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Not So Fast on Electric Cars - WSJ


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2022 Dec 26, 9:49am   52,285 views  778 comments

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Not So Fast on Electric Cars - WSJ

Allysia FinleyDec. 25, 2022 6:20 pm ET

Toyota’s CEO delivers a timely warning, and many states echo it.

Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda recently caused the climate lobby to blow a fuse by speaking a truth about battery electric vehicles that his fellow auto executives dare not. “Just like the fully autonomous cars that we were all supposed to be driving by now,” Mr. Toyoda said in Thailand, “I think BEVs are just going to take longer to become mainstream than the media would like us to believe.” He added that a “silent majority” in the auto industry share his view, “but they think it’s the trend, so they can’t speak out loudly.”
The Biden administration seems to believe that millions of Americans will rush out to buy electric vehicles if only the government throws enough subsidies at them. Last year’s infrastructure bill included $7.5 billion in grants for states to expand their charging networks. But it’s a problem when even the states are warning the administration that electric vehicles aren’t ready to go mainstream.

Maine notes in a plan submitted to the Federal Highway Administration this summer that “cold temperatures will remain a top challenge” for adoption, since “cold weather reduces EV range and increases charging times.” When temperatures drop to 5 degrees Fahrenheit, the cars achieve only 54% of their quoted range. A vehicle that’s supposed to be able to go 250 miles between charges will make it only 135 miles on average. At 32 degrees—a typical winter day in much of the country—a Tesla Model 3 that in ideal conditions can go 282 miles between charges will make it only 173 miles.
Imagine if the 100 million Americans who took to the road over the holidays were driving electric cars. How many would have been stranded as temperatures plunged? There wouldn’t be enough tow trucks—or emergency medics—for people freezing in their cars.
The Transportation Department is requiring states to build charging stations every 50 miles along interstate highways and within a mile of off-ramps to reduce the likelihood of these scenarios. But most state electrical grids aren’t built to handle this many charging stations and will thus require expensive upgrades. Illinois, for one, warns of “challenges related to sufficient electric grid capacity, particularly in rural areas of the state.”

Charging stations in rural areas with little traffic are also unlikely to be profitable and could become “stranded assets,” as many states warn. Wyoming says out-of-state traffic from non-Tesla electric vehicles would have to increase 100-fold to cover charger costs under the administration’s rules. Tesla has already scoped out premier charging locations for its proprietary network. Good luck to competitors.

New Mexico warns that “poor station maintenance can lead to stations being perpetually broken and unusable, particularly in rural or hard to access locations. If an EV charging station is built in an area without electrical capacity and infrastructure to support its use, it will be unusable until the appropriate upgrades are installed.”

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Arizona says “private businesses may build and operate a station if a grant pays for the first five years of operations and maintenance” but might abandon the project if it later proves unprofitable. Many other states echo this concern, noting that federal funds could result in stranded assets.

The administration aims to build 500,000 stations, but states will likely have to spend their own money to keep them running. Like other federal inducements, these grants may entice states to assume what could become huge financial liabilities.

Federal funds also come with many rules, including “buy America” procurement requirements, which demand that chargers consist of mostly U.S.-made components. New Jersey says these could “delay implementation by several years” since only a few manufacturers can currently meet them. New York also says it will be challenging to comply with the web of federal rules, including the National Environmental Policy Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, and a 1960 federal law that bars charging stations in rest areas.

Oh, and labor rules. The administration requires that electrical workers who install and maintain the stations be certified by the union-backed Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Training Program. New Mexico says much of the state lacks contractors that meet this mandate, which will reduce competition and increase costs.

Technical problems abound too. Virginia says fast-charging hardware “has a short track record” and is “prone to malfunctions.” Equipment “previously installed privately in Virginia has had a high failure rate shown in user comments and reports on social media,” and “even compatibility with credit card readers has been unexpectedly complicated.”

A study this spring led by University of California researchers found that more than a quarter of public direct-current fast-charging stations in the San Francisco Bay Area were unusable. Drivers will be playing roulette every time they head to a station. If all this weren’t disconcerting enough, Arizona warns cyber vulnerabilities could compromise customer financial transactions, charging infrastructure, electric vehicles and the grid.

Politicians and auto makers racing to eliminate the internal-combustion engine are bound to crash into technological, logistic and financial realities, as Mr. Toyoda warned. The casualties will be taxpayers, but the administration doesn’t seem to care.


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362   Eman   2024 Feb 11, 4:26pm  

Blue says

Eman says



EV may not make economic and practical sense for everyone, but it does for some.

Yes, particularly to those who collect others tax money under "gov incentives" ;) this incentives can apply to so many other vehicles under business expenses.
(PS: I have to admit that I am one of them to be honest for my Tesla plaid model s)

Tesla sold its EVs just fine without the tax incentives in 2022. In fact, Elon said no tax incentives. The government is the one who came up with these incentives. Sorry, but we don’t get to decide. It is what it is.
363   Eman   2024 Feb 17, 11:39pm  

As I previously mentioned, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Joe Rogan in 30 sec on the Cybertruck.
https://x.com/nicklasnilsso14/status/1758777471833415925?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q
364   richwicks   2024 Feb 18, 12:42am  

Electric cars are so heavy that a guard rail is absolutely no match for them:


original link
365   richwicks   2024 Feb 18, 12:45am  

Eman says

The government is the one who came up with these incentives. Sorry, but we don’t get to decide. It is what it is.


Isn't dumbocracy and and freedumb great?
366   richwicks   2024 Feb 18, 12:48am  

Eman says

Aerodynamic would be my guess. The S looks good.


No. 99.99% of cars on the road would have less drag if they drove backwards. The only vehicle that is actually designed to limit drag is the Aptera and that's in development hell.

Unless the back of the car is more tapered than the font, aerodynamics was ignored. It has to be a tear drop shape.
367   WookieMan   2024 Feb 18, 1:00am  

Eman says

As I previously mentioned, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Joe Rogan in 30 sec on the Cybertruck.
https://x.com/nicklasnilsso14/status/1758777471833415925?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q

I give zero shits about looks. I drove a Pontiac Aztec for 2 years because it was cheap and had utility. Cyber Truck is useless for utility. It's not debatable. There's no range with load or towing. I give zero shits about speed. I don't need to kick my car, hit it with a hammer or shoot a bow and arrow at it. That's retarded. You pay a premium for status and stupid shit that should never happen to your car if you're a good driver. That's it. Gas is cheaper. Again, not debatable.

I live modest and have almost $2M in savings at 40. I'm not dropping $80k on a car that can't go 100 miles with a trailer and sit at a charging station for 30 minutes plus to maybe get another 100 miles out of it. It's a stupid vehicle. It's a tax write off for poor business owners that think they're smart. Musk isn't stupid. He knew what he built and have admitted as much. It looks cool to him. It's not a good car. It was a pet project.

Sales will dry up. Fly over country isn't buying them. Market saturation will be 18-24 months.
368   HeadSet   2024 Feb 18, 7:15am  

WookieMan says

I drove a Pontiac Aztec for 2 years

Everyone I knew that had an Aztec loved it.
369   WookieMan   2024 Feb 18, 10:52am  

HeadSet says

WookieMan says


I drove a Pontiac Aztec for 2 years

Everyone I knew that had an Aztec loved it.

My parents had 3. It was a flop commercially. It was a cooler car than you'd think though. I guess maybe that's what the Cyber Truck is trying to go for. I stacked two pontoon boats on a trailer coming from the Quad Cities. I'd have had to stop at least two times to make the distance I needed with a Cyber Truck. A touch sketchy with a V-6, but made it without fueling up. Not a chance in hell I'm doing that in a EV.
371   GNL   2024 Feb 18, 7:16pm  

Patrick says





Legend.
372   HeadSet   2024 Feb 18, 8:01pm  

Patrick says





If the country was all EVs. then there would be no gas stations and chargepoints/battery swaps would have been everywhere. As far as the new ICE vehicles, people would ask "Where are you going to refuel? Are you going to have a tanker truck follow you around?" "Even if you had fueling stations, those stations would have to be constantly serviced by tankers or run out quickly. Much easier to use the battery swap-outs that are serviced by existing power lines. "I hear you have to change the crankcase lubricant every few thousand miles, what will we do with that hazardous waste?" "Also, ICE engines are very noisy, require transmissions and thus lose efficiency, thus ICE cars are slow accelerating."

100 years ago we had cars powered by gasoline, steam, alcohol, and even electric. Gas won out over time.
373   Reality   2024 Feb 18, 8:29pm  

HeadSet says


If the country was all EVs. then there would be no gas stations and chargepoints/battery swaps would have been everywhere. As far as the new ICE vehicles, people would ask "Where are you going to refuel? Are you going to have a tanker truck follow you around?" "Even if you had fueling stations, those stations would have to be constantly serviced by tankers or run out quickly. Much easier to use the battery swap-outs that are serviced by existing power lines. "I hear you have to change the crankcase lubricant every few thousand miles, what will we do with that hazardous waste?" "Also, ICE engines are very noisy, require transmissions and thus lose efficiency, thus ICE cars are slow accelerating."

100 years ago we had cars powered by gasoline, steam, alcohol, and even electric. Gas won out over time.


Without ICE cars, electric grid would not have progressed much beyond lighting use (with frequent residential fires due to wire shorts), and battery technology not much beyond lead-acid: wide use of plastic would not have been possible if not for the petrochemical industry developed over the early 20th century for gasoline and diesel production. Various plastics for the interior/exterior of cars as well as for the membranes used in modern lithium batteries, and for wire insulation in the electric grid were byproducts of the ICE revolution. Even lithium mining depends on massive ICE mining trucks. If the Green socialists were around in 1890 to enforce their theology, the world might just have become a bigger and longer-duration Cuba: instead of being stuck with 1950's cars for half a century, the world transportation technology standards could have stuck for a century in a mix of horses, lead-acid battery cars and bicycles.
374   HeadSet   2024 Feb 18, 8:45pm  

Reality says

Without ICE cars, electric grid would not have progressed much beyond lighting use (with frequent residential fires due to wire shorts), and battery technology not much beyond lead-acid

Could be, but I was answering on that premise "all cars are EV."
375   Reality   2024 Feb 18, 8:54pm  

The premise "all cars were EV's" would have meant no plastic, as there would have been no way of disposing of massive amount of the lighter components of the petroleum, nor would there have been the petrochemical research to result in plastics. So the dominant battery technology would have been Lead-Acid. Even today, banning all ICE cars would face the problem of what to do with the 60-70% by volume lighter components of petroleum, as making plastic and paving road would only need the most heavy 1/3 components, and the heavy EV's require frequent repaving using asphalt. What to do with the 2x more volume lighter components of petroleum that producing aslphalt (and plastics) would result as byproducts?
376   WookieMan   2024 Feb 18, 10:48pm  

HeadSet says


Reality says

Without ICE cars, electric grid would not have progressed much beyond lighting use (with frequent residential fires due to wire shorts), and battery technology not much beyond lead-acid

Could be, but I was answering on that premise "all cars are EV."

We literally don't have a quality electric grid in most places. It's one thing IL and ComEd here have done 100% right. We have the most nuclear generation in the country and probably world per capita. Never have had a legit power outage more than 30 minutes. Usually only off for 30 seconds and comes back on. Some drunk hits a power pole, lightening strike, or transformer blown. That's usually the reason, but it's still back quick.

We also have some of the largest wind farms near me. Not a massive fan of "green" power, but it does make sense where I'm at. I could run a windmill to a battery pack and power things like my pool pump, outdoor landscape lighting and sound system. Today was 20mph consistent with no big gusts. So those things probably allow the nat gas power plants and coal to back off production and take over on windy days. So it makes sense.

Outside of a tornado hitting your town here, our grid is amazing here in IL. I don't give compliments to my own state often. I feel for you guys in CA. It's only going to get worse with the cyber truck and small dick syndrome and being gay. I don't think any of you have any idea how taxed your already over taxed grid is going to get. It's honestly not funny. You may have week long outages during hot stretches as people plug in all these EV's. I'd invest in ways to keep your already cold food cold for at least a couple days. Generators are obvious but I'd still at least get a huge cooler or two and grab ice the minute the power goes out. Long outage without that would cost us an east $600-1k in spoiled food.

This is what you're gonna be getting with EV's. Just amazing.
377   Reality   2024 Feb 19, 5:13am  

In the absence of ICE car demand for gasoline (and diesel), there wouldn't have been the petrochemical industry that has produced the plastic insulators (tubes/wire-wraps/coatings) for electric lines. Electricity distribution into households would have continued using the Knob-and-Tube method, which is not only much more expensive but also far more fire-hazardous. Under those conditions, it would be doubtful that high power household electrical appliances (such as electric stove, electric dryer, dishwasher with drying function, electric water heater, electric heater, or even central air conditioning) would have become popular. Nuclear power plants would have been quite unnecessary except for making nuclear bombs. Knob-and-Tube wire charging an EV is possible, but chances are that you would have to physically remove the Lead-Acid batteries from the car to carry them into the house to charge, because the extension electric cable with 1 or 2 elements (no grounding under Knob-and-Tube method of household wiring) wrapped in asphalt or natural rubber would be either brittle or age rapidly if exposed to UV or elements. So the EV's under those circumstances would be what we call golf carts, but even golf carts would still be better than horse-drawn carriages (which would be buses) for city dwelling household ownership living in streets filled with muck from horse-drawn "buses" and "taxi-cabs"; charging Lead-Acid batteries would be easier than buying hay every day, and a golf-cart doesn't generate vet bills just standing still. Of course kids on their way to schools would be witnessing horse-shooting in the streets frequently as a typical horse (pulling buses or taxi-cab) lasted only 2000-5000 miles, and had to be put out of misery when it collapsed.
378   porkchopXpress   2024 Feb 19, 6:10am  

Eman says


Porkchop,

Serious question. Have you ever owned an EV or a Tesla? My wife and I used to be ICE car drivers, and we don’t see ourselves ever going back to to ICE cars.

I've never owned an EV but I have driven them and they are indeed fun to drive. If I owned a home in CA, AZ or NV, I'd probably own an EV if I had solar on my house. But, it still probably wouldn't make economic sense but neither do many things I do...I just do them because I want to. I don't put a lot of miles on my car because I work from home, and I live in TN where EV infrastructure is more scarce. If someone does a lot of driving, especially city driving, I could see it making sense.
379   WookieMan   2024 Feb 19, 6:31am  

porkchopXpress says


I've never owned an EV but I have driven them and they are indeed fun to drive. If I owned a home in CA, AZ or NV, I'd probably own an EV if I had solar on my house. But, it still probably wouldn't make economic sense but neither do many things I do...I just do them because I want to. I don't put a lot of miles on my car because I work from home, and I live in TN where EV infrastructure is more scarce. If someone does a lot of driving, especially city driving, I could see it making sense.

Bingo. CA isn't the country. They don't make sense and the Cyber Truck makes even less sense if you try to get ANY utility out of it for the price. It's okay to like a car. Is it logical most of the time? No. I'll never buy an all EV even if in a warm climate. It makes no sense. You'll want a new car 5 years in and you still haven't even gotten your gas savings at all.

Quote this or whatever. The electric grid cannot handle it AND MFT taxes or taxes via the grid are coming EV owners ways. I think by 2025. Covid gave the EV owners an extra 2-3 years. It's coming. I won't be wrong.
380   HeadSet   2024 Feb 19, 8:09am  

Reality says


In the absence of ICE car demand for gasoline (and diesel), there wouldn't have been the petrochemical industry that has produced the plastic insulators (tubes/wire-wraps/coatings) for electric lines. Electricity distribution into households would have continued using the Knob-and-Tube method,

We are talking an "alternative history" here, a thought exercise like "what would it be like if Hitler did not invade the USSR." However, I do not think it is correct to assume that without ICE cars we would have no progress in other areas including chemistry. If, for example, the country trended to electric vehicles instead of gas we would have seen more improvements in batteries, electrical distribution, and electric drive trains. Petroleum would still be around as heating oil and lubricants, so plenty of opportunity to develop plastics and related products. If we had gone the EV route, then today's EV would be more advanced than a Tesla, just like real world ICE cars are a far cry from a Model T.
381   WookieMan   2024 Feb 19, 9:30am  

We can't even do 10% EV's currently. We're at 3% max. Your light in your home would not turn on if we got to 10% at current grid capabilities in most areas. CA grid is toast if EV's double in the next year or two. It's already shit anyway.

Your toy will become useless. it's fact.
382   socal2   2024 Feb 19, 11:51am  

WookieMan says

We can't even do 10% EV's currently. We're at 3% max. Your light in your home would not turn on if we got to 10% at current grid capabilities in most areas. CA grid is toast if EV's double in the next year or two. It's already shit anyway.


Over 25% of all new cars sold in California last year were electric.

California has one of the shittiest and least reliable grids in the US, so if California can cope - so will most everyone else.

Not saying that we don't have to improve our energy grid - but it is not an insurmountable task.
383   WookieMan   2024 Feb 19, 1:24pm  

socal2 says

Over 25% of all new cars sold in California last year were electric.

California has one of the shittiest and least reliable grids in the US, so if California can cope - so will most everyone else.

Not saying that we don't have to improve our energy grid - but it is not an insurmountable task.

Not disputing the sales. It's fine 90% of the time. You get a hot summer and you guys are fucked even if you have the free super charger. Your car won't work. Eman might do fine with solar I suppose but you cats are still reliant on the grid no matter what. You have cars that are fucked if there's no sunshine or grid. Not really a discussion.

I'm intested to see what happens when this 25% of cars cannot move? Or your roads get shittier than they already are with no MFT. There's a lot, a ton that EV driver have zero clue about the industry. It's kind of comical and kind of scary at the same time. Enjoy the next 18 months. Your toy is gonna cost $5k/yr more. Between grid updates, MFT and overpaying for a sedan, you'll have lost $20-30k and not saved a dime.
384   WookieMan   2024 Feb 19, 1:33pm  

A bit "technical" but proves my point. https://lawecommons.luc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2090&context=lclr

They're gonna come after you guys. Hybrids as well, which is the ultimate future. You'll pay even more for what you overpaid for a vehicle when you have to repair your suspension because of shitty roads. Winning, I guess?
385   Eman   2024 Feb 19, 2:56pm  

If anyone, who doesn’t have solar, but is worried about power outages, consider installing a power generator.

My biz partner installed a power generator for his house, which is capable of generating equivalent to his electricity grid. It’s tied to the PG&E gas supply line. If there’s a power outage, it will kick on. Instead of paying for electricity, you pay for gas during that duration. He paid $10k to have it installed.

He has a single story Eichler house, and his neighbors have tall trees. Solar was not a viable option while he drives an X. Just food for thought.
386   socal2   2024 Feb 19, 3:00pm  

WookieMan says

You get a hot summer and you guys are fucked even if you have the free super charger. Your car won't work.


If we have no electricity, how are the gas pumps at gas stations going to work? The pumps won't work, nor would the payment systems. Most power outages don't last for more than a day or so. Anything longer, and EVERYTHING will have issues, not just EV's.

Also, it takes 4 kWH of electricity just to refine 1 gallon of gas. That is the equivalent of my Model Y driving 15 miles just on the electricity it takes to refine a gallon of gas. That doesn't even factor in the costs and energy needed to transport the refined gasoline to the gas station.

Think of all the electricity we could save and less wear and tear on our roads if we don't need to refine and haul billions of gallons of gas all over the country.
387   Eman   2024 Feb 19, 3:37pm  

It’s only February. Let’s go Tesla. 🚀🚀


388   GNL   2024 Feb 19, 3:50pm  

Did it win any awards for being fugly?
389   socal2   2024 Feb 19, 4:13pm  

Looking at getting one of the new 3's for the wife and handing her Hyundai Santa Fe down to one of my kids.

I hope the Model Y gets its update before next January when I am due to turn in my lease and get a new Tesla. All the reviews on the upgraded 3 are very good.
390   Eman   2024 Feb 19, 4:19pm  

GNL says

Did it win any awards for being fugly?

Not yet. Did any car ever win any awards for being fugly?
391   Eman   2024 Feb 19, 4:25pm  

socal2 says

Looking at getting one of the new 3's for the wife and handing her Hyundai Santa Fe down to one of my kids.

I hope the Model Y gets its update before next January when I am due to turn in my lease and get a new Tesla. All the reviews on the upgraded 3 are very good.

Good choice. It’s getting raving reviews. The hope for the refreshed Y is this summer, or later this year at the latest.

As much I love the ride of the M3P, I’ll likely settle for a MYP or CT from a safety POV. Since we have a ton of credit for the solar we installed last summer, I’ll see how much credit we use up before tagging on more EV tax credit. The solar tax credit can be spread out over 5 years, but the EV tax credit is only good for 1 year. It’s good not to be in a rush to buy.
392   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2024 Feb 19, 4:29pm  

Eman says

GNL says


Did it win any awards for being fugly?

Not yet. Did any car ever win any awards for being fugly?


i think pontiac vibe did, for sure had it in the bag.
393   socal2   2024 Feb 19, 5:04pm  

Eman says

Good choice. It’s getting raving reviews. The hope for the refreshed Y is this summer, or later this year at the latest.


I hope you are right. They have to be cagey about announcing so they don't "Osbourne" current Model Y orders.
394   HeadSet   2024 Feb 19, 7:00pm  

Eman says

Solar was not a viable option while he drives an X

Then that $10k installed generator will not be viable for that X either. Both solar and that price generator would be around 25kW.
395   Eman   2024 Feb 19, 8:06pm  

HeadSet says

Eman says


Solar was not a viable option while he drives an X

Then that $10k installed generator will not be viable for that X either. Both solar and that price generator would be around 25kW.

It’s adequate based on what he told me. He tested it and ran all appliances at the same time in his house to be sure, and it worked.

Based on my tracking, Tesla draws about 9.6 kW/hour on a 50A circuit breaker so it should work just fine. Owner also has the option to reduce it down to 40A, or 30A, or even less if desired.
396   Eman   2024 Feb 19, 8:09pm  

socal2 says

Eman says


Good choice. It’s getting raving reviews. The hope for the refreshed Y is this summer, or later this year at the latest.


I hope you are right. They have to be cagey about announcing so they don't "Osbourne" current Model Y orders.

I think it has already osbourned some. I know people who are waiting on 1) the tax credit of the refreshed Model 3 to kick in, and 2) the refreshed Y.

The low hanging fruits would be to use US made batteries/minerals and get the 3 to qualify for the $7.5k tax credit. This will boost sales bigly. And when the refreshed Y comes in the 2nd half of this year, it will 🚀.

Just my 2 cents.
397   WookieMan   2024 Feb 20, 1:23am  

Eman says

Based on my tracking, Tesla draws about 9.6 kW/hour on a 50A circuit breaker so it should work just fine. Owner also has the option to reduce it down to 40A, or 30A, or even less if desired.

What does a 50A breaker run you? 50' and maybe 100'? You do know the gauge of wire needed? You're already in a $20-50k overpriced car. Where are the savings? The electric alone will be $5-10k. You think you're gonna pay $50k in gas in 5 years? Nope.

Enjoy the drive. I don't dislike you for that. Just be realistic it is not cheaper or green. It's not. Kind of by a long shot. Again, it's coming, the tax hit. Gas tankers are maybe 1-2% of large vehicles. Regular cars cause more issues overall because of frequency. 30 cars versus 1semi cause more damage to roads. The day of reckoning is coming my friend. I don't want to see Tesla fail, but the day of reckoning is coming. Shit grid. Rare earth minerals run out. You're taxed out the ass. No one will buy them.

Hybrids can plug into a 20A regular circuit and get 60-90 miles. Still fuel up if needed. I don't get the disconnect here with you Eman and Socal. It doesn't make any sense. I can get a used car for $20k less that's bigger with more utility. My gas alone would be cheaper than the electric bill and that's assuming it is zero. You pay more for the car. That has to be factored in. Then pay for solar panels? lol. This is backwards logic. You're $100k deep in a car not saving you money. It's math.
398   socal2   2024 Feb 20, 8:21am  

WookieMan says

I don't get the disconnect here with you Eman and Socal.


For me - my Tesla Model Y was the cheapest luxury sports car I could afford. It is faster and more practical than a Porsche. Sure I could save some money and drive a Nissan or Toyota sedan, but what's the point of making a decent salary if I can't ENJOY some toys?

I LOVE driving my Tesla and can't stand driving ICE cars with primitive friction brakes grinding out, jerky transmissions, low torque, no all wheel drive and no cool features like auto-pilot and world class audio/visual system. Wife and I were enjoying Arrested Development on Netflix in my car this weekend while waiting on our son to finish practice.

I have been driving new cars for 25 years and am very aware of what my monthly cost of operation is - and I can confidently tell you that driving a Tesla is cheaper than driving other equivalent luxury cars. Maybe California changes all the tax structures to put EV's out of business down the road (doubtful) - but I have had an absolute blast the last 6 years driving EV's and saving money. I am currently ahead of the game.
399   GNL   2024 Feb 20, 8:41am  

The disconnect as I see it is, the original discussion started by Wookie toward EV owners is that EVs are neither cost effective, convenient nor environmentally friendly. He got plenty of pushback. I think all those are generally accepted in this group as well as acknowledging they're 1. A toy for the well healed and 2. Limited use cases.
400   socal2   2024 Feb 20, 9:31am  

GNL says

I think all those are generally accepted in this group as well as acknowledging they're 1. A toy for the well healed and 2. Limited use cases.


That was the case a few years ago. Elon always said he wanted to start with making high-end expensive cars with high margin then move onto more affordable cars as they ramp up production and perfect manufacturing.

The Model Y was the best selling car in all of the world last year. There must be alot of well healed people on the planet.

Also, the average Tesla exceeds the needs over over 90% of the US market based on their daily driving needs. Tesla's supercharger network is 2nd to none (getting better every day) which allows for long hauls.

But if you are one of the 10% who can't charge at home and drives 300+ miles every day, an EV is not a good choice.

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