phiwum
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2010
- Messages
- 13,590
They tell me a lot of things, often ending in "and what are you gonna do about it" after switching off the bodycam.
Very nice. Much better than my reply.
They tell me a lot of things, often ending in "and what are you gonna do about it" after switching off the bodycam.
Lawyers deal in binding contracts and get-out clauses. Range Rover lawyers will be working overtime to get-out of this. 'The Fire Brigade never said it was a Range Rover what done it,' will be their line.
It'll be pinned on the driver.
Poor maintenance. Messing with the electrics. Driving it into a packed car park when you know it is on fire.
I think the 12v battery would be lead.
For my own sanity, I have not followed much of the thread
I know nothing about cars
Very nice. Much better than my reply.
Police won't care. It'll be Prime Minster Rishi Sunak and his wife not wanting anything to besmirch the Tata brand. Imagine if the Range Rover had a dud lithium battery, albeit a mild hybrid, just as they are champing at the bit to build a factory of the things...? Of course, Rish! wouldn't lie. It'd just be an 'inadvertent' oversight that he forgot to state his wife's interests. Whoops. He did it again. Silly him.
He will have liaised closely with the police. Clearly he was told not to name the brand of car.
Why would the police be concerned about this?
In this type of incident the police would liaise with the regional fire brigade, which has the ultimate responsibility of bringing out the official fire report. As blame apportioning is involved then of course the police are involved at an early stage.
Doesn't answer the question. Why would the police be concerned about the make of the car being named by the fire brigade?
Police won't care.
Driving it into a packed car park when you know it is on fire is not a case where the initial fire is due to driver error.
I wonder why on October 23, the fire brigade explicitly said the fire was caused by vehicle fault. Seems like they haven't set up the driver error excuse very well.
And do you suppose that the final report will lie and blame driver error even though the cause was vehicle fault?
The Liverpool car park fire was deemed to have been caused by a running burning fuel line between initially a couple of rows of cars and then...
If as is feared they are a fire hazard when they do catch fire, albeit less frequently than petrol or diesel or even hybrids then it does become a political issue. People don't care about the cobalt mining by young children in third world countries but if any potential hazard is nearer to home then the government may be forced to relook at safety standards in public places.
You can be all for Net Zero and clean air whilst also being a supporter of safety standards. They are not mutually exclusive.
If the driver had to leap out of a burning car sharpish then it is stating the Bleedin' Obvious to state it appears to be a 'vehicle fault'. Again, you have very carefully been told nothing at all. Yet you believe you know all about it.
If you could just keep your fantasies to yourself, and confine yourself to the real world, where the car was a diesel, not a hybrid, so your flight of fancy is completely irrelevant.
Her mother was the first female engineer to work for the TATA Engineering and Locomotive Company, then India's largest car maker, and later became a philanthropist. Murty has one brother, Rohan Murty, and they were brought up in Jayanagar, a suburb of Bangalore.
Just before I wade through the rest of your doubtless gripping and incisive account of the famous Liverpool fire, can I suggest that you appear to have misconstrued what the term 'fuel line' refers to?
A fuel line is a pipe which delivers fuel from the fuel tank to the engine (or returns unused fuel, depending on the type of fuel system). You seem to imagine a 'fuel line' is a rivulet of fuel flowing on the ground. It is not.
You're welcome.
Just before I wade through the rest of your doubtless gripping and incisive account of the famous Liverpool fire, can I suggest that you appear to have misconstrued what the term 'fuel line' refers to?
A fuel line is a pipe which delivers fuel from the fuel tank to the engine (or returns unused fuel, depending on the type of fuel system). You seem to imagine a 'fuel line' is a rivulet of fuel flowing on the ground. It is not.
You're welcome.
I'm guessing you've never been to Florida.If the driver had to leap out of a burning car sharpish then it is stating the Bleedin' Obvious to state it appears to be a 'vehicle fault'.
No one else is claiming to know exactly what started the fire. "Vehicle fault" can include numerous events, and doesn't necessarily implicate the manufacturer. It was a nine year old car, after all.Again, you have very carefully been told nothing at all. Yet you believe you know all about it.
OK, but...wouldn't police and firefighters be highly incentivized to call attention to a potentially dangerous vehicle? They are the ones who have to fight it and drag out the bodies, when applicable. Seems like a stellar opportunity for all involved to jump up and say "howzabout we get together and nip this puppy in the bud before the bodies start racking up like cordwood?"
... A Romanian eye witness [...] told a press reporter at the scene that they left when 'the fuel tank exploded'...
Even if you were correct (hint: you aren't), and the Fire Brigade and the Police haven't uttered the words "Range Rover", it hasn't had much effect since just about every story in the media has used them, and not mentioned any other brand as being the vehicle where the fire started.From Wiki re Akshata Murty, Rish! Sunak's wife:
And of course, Rish! is a well-known paragon of always declaring his and his wife's interests. Unless, of course, he 'inadvertently' forgets...
Sunak's eat out to help out is an exemplar of a man filled with compassion and pity for the poor & suffering and nothing at all to do with helping out his business interests.
I bet this is the reason behind the Fire Brigade gag on naming Range Rover. Has to be. Range Rover were named promptly in the Liverpool fire.
And if Bedfordshire Fire Service really are trying to downplay the risks of lithium-ion batteries, they aren't doing a very good job of it.