We tested these 4 Chinese EVs in the US (but don’t ask us how)
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1 month agoon
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We recently got a chance to test out a few Chinese EVs in the US, despite that none of the models are actually available here. It gave us just a small taste of the variety and quality of vehicles coming out of the world’s largest EV market – and largest car exporter.
The Chinese EV market is flourishing, with a huge amount of models available in all different vehicle segments and price points. And the acceleration in sales has happened only in the last few years. EVs now make up about half of the new car market in China, whereas in 2020 they only accounted for about one in twenty cars sold.
This has come alongside a rapid expansion in available brands and models. There are hundreds of competing EV brands in China, with each offering their own slate of high tech features to try to compete in a cutthroat market. Chinese consumers have benefitted from this competition as prices have dropped due to the large amount of brands competing.
However, none of those Chinese cars are available here. Due to unwise tariffs, Americans have been locked out from buying Chinese EVs, restricting a source of competition that could help reduce ballooning vehicle prices. The net effect of these tariffs will be to increase pollution, increase vehicle prices, and lull American automakers into a sense of complacency that will leave the US further behind the rest of the world’s auto market. Although, our neighbors to the north may consider letting Chinese EVs in, so, stay tuned.
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And to get just a small sense what American consumers are missing, we got a test drive in four cars in a variety of styles. (In contrast to US EV offerings, which are… basically all SUVs)
We got this opportunity thanks to DCAR STUDIO, which is part of Dongchedi, a massive Chinese car review channel. You may remember it from the incredibly impressive Chinese self-driving test where it shut down real highways to test driver assist systems with real cars on real roads.

It just so happens that DCAR has a few Chinese EVs in the US, and we got a chance to take each of them out for a quick spin.
We only had a short time in each of these vehicles, more akin to a test drive than a “first drive” review that we would normally do during a manufacturer drive event. But, for me, this was my first time driving any of the Chinese EVs that we don’t already have access to here in the US (i.e. the Chinese-owned Western brands).
There were a few similarities which struck out between the cars: some had off-throttle regen, but it was light, and none had true one-pedal driving (…or, at least, I couldn’t find out how to activate it since the UIs were in Chinese, and my translator couldn’t find it either). None had ADAS that I could test, because they’re built for China, and thus couldn’t activate any sort of driver assistance systems on American roads. All had extensive use of LCD screens (again, mostly in Chinese), and had available AI-powered voice assistants (a very popular feature in China) which we also didn’t get a chance to test.
So, here’s some quick thoughts on the four cars I drove: the BYD Yangwang U8, MG Cyberster, Bestune Pony, and Chery iCar 03.
BYD Yangwang U8
Our first EV is actually an EREV, an electric car with an engine in it which can be used to charge the battery, but using only electric motors for drive power. There’s been a trend towards these in China lately, especially among the gigantic land yachts typical of the luxury segment.
The Yangwang is solidly in the luxury segment, and it’s BYD’s attempt to create a halo car for its whole brand. BYD has actually been around a long time, prior to EVs, and was known in China for making taxis. This perception gave it a solidly boring, low-market feel to the Chinese consumer, and the U8 is an attempt to reverse that.
The car is big, expensive (~$150k), excessively leathered (all that leather, combined with the smell of gasoline which is a foreign scent to me, led to a stinkier car than I’d have liked), and packed with features and screens all over (and this was the only car with mostly English on the screens – the other three were all in Chinese).
Now, when I call the U8 a land yacht, I mean it literally… because the U8 has the unique capability of being driven while floating in water. Unfortunately, we were not able to test this capability (plus, apparently you need to bring the car into a BYD dealership any time you use this mode, to make sure you didn’t break anything).
Another highlight feature we didn’t get to test was the car’s ability to do a 359-degree “tank turn,” where it will spin in place, either kicking up plenty of dirt or leaving rubber everywhere.



When we got to the car it was at low state of charge, which meant the engine stayed on for the entire drive to keep battery charge up. This could have affected power delivery, because it felt a bit less punchy than I’d have expected of an 1,197hp car… not that I was racing it or anything. The battery is a 50kWh LFP pack with 112 miles of EV-only range (CLTC is the Chinese test protocol, and it is quite optimistic), which is quite small for such a giant vehicle, but that’s why the engine is there for backup.
The inside was quite comfortable, with plenty of space. The seats are heavily bolstered – and the bolsters are electric, and will “hug” you when you turn the wheel. I found this feature to be a little silly, because they seemed to move solely based on steering angle, rather than lateral Gs. This meant the bolsters grabbed at me even when turning at low speed, like in a parking lot, when this was entirely unnecessary. It should probably be scaled to vehicle speed, not just steering angle.
But also, you’re unlikely to take many turns at particularly high speed in this vehicle, because it feels incredibly tall. Despite a battery placed low in the vehicle, the engine and all the other creature comforts still make it feel topheavy. Maybe this is because I spend relatively less time in SUVs than I do in cars that don’t perform horribly, but it felt wobbly even compared to other recently available electric SUVs.
I make no secret of being an anti-SUV guy, so this car would not be my choice, as I think it screams “doing too much.” But, then again, it doesn’t really have to be anyone’s choice, as it exists more to be a halo car to enhance BYD’s luxury cred than anything else.
MG Cyberster
This thing ripped.
The MG Cyberster is a resurrection of the classic MG brand, which was acquired by SAIC, one of the Chinese “big four” state-owned auto manufacturers, in 2007. It’s a two-seat, two-door roadster… but don’t think of it as a lightweight, as it still tips the scales at about 4,100lbs (quite a lot heavier than the 2,800lb two-door, two-seat electric roadster I showed up in).



The Cyberster has 544hp and does 0-62mph in 3.1 seconds and 323 miles of range (CLTC). While we were only on surface streets and thus couldn’t really unleash the beast, this car was insanely punchy and felt like it wouldn’t have stopped pulling until quite high into the rpm range.
The car has a “super sport” button on the steering wheel, a quick way to switch the car into its highest performance mode (which swaps the car to AWD, even if you have RWD set in the settings… as I normally would, because, hot take: if it’s not RWD it’s not really a sportscar). When you press this button, the driver display changes modes to show more track-focused information like G-forces, timer, energy consumption, average speed, tire pressures, and temperatures.
For normal driving, I would probably keep the car in comfort mode at most times (despite too-aggressive traction control), as the pedal was a little too twitchy for me in the sportier modes. But since the super sport mode button is right there on the steering wheel, it’s easy enough to swap the car into higher performance mode at a moment’s notice and send your passenger for a loop.
That said, the car is not really a perfect monster. While powerful, it feels sort of like it can’t decide whether to be a sporty roadster or a grand tourer.


It’s a low slung two-seater drop top, and looking at it you’d expect light, RWD sportscar performance. But it’s quite heavy (heavier, for example, than a 5-seat Model 3 Performance… and even the iCar 03 SUV below), the interior is nice but perhaps overbuilt for my tastes, and the suspension is oddly undampened – when we hit a light bump, the car kept bouncing for entirely too long.
I think the car could be better if it committed to being more purely sportscar or GT – and, given the MG marque and the Cyberster’s intentional references to the classic MGB Roadster, I’d vote for sportscar. But if you want something that looks good, performs well (maybe after a suspension upgrade…), and has a few tricks up its sleeve, you could do worse for the ~$44k base price the Cyberster is on offer for.
Oh, and the doors go like this:
Bestune Pony
The Bestune Pony is the most adorable thing I’ve seen in my life.
This unbearably saccharine two-door city car comes in a variety two-tone mostly pastel paintjobs, sits on 12-inch wheels, and measures 118 inches in length – even shorter than a Japanese kei car (<133in). Because of that short length, it turns on a dime, and you can park it anywhere.
But behind those two doors, somehow, sit four seats, and all four of them are almost big enough to fit an adult human. As a 6 foot tall American male, the front seat was comfortable enough but had an incredibly high and upright seating position, leaving my eyes so high that I couldn’t really see out the rear window in the rearview mirror (which vibrated significantly while the car was moving).
The driver’s seat can be moved front/back but not up/down, so anyone my height or taller will have limited rear visibility. But, given the car’s looks and the market it exists in, something tells me they aren’t aiming for the 6-foot-tall-male category of buyer. Another hint at the market it’s seeking: the Pony’s trim options are named “playful,” “colorful,” “shiny,” ‘”smart,” and “petite” (I don’t care, I love it anyway).

Inside, the two-tone paintjob is carried through interior decor, with a cute but simple dash with lots of fun physical switches and dials on it. The audio controls look like a Nintendo controller. The drive mode selector is a dial. The pedals have “play” and “pause” symbols on them (and are positioned such that the passenger could easily reach them, so you might want to leave unruly kids in the back). Everything is in big, tactile plastic. It’s all very cute.
This small package comes with a comparatively small price, too. The Bestune Pony starts at just $4,800, but can bring that price up to $6,300 if you trick it out with upgraded tech options.
Upgraded trims get a large iPad-like screen in the middle. The screen (which doesn’t work when wearing polarized sunglasses…) has access to over-the-air updates and DeepSeek AI assistant, China’s answer to ChatGPT. Higher trims also allow a bluetooth phone-as-key system, something which many EVs in the US don’t allow at any price.





The 18kWh battery (with 138mi CLTC range) powers a disappointing 41HP motor, which can get you up to a top speed of around 60mph, just don’t ask how long it will take (some say he’s still waiting to reach 60mph, to this day…). Both battery and motor were upgraded for this model year. A slow charge takes around 6 hours, but “shiny” and “petite” trim options get access to a fast charge port that takes 1 hour.
It even has sport mode! In sport mode, you get slightly quicker acceleration (as if you could even tell), but also slightly weaker off-throttle regen. Off-throttle, we’d regen up to about 5kW in sport mode, and up to around 14kW in eco mode. I wish companies would stop making me choose between max acceleration and max regen – just give me both.
While you give up a lot with this car, it’s unbearable cuteness, fitness-for-purpose, and attractive price all add up to a package that I really wish I could have access to. Unlike the Cyberster, the Pony knows exactly what it is and does nothing more or less than is expected of it.
Something like this could be great in a city, a beach or retirement community, as a first car to get kids to school and back, etc. Heck, I’d almost even pay the 100% tariff (or whatever stupid number they’ve decided on this day of the week) anyway – even doubling the base ~$4,800 price, ~$10k is still cheaper than you can get almost anything, even used cars these days.
Chery iCar 03
This is your standard family mid-size SUV. Like in the US, China has been buying more and more larger vehicles, forsaking any reasonably sized vehicle for big, inefficient, poor handling, square SUVs, thinking that having a worse car gives you higher status or something. Sigh.
The iCar 03 starts at around $20,000, a perfectly acceptable starting price for a full-featured vehicle like it is. It may not have access to boat mode or tank turns like the Yangwang U8, but it’s marketed as a “hardcore” off-road SUV, and has drive modes for all sorts of varied terrain (which make goofy sounds when you switch between them).
It even has one available option that you don’t see too often: solar panels on the roof. On a chunky vehicle like this they’re not going to do a whole lot to give you range, but if you’re using the car for overlanding, it can help reduce energy losses while you’re out camping.


We kept the car in “sport” mode for the drive, as I usually do, because I prefer to have access to all the power the car has to offer. In this mode, the pedal was a little twitchier than I’d like, even with a middling 0-60 time of “just” 6 seconds from the 279hp powertrain. For practical driving purposes, it felt like it had as much power as I’d need.

I probably would tone down the drive mode for normal driving, as a twitchy throttle and a tall SUV don’t mix very well. The iCar felt a bit topheavy on turns, but the steering did feel quite nice in my hands and it handled well enough considering its tallness.
The iCar had ample space in the back, and an additional cargo box outside the vehicle to keep smaller objects that you might not want to bring in the car (dirty/wet things) or items you might want access to without having to open the rear hatch.


It also has access to an AI assistant, though we didn’t get to test that.
The iCar didn’t really stand out to me in any particular way, but I suppose it doesn’t have to. We didn’t get to test its supposed off-road cred, so perhaps that’s why it didn’t hook me in any particular way. But it did seem like a mostly competent vehicle with good features at a good price in the same numb segment that every freaking car on the road is these days, so I can respect what Chery has done here even if it didn’t stand out to me in any particular way.
The auto industry is moving forward, whether the US joins it or not
While this is a somewhat random assortment of vehicles, it gives us a small sense of what’s going on in China.
In the last few years, China’s EV market has flourished both domestically and for export.
Despite a classic American stereotype of Chinese goods being substandard, much of the world’s manufacturing, even of the most advanced products, happens there – particularly in the realm of electronics. Americans need look no further than what they carry in their own pockets to see the kind of advanced manufacturing the country of China is capable of.
But Americans have not had the opportunity to see whether these stereotypes are true in the realm of automotive, another of the most complex manufacturing sectors out there.
While we only got a short drive in these cars and thus couldn’t assess a lot of the little things that can make or break a vehicle ownership experience, there was nothing extraordinarily “cheap-feeling” (well, except on the Pony, but that’s the point) nor any hugely terrible points that stood out about these cars.
The Cyberster may have too-softly damped suspension, the U8 has a stinky engine (ew yuck), the iCar has a twitchy pedal in the mode we drove it in. Fine. These are quibbles we have with plenty of cars, made in China or otherwise. (and finally, *the Pony is perfect in every way, shut up, don’t you dare say anything bad about it, la la la I’m not listening*)
The overall feeling is that, at several price points and in several segments, China has a competent entry available. These entries are being kept out of the US, but not from other countries in the world, where buyers are being offered good, high-tech cars at low prices in the face of Western intransigence on EVs.
This growth in Chinese EV exports is fueling a transportation renaissance in some countries, including developing countries like Nepal and Ethiopia, who are getting access to more affordable forms of mobility that don’t rely on wasteful imports of oil. Imagine what a boost to a national economy it must be to suddenly reduce the amount of energy you’re wasting on transportation by a factor of five or so.
The rest of the world’s auto industries can react by refusing to acknowledge these trends and allow China to dominate the future of autos, or they can pick up the pace and compete. They – and I don’t just mean the US here, but Europe and Japan too – seem to be choosing the former.
We hope our short chance to test out these vehicles can help to convince anyone to take EVs more seriously, as seems to often happen to Americans who get a chance to see what China has to offer.
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Environment
DOT opens public comment on plan to hike fuel costs during affordability crisis
Published
8 hours agoon
December 7, 2025By
admin


This week, the US Environmental Protection Agency proposed a plan to make cars less efficient when Americans are already paying record-high energy bills during an affordability crisis fueled by tariff-driven inflation. That plan is now up for public comment.
Since the beginning of this year, the occupants of the White House have been on a mission to raise costs for Americans.
This mission has encompassed many different moves, most notably through unwise tariffs.
But another effort has focused on changing policy in a way that will raise fuel costs for Americans, adding to already-high energy prices.
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This specific rollback focuses on a rule passed under President Biden which would save Americans $23 billion in fuel costs by requiring higher fuel economy from auto manufacturers. By making cars use less fuel on average, Americans would not only save money on fuel, but reduce fuel demand which means that prices would go down overall.
The effort to roll back this rule was initially announced on the first day that Sean Duffy started squatting in the head office of the Department of Transportation. Duffy notably earned his transportation expertise by being a contestant on Road Rules: All Stars, a reality TV travel game show.
Then in June, Duffy formally reinterpreted the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standard, claiming falsely that his department does not have authority to regulate fuel economy.
Republicans in Congress even got into effort to raise your fuel costs, as part of their ~$4 trillion giveaway to wealthy elites included a measure to make CAFE rules irrelevant by setting penalties for violating them to $0. In addition, it eliminated a number of other energy efficiency and domestic advanced manufacturing incentives.
Duffy’s department then told automakers that they would not face any fines retroactively to 2022, which saved the automakers (mostly Stellantis) a few hundred million dollars and cost American consumers billions in fuel costs.
Then, finally, earlier this week, Duffy formally announced the proposed changes to the CAFE rules, lowering the required fuel economy for 2022-2031 model year vehicles, even despite all of the other changes in trying to make the rules unenforceable.
The theory behind this would be to make it harder to later enforce the rules, and to allow automakers to get off with more pollution, and to increase fuel demand and fuel prices for longer until a real government returns to power and starts doing its job to regulate pollution.
Specifically, the announcement changes the planned 2031 50.5 mpg target to 34.5 mpg, cutting vehicle efficiency by nearly a third, which will lead to a commensurate increase in your fuel costs (note: CAFE numbers are calculated differently, and tend to look higher than actual mpg numbers).
The regulation even explicitly describes ballooning vehicle sizes in a positive light, which is ironic given that at the same event, Mr. Donald Trump, the convicted felon who directed this change to begin with, also quipped that he wants to bring tiny Japanese kei cars to the US, displaying his lack of knowledge of why he was even in the room to begin with.
If President Biden’s regulations were retained through 2031, average fuel economy would have tripled since the 1970s, when CAFE targets were first put in place. In the last two decades, CAFE targets helped drive a 30% improvement in average fuel economy, saving an average of $7,000 over the lifetime of an average vehicle – and they did this without increasing vehicle prices.
Despite that the dictatorial regime proposing such braindead rule changes would rather just push its oil company funders’ demands through without having to consult the people it will harm, these rulemaking procedures are still governed by the Administrative Procedures Act. This law requires the government to accept public comments and to take into account and respond to substantive comments posted to the docket related to the rulemaking procedure.
And so, you can now leave your own comments on whether or not you think this plan to make cars larger, more dangerous and less efficient, thus raising your fuel costs, is a good one or not.
Comments can be submitted through this link. Information for the docket can be found at docket number NHTSA-2025-0491. The comment period ends on Jan 20 at 2026 at 11:59 PM EST (yes, that superfluous “at” is from the NHTSA’s docket, wonderful attention to detail from the fake lawyers running the place).
Another of the administration’s recent plans to raise your fuel costs, the EPA’s plan to increase gas prices by $.76/gallon by deleting climate science, was recently posted and received 568,326 comments, the vast majority of which opposed the plan. Public comment on that plan is closed now and the EPA is sifting through the mountain of comments made, trying to figure out a way to kill people and raise energy costs in service of their oil masters despite massive public opposition in a country that is supposed to be a democracy.
That plan also received a virtual public hearing where commenters could call in with their thoughts, held over a few days, during which a vast majority opposed the plan. We’re not aware of a similar hearing for this plan yet, but we’ll let you know if we hear about one.
And despite many readers’ probable initial reaction that the unqualified dictator pushing these plans won’t be interested in hearing your comments, it should be noted that improper rulemaking has and will continue to result in certain rules being thrown out in court. There is a legally required method to how the government makes rules, and courts can throw out regulations that do not follow the proper method. Part of that method includes seeking public feedback, and this is your chance to enter your thoughts into the official government record on this regulation specifically.
Public comments on this ridiculous plan are open through Jan 20, 2026 at 11:59 PM EST, 8:59PM PDT. Comments can be submitted here. In case you get lost, the docket code is NHTSA-2025-0491. DOT/NHTSA has to respond to legitimate concerns made during public comment periods or else the rule could be voided (as was the case for 90% of the cases the NRDC challenged last go around), so the more substantive your comment, the better.
The 30% federal solar tax credit is ending this year. If you’ve ever considered going solar, now’s the time to act. To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. It has hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use, and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them.
Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here.
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Environment
I got a 5-ton electric tractor from China. Here’s what showed up
Published
10 hours agoon
December 7, 2025By
admin


When a 40-foot container rolled up to my property and the doors swung open, I finally got to meet a machine I’d only last seen half-finished on a factory floor in China. Sitting up front, nose practically pressed against the container doors, was my new 10,000-plus-pound (4,700 kg) electric tractor: the NESHER L3000 wheel loader.
Technically, it’s part of a class known as articulating front loaders, a subset of the broader tractor family, and not a farm tractor like you may have seen before (though I’m working on a farm tractor!).
But if you need to lift, pull, drag, grapple, dump, drill, or dig things around your property, this is what these types of machines were made for.
And as wild as it was to see that giant electric machine roll down the ramps, it turns out that wasn’t the only “new toy” I got.
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Soon after the arrival of the big guy, I had a second surprise to unload: a slightly smaller, much more approachable NESHER L2500, tipping the scales at a more manageable 6,400 lb (2,900 kg).

Meet the 5-ton lb NESHER L3000
Unloading these things and getting to know them well has been an incredibly fun process, and one that I love getting the chance to share in videos and articles like this one.
The L3000 is the biggest machine I’ve ever brought into the NESHER lineup, and it’s very much a “because we can” kind of loader. It’s rated for a 3,000 lb (1,360 kg) lift capacity (and it’s underrated), but that stat doesn’t really hit home until you see what that looks like in real life.
Right away I put it to work moving all sorts of heavy equipment around the property, from lifting a wooden shipping crate with an entire mini-excavator inside, to carrying around a full-size golf cart in a steel shipping crate as if it was a grocery bag, to even pushing shipping containers around the property and into position (I’ve been welding on roof structures between them to create some nice covered parking).

That last one is the moment you really feel the mass working in your favor. A 10,000 lb electric machine has the kind of traction and grunt where you barely notice the load. A tiny press on the accelerator and heavy objects just start moving.
I used a set of EZYwheels on one end of a shipping container and simply lifted the other end using the L3000’s pallet forks, allowing me to push and pull a roughly 5,000 lb (2,250 kg) solar shipping container that I built last year around a grassy pasture as if I were playing with toy cars in a sandbox.
We even used it to right a tree that had blown over in the last hurricane, but was still alive and lying on its side. Without the slightest protest, the L3000 pulled it vertically and let us get some bracing under it so the root structure could regrow and anchor it back the way nature intended.

Under the floorboards is a 40 kWh AGM battery pack, good for around 6 hours of typical use on a charge. This isn’t meant for 12-hour highway construction shifts… it’s designed for landowners, homesteaders, small businesses, and anyone with a list of jobs that can be knocked out in a few focused hours.
Charging is fairly straightforward and designed to be done anywhere: it uses standard North American 120VAC outlets, with twin onboard chargers to feed that big pack from a pair of household circuits overnight. The onboard chargers can accept 240V, but the 120V option allows for Level 1 charging anywhere a typical electrical outlet can be found.
I get a lot of questions about batteries, and one reason I liked the AGMs over lithium iron phosphate batteries is the ease of future work. While not rivaling LFP charge cycles, these should last for many years (my oldest NESHER tractors are around 2.5 years old and showing very minimal battery degradation), but when the batteries do eventually need to be replaced, AGM modules can be found much more easily and from local suppliers, even big box stores like Tractor Supply or Home Depot. They can also be removed one pack at a time by a single (strong) individual. Other advantages include better cold-weather performance without needing battery heaters, extra weight that serves as ballast and increases the lifting capacity of the machine, and lower total vehicle cost. Of course there are different unique advantages to LFP batteries, and like everything in life, there are tradeoffs, but this seems to be a good balance so far in our experience.

But wait… there’s a “smaller” one too
As fun as a 10,000 lb loader is, it’s honestly more machine than a lot of people want to maneuver around their property. That’s where my second new arrival comes in.
This smaller beast, my NESHER L2500, is rated for a 2,500 lb (1,140 kg) lift but weighs in at roughly 6,400 lb (2,900 kg). On paper, that sounds like a small step down from the L3000. In practice, it feels like a different category: more compact, more nimble, and more approachable for someone who doesn’t want their “yard tool” to weigh nearly as much as a school bus. It’s also even quieter than the L3000, as it uses a dedicated electric motor on each axle instead of a larger mid-mounted motor with dual drive shafts like the L3000.
Between the two, I actually prefer it. The machine has nearly as much capability, but is around 1/3 lighter and thus easier to maneuver and operate.
We’ve already used the L2500 for some creative jobs around the place. At one point, my dad and I basically turned it into a freight elevator, raising an old couch more than 10 feet up to a mezzanine of his shop. Another day, we used it to drag a massive tree trunk out of a pond after a hurricane turned that long-leaning tree into a floating navigation hazard. The loader treated that water-logged tree trunk like a toothpick.
The L2500 shares the same concept as the bigger machine: enclosed cab and heater, around 6 hours of use from a 25 kWh battery, easy residential charging, and enough lift and pull to make most homesteader and small farm tasks feel trivial. For a lot of people, this is the sweet spot. And in fact, I actually prefer it at this size. The L3000 is fun but more machine than most people need. The L2500 seems like the best balance of power, size, and value.

Attachments turn them into Swiss Army tractors
All of the loaders use quick-hitch front attachments, which is where things get fun. From the operator’s seat, you can drive up to a bucket, drop it, roll right into a pallet fork, and latch it without climbing down every time.
For attachments with their own hydraulics, like augers, grapples, and the excavator-style digging attachment, you do still have to hop out to connect hoses, but the tradeoff is big. With the excavator attachment on the larger loaders, you can dig down around 6 feet (nearly 2 meters). That’s a major upgrade compared to my smaller NESHER machines that give closer to about 3.5 feet (around 1 meter) of digging depth from their excavator attachments. That covers a surprising amount of real-world work: laying pipe, planting trees, digging drainage, and shaping land.
That’s the real magic with these: you don’t need separate dedicated machines for every task. One electric loader, a handful of attachments, and suddenly you’re lifting shipping containers, pulling trees upright, digging trenches, moving mountains of dirt or mulch, and doing oddball jobs you never expected to do with a conventional tractor.

Why go electric for heavy equipment?
Regular Electrek readers will already know the big advantages of going electric, and our own Jo Borràs has often covered some of the most interesting new additions to the world of electric heavy equipment from trucking to tractors to tools, but electrification is still a niche part of the industry.
And while I’ve talked a lot about what these machines can do, a question I still often get from curious neighbors and onlookers is, “Why electric?”
Part of it is maintenance. A diesel loader has a lot of ways to ruin your day: fuel system, injectors, emissions equipment, warm-ups, oil changes, filters, and so on. An electric drivetrain is basically a cordless drill scaled up: battery, motor, controller. The maintenance you do have – hydraulic oil, greasing the joints – is for the mechanical bits, not the engine. The powertrain, historically the worst part of owning any vehicle, just quietly works.
Then there’s sound. When you’re walking around an electric loader, you hear your own footsteps in the dirt as much as you hear the machine. You can talk to someone standing nearby without shouting over a clattering diesel engine. As the operator, you can talk to your crew or your family members in the yard without needing walkie-talkies. The reduced noise means you can even work around animals and livestock without spooking them. I can work right alongside the cows in my family’s pasture without bothering them. It’s just a calmer experience.
Health is another big one. If you spend hours a day sitting a few feet from a diesel tailpipe, that exhaust is going into your lungs. Diesel particulates are not something you want to marinate in for years. Electric loaders eliminate that constant stream of fumes.
And of course, there’s the environmental angle too. If you’re working the land because you love it and want to live with it, not just from it, then it feels a little odd to be coating it in exhaust and oil. Electric loaders don’t drip fuel, don’t belch smoke, and don’t add to greenhouse emissions the same way, especially if you’re charging from clean energy.

Final thoughts
I’ve talked at length about this process before, but for those who may be new around here, allow me to provide full disclosure: these are my machines. I helped design them, I walk the factory floor where I build them in China, I import them, I maintain the local spare parts warehouse, I wrote the operator’s manual, and I spend a ridiculous amount of time thinking about how to make electric machinery like this more accessible to average folks who want to manage their land instead of just for large contractors and businesses who can afford the six-figure machines from the big guys.
I’m proud of the work that has gone into getting them to this point, and of the fact that they are starting to become available in more countries (the first NESHER dealer in Canada just opened recently and a few other countries are in the works).
As a society, even a well-intentioned one looking for electric alternatives to replace our polluting legacy machines, we often spend so much time focusing on flashier vehicles, such as electric cars, trucks, and even bikes and scooters, that it’s easy to forget how much diesel is idling away on farms, work sites, and homesteads. Machines like these show that electric isn’t just possible in this space, but that it can actually be better, quieter, cleaner, and easier to live with.
Sure, that big NESHER L3000 loader isn’t for everyone. Most people would probably be better served by the L2500 or even the smaller L1400 or L880. And if you’re running round-the-clock road crews, you’ll still have a diesel fleet for a while, as there aren’t many electric machines that can do 16 or 20-hour shifts yet.
But for the growing number of landowners, small contractors, and homesteaders who want serious capability without the headaches and fumes of diesel, electric loaders are finally becoming a real option.
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Environment
The ticket bot cometh: cities are ticketing drivers that AI says are bad [update]
Published
1 day agoon
December 6, 2025By
admin


In a high-tech move that we can all get behind and isn’t dystopian at all, the City of Barcelona is feeding camera data from its city buses into an advanced AI, but they swear they’re not using the footage to to issue tickets to bad drivers. Yet.
UPDATE 06DEC2025: the ticket bot cometh to Chicago.
Last month, the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) contracted with Hayden AI to equip six of its transit buses with AI-powered license plate readers intended to target illegally parked vehicles in an area bound by North Avenue, Roosevelt Road, Lake Michigan and Ashland Avenue.
As with similar pilots in Barcelona and NYC, the Hayden AI technology captures information from vehicles illegally blocking bus and bike lanes, then submits its “findings” to a human reviewer for confirmation. If the reviewer agrees with the AI, they can issue a fine of $90 for parking in a bus lane, $250 for bike lane obstruction, $50 for parking in expired meters outside of the central business district, and $140 for personal vehicles parked in commercial loading zones.
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Despite those hefty fines, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is quick to point out that the goal of the program isn’t to generate revenue.
“Every Chicagoan deserves a transportation system that is safe, reliable, and efficient,” said Mayor Johnson, in a statement. “By keeping bus and bike lanes clear of illegally parked vehicles, the Smart Streets pilot helps us protect our most vulnerable road users while improving the daily commute for riders across the city.”
The official release makes no mention of the fact that Hayden AI’s system generated nearly $21 million in revenue for the city in just a few months, despite the fact that thousands of those ticketed weren’t doing anything wrong.
We wrote about some of these issues back in Jun. You can read that original article, below, and let us know what you think of Chicago’s “non-revenue” claims in the comments.

Barcelona and its Ring Roads Low Emission Zone have earned lots of fans by limiting ICE traffic in the city’s core. The city’s latest idea to promote mass transit is the deployment of an artificial intelligence system developed by Hayden AI for automatic enforcement of reserved lanes and stops to improve bus circulation – but while it seems to be working as intended, it’s raising entirely different questions.
“Bus lanes are designed to help deliver reliable, fast, and convenient public transport service. But private vehicles illegally using bus lanes make this impossible,” explains Laia Bonet, First Deputy Mayor, Area for Urban Planning, Ecological Transition, Urban Services and Housing at the Ajuntament de Barcelona. “We are excited to partner with Hayden AI to learn where these problems occur and how they are impacting our public transport service.”
Currently operating as a pilot program on the city’s H12 and D20 bus lines, the system uses cameras installed on the city’s electric buses to detect vehicles that commit static violations in the bus lanes and stops (read: stopping or parking where you shouldn’t). The Hayden AI system then analyses that data and provides statistical information on what it captures while the bus is driving along on its daily route.
Hayden AI says that, while it photographs and records video sequences and collects contextual information of the violation, its cameras do not record license plates or people and no penalties are being issued to drivers or owners of the vehicles.
So far so good, right? But it’s what happens once the six mont pilot is over that seems like it should be setting off alarm bells.
Big Brother Bus is watching

The footage is manually reviewed by a Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona (TMB) officer, who reportedly reviewed some 2,500 violations identified by AI in May alone. But, while the system isn’t being used to issue violations during the pilot program, it easily could.
And, in fact, it already has … and the AI f@#ked up royally.
AI writes thousands of bad tickets
When AI was given the ability to issue citations in New York City earlier this year, it wrote more than 290,000 tickets (that’s right: two-hundred and ninety thousand) in just three months, generating nearly $21 million in revenue for the city. The was just one problem: thousands of those drivers weren’t doing anything wrong.
What’s more, the fines generated by the AI powered cameras were supposed to be approved only after being verified by a human, but either that didn’t happen, or it did happen and the human operator in question wasn’t paying attention, or (maybe the worst possibility) the violations were mistakes or hallucinations, and the human checker couldn’t tell the difference.
In OpenAI’s tests of its newest o3 and o4-mini reasoning models, the company found the o3 model hallucinated 33% of the time during its PersonQA tests, in which the bot is asked questions about public figures. When asked short fact-based questions in the company’s SimpleQA tests, OpenAI said o3 hallucinated 51% of the time. The o4-mini model fared even worse: It hallucinated 41% of the time during the PersonQA test and 79% of the time in the SimpleQA test, though OpenAI said its worse performance was expected as it is a smaller model designed to be faster. OpenAI’s latest update to ChatGPT, GPT-4.5, hallucinates less than its o3 and o4-mini models. The company said when GPT-4.5 was released in February the model has a hallucination rate of 37.1% for its SimpleQA test.
I don’t know about you guys, but if we had a local traffic cop that got it wrong 33% of the time (at best), I’d be surprised if they kept their job for very long. But AI? AI has a multibillion dollar hype train and armies of undereducated believers talking about singularities and building themselves blonde robots with boobs. And once the AI starts issuing tickets to the AI that’s driving your robotaxi, it can just call its buddy AI the bank to send over your money. No human necessary, at any point, and the economy keeps on humming.
But, like – I’m sure that’s fine. Embrace the future and all that … right?
SOURCES: Hayden AI, via Chicago Sun Times, Forbes, Motorpasión.

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