โOct-07-2023 07:17 AM
โNov-21-2023 02:22 PM
Update according to many business and automotive news sources is that the major auto makers are cutting back or discontinuing their EV production. Even with large price cuts and other gimmicks consumers are simply not interested in buying EV. Latest from Ford. Ford is dramatically scaling back their EV plant production due to plummeting sales.
โOct-15-2023 07:46 AM
Grit dog wrote:That's just not been my experience. I know a half dozen EV owners and other than being affluent (same as most buyers of new HD trucks) none of that describes them. I don't think any of them care what other folks drive. Not saying your experience hasn't been different. ๐shelbyfv wrote:
Yep, having choices is usually a good thing. I wouldn't choose an EV right now to pull a 40' mobile home but one would work fine for my wife's commute to the gym. I'm happy to see infrastructure expanding and technology improving!
For sure. And we each in our own way spend unnecessary money on things or luxuries that โweโ want. Myself included.
But the flip side to what you said, is that $5000 fuel sipping old commuter would get her to the gym just the same, but cheaper, albeit without the fanfare and image you/she is trying to put forth.
I feel the point that is lost here is that generally those who are advocates are either above the median income/wealth range and itโs a combination status symbol and an adjectival representation of what they want people to think about them or literally going for the most basic compact commuter car.
Not bagging on your choice. I could say the same for myself with a stable full of fuel guzzlers. Theyโre what I prefer.
The difference is, unlike many EV owners, I donโt try to justify my actions by selectively promoting them while looking down my nose at those that donโt think the same.
Again not saying thatโs you in particular, but that is the general theme amongst most of the staunch EV proponents here. Even the ones who donโt have the coin to buy one.
โOct-14-2023 10:13 PM
pianotuna wrote:
for me an ev would be perfect for a car.
for towing, not quite yet.
โOct-14-2023 05:09 PM
โOct-14-2023 10:58 AM
โOct-14-2023 07:20 AM
shelbyfv wrote:
Yep, having choices is usually a good thing. I wouldn't choose an EV right now to pull a 40' mobile home but one would work fine for my wife's commute to the gym. I'm happy to see infrastructure expanding and technology improving!
โOct-14-2023 07:11 AM
JaxDad wrote:Reisender wrote:
Generally speaking, the further you go north the higher the adaption rate of EVโs is. Norway has the highest EV adoption rate in the world, now north of 90 percent. Iceland, holland, Sweden, Switzerland, Germany all have high EV adoption rates.
I have family in Finland, the main reason, by a wide margin, for EV ownership is purely financial. People that formerly couldnโt really afford a car, now can, and thank the taxman for that.
Gasoline is ~US$7.50 / gallon, and is garbage fuel from Russia that requires a major detune of most vehicles. Folks with money and performance cars buy gasoline imported from Germany with a 50% premium tacked on. Heavy import duties, huge annual taxes and licensing fees all disappeared with the EVโs
In my familyโs case the advantage is so great they have 3 EVโs now for less money than one gasser used to cost.
โOct-14-2023 06:43 AM
โOct-14-2023 06:04 AM
Huntindog wrote:Lantley wrote:Depends on when you want to travel.
I think believing EV's are not viable it because of the lack of charging stations is silly.
At some point there were cars and no gas stations.
The wright bros. didn't give up on the airplane because there were no airports.
The infrastructure will come in time. To think there should be a charging station on every corner at this juncture is foolish.
I want to now. Not at some point in the future. Is that foolish? If so, I will proudly wear that label.
โOct-14-2023 05:24 AM
Lantley wrote:Depends on when you want to travel.
I think believing EV's are not viable it because of the lack of charging stations is silly.
At some point there were cars and no gas stations.
The wright bros. didn't give up on the airplane because there were no airports.
The infrastructure will come in time. To think there should be a charging station on every corner at this juncture is foolish.
โOct-12-2023 05:54 AM
RetiredRealtorRick wrote:Groover wrote:RetiredRealtorRick wrote:Lantley wrote:
I think believing EV's are not viable it because of the lack of charging stations is silly.
At some point there were cars and no gas stations.
The wright bros. didn't give up on the airplane because there were no airports.
The infrastructure will come in time. To think there should be a charging station on every corner at this juncture is foolish.
"The infrastructure will come in time" . . . Exactly. And until you can tell us precisely when that will happen, the go-to solution, as I see it, is a hybrid. Best of both worlds without the anxiety.
Can you tell us precisely when the infrastructure for gasoline became adequate? I sincerely doubt it.
However there is a prediction available:
"By late 2024, Tesla would open 3,500 new and existing Superchargers along highway corridors to non-Tesla customers, the Biden administration said. It would also offer 4,000 slower chargers at locations like hotels and restaurants."
Supercharger stations average about 10 chargers each. So about 350 next stations by the end of next year. Personally, I expect that Tesla will surpass that. They had better since vast majority of new EVs will be using the Tesla plug by 2015. Will that be adequate? For many people, yes. Could be improved in following years? Absolutely. Will it be adequate for you? That depends on your definition of adequate and where you drive.
"Can you tell us precisely when the infrastructure for gasoline became adequate? I sincerely doubt it."
Is this a history test or a discussion on EV's and our inadequate infrastructure?
โOct-12-2023 05:29 AM
Groover wrote:RetiredRealtorRick wrote:Lantley wrote:
I think believing EV's are not viable it because of the lack of charging stations is silly.
At some point there were cars and no gas stations.
The wright bros. didn't give up on the airplane because there were no airports.
The infrastructure will come in time. To think there should be a charging station on every corner at this juncture is foolish.
"The infrastructure will come in time" . . . Exactly. And until you can tell us precisely when that will happen, the go-to solution, as I see it, is a hybrid. Best of both worlds without the anxiety.
Can you tell us precisely when the infrastructure for gasoline became adequate? I sincerely doubt it.
However there is a prediction available:
"By late 2024, Tesla would open 3,500 new and existing Superchargers along highway corridors to non-Tesla customers, the Biden administration said. It would also offer 4,000 slower chargers at locations like hotels and restaurants."
Supercharger stations average about 10 chargers each. So about 350 next stations by the end of next year. Personally, I expect that Tesla will surpass that. They had better since vast majority of new EVs will be using the Tesla plug by 2015. Will that be adequate? For many people, yes. Could be improved in following years? Absolutely. Will it be adequate for you? That depends on your definition of adequate and where you drive.
โOct-11-2023 09:38 AM
RetiredRealtorRick wrote:Lantley wrote:
I think believing EV's are not viable it because of the lack of charging stations is silly.
At some point there were cars and no gas stations.
The wright bros. didn't give up on the airplane because there were no airports.
The infrastructure will come in time. To think there should be a charging station on every corner at this juncture is foolish.
"The infrastructure will come in time" . . . Exactly. And until you can tell us precisely when that will happen, the go-to solution, as I see it, is a hybrid. Best of both worlds without the anxiety.
โOct-11-2023 08:53 AM