially if level 3 DC fast charging is in place at a central depot.