#1606
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Premium EVs are lowest efficiency. My friend's 2 motor Tesla S is 1/2 what out Bolt is Mile/kW. It is also WAY faster.
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This foot tastes terrible! |
#1607
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#1608
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When buying an EV, it's important to understand not all EV's are the same. The legacy automakers are about 7 years behind the pure EV makers like Tesla and the Chinese. Volkswagen Automotive Group is having an especially hard time manufacturing competitive EV's: https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/14/busin...ace/index.html https://electrek.co/2024/07/10/volks...plant-closure/ The Polestar tuxbailey fell in love with was manufactured in China by Geely. That's why it's so good. Cars like that keep legacy manufacturers -- and even Tesla -- awake at night. Last edited by dgauthier; 08-09-2024 at 11:25 AM. |
#1609
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I understand that they're paying out more for natural disasters, and so have to raise rates, but why should someone who lives in an area where hurricanes, tornados, and earthquakes are rare pay extra for auto insurance to make up for those who live in more disaster prone areas?
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It's not an adventure until something goes wrong. - Yvon C. Last edited by reuben; 08-09-2024 at 11:57 AM. |
#1610
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I'm curious as no one as mentioned the 'Tesla ins premium tax'? Tesla's are said to be more expensive to repair compared to other vehicles and as such are subject to higher insurance premiums. Maybe there is someone in the auto insurance biz that can chime in on this for facts as I've just heard rumors' that Tesla drivers on average are paying up to 30% more in insurance premiums compared to other vehicles, can that be true?
What is my experience with EV's? I've leased both a Nissan Leaf (2014) and a Chevy Bolt (2017) as commuter vehicles. Both functioned without any issues for the 36mos that I leased them for without any issues whatsoever. The only complaint for me was with the extremely low range on the Leaf, but for what I paid to lease it (peanuts), it was well worth it. Last edited by muttley; 08-09-2024 at 12:47 PM. |
#1611
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This with Angry’s analysis is really helpful. |
#1612
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I think if I own the car for 100k miles then it will be much cheaper than an ICE car to operate. I am leasing this car because it happened to be a good deal. And my daughter starts to drive this year, so free up a car for her (old CR-V.) I figure when she goes to college in 2 years, the lease will end, we don't need the CR-V anymore and we will figure what the next car will be. Right now I am inclined to buy a 2-3 years old Polestar. They go on sale for under $30K with about 20k-25k miles. I can't lease anymore because I drive 15,000 miles a year and i actually want to drive more with this car.
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Dean El Diente BH Lynx 4.829 Jamis Ventura (Kickr) |
#1613
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People often link EV’s to sustainability, but when I see a Rivian, Cybertruck, Hummer, etc., it makes me wonder what the environmental penalty is when wasting a battery on powering a 6-9,000# vehicle. How about building a Tesla Model S or a Porsche Mission E that can go 75 miles over the speed limit? Essentially in some cases, it seems like in the US, we aren’t focused on rightsizing vehicles, improving fuel economy and being more environmentally responsible, we’re just using batteries instead of gas to make people feel good.
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#1614
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#1615
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Seems that the manufacturers just look at what sells here in the ICE world and make EVs to meet that demand. I'd love to see right-sized vehicles but I think the US consumer demand says bigger is better.
With gigantic F-150s and their equivalents, Escalades, and Suburbans etc. on the road it's hard to find fault with a Rivian (e.g.) because of its size. |
#1616
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I think the industry is approaching an interesting phase with rollouts of more affordable vehicles like the Equinox, Kia EV3 and Volvo XC30. This will be an important period for the industry as the lease prices on these vehicles will likely be less than equivalent ICE competitors and range will be competitive (+300 miles each).
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#1617
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also, still not convinced this is "affordable" for many folks, esp for a smaller car.. "The 2025 Kia EV3 is expected to have a base MSRP of around $35,000, with top-trim models costing up to $50,000" I know cars have risen in price, but, for reference, the Hyundai Kona starts just under $25k.. the Elantra starts at under $22k.. I picked those two ICE cars as I think they are of comparable sizes.. I still say (as others have) that EVs will not be ubiquitous until they are much more in line with their comparable ICE cousins AND there is more infrastructure in outside the major cities or major highways.. the infrastructure is way better than it was a few years ago, but still not there.. and then you have the issues of someone who doesn't live in a single family home or otherwise doesn't have a place to charge at home..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#1618
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For me, EV is still for users who have multiple cars and best suited for commute. It is even tricky for urban setting unless you home/apartment complex offers in home charging. Although for me I can see the use case of owning just EVs, and rent a van/SUV when I need it for vacation, long trips, etc.
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Dean El Diente BH Lynx 4.829 Jamis Ventura (Kickr) |
#1619
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Our Bolt for 3 years has been commuter and until last weeks CAN trip I'd have agreed. Our biggest issue was the Hotel we stayed had more EV guests than chargers, and selfish guests leaving their car after charged. So twice I had to go to a charger off site. That charger was close by and DC fast [VS hotel level 2] So not big deal overall. BUT, topping off night before departure, the hotel charger was clogged up. So the 85% to full @ DC fast was only a 12kw charge that took 51 minutes to get to 100% [VS the 80% max we employ for commuter mode @ home] All in all I think we'd travel with the car again definitely. Especially where city parking will be on a trip. We were going to take the mini-van, Victoria street parking would have been more of a hassle probably. Back to charging, on way home we ran it to lower range % to mid point/stop and got full charge rate for our 15 minutes. The ride up we charged middle range % and the rate from 49 to 41kw for the charge. Return charge was 52 kw for the entire time. Live/learn. Plus we put in more than we needed going north it turned out. But I like to not run the battery to low. Might have been able to not charge for trip, but arriving @ single digit range left in car, not me... This faster charge rate certainly come more into play with greater range overlap, longer trip etc. Take away for us is we will use EV on next planned Vancouver, BC trip. We cut this trip to 1 week from the orig 2 weeks and only Victoria instead of both cities.
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This foot tastes terrible! Last edited by robt57; 08-12-2024 at 11:48 AM. |
#1620
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https://www.yahoo.com/news/subsidize...090000016.html
Interesting article. I didnt realize that: a) some states charge an annual fee to ev users b) some states are collecting less $$ in fuel tax than a decade+ ago
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
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