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DeficitHawk says
I dont think they asked for anything... but it was a long time ago and I dont really remember.
They did ask for a VIN when I explored the idea of switching to an EV plan.
RWSGFY says
DeficitHawk says
I dont think they asked for anything... but it was a long time ago and I dont really remember.
They did ask for a VIN when I explored the idea of switching to an EV plan.
OK I may not remember. Ive had this type of rate plan since 2015. They dont come around and check. certainly I could sell my EV and they wouldnt ask me to change rate plans or anything. (If you really want time of use plan... you could probably pull a vin from a dealer website too...) but time of use plans are mostly only beneficial if you are using lots of power that you can shift to the off-peak times by using a timer.
PumpingRedheads says
And they don't make sense. For every EV battery pack, 2 - 4 plug in hybrids could be built instead. Way more gasoline could be saved.
Hybrids are totally retarded.
Twice the complexity having both an ICE gas engine and battery drive train. So much more to go wrong and still have to dick around with changing oil, filters and dealing with complex transmission systems.......all which is absent from a pure EV.
Hybrids are totally retarded.
Twice the complexity having both an ICE gas engine and battery drive train. So much more to go wrong and still have to dick around with changing oil, filters and dealing with complex transmission systems.......all which is absent from a pure EV.
Toyota and Honda have the only CVT transmissions worth a shit, mostly because they've worked out the kinks over the last 20 odd years with their hybrids (CVTs are crucial to hybrids).
I didn't get any subsidies for my Tesla and I am able to charge in my garage using the existing 220 outlet without any extra equipment. I rarely use Tesla Superchargers unless on a rare long road trip.
I have saved thousands in fuel costs over the last 5 years of driving EVs.
What's the cost for replacing the batteries in your Tesla?
Chevy EV Bolt is around $28,000 MSRP (before any government subsidies). It has a warranty of 8 years, 100,000 miles for the batteries. Its range is about 260 miles.
Seems like it could compete very easily with internal combustion engine vehicles like Honda Civic.
.
So fucking what? I thought this is about 'saving the planet'? and cutting down fossil fuel use in transportation.
Yes - there undoubtedly needs major investments in our electric grid and the Government will continue to find ways to tax EV's to support infrastructure improvement (and funding Illinois and other Blue State out of control and bonkers pension system).
Roads pave themselves? Jesus I thought I've heard it all. 50% of people pay no federal or state income taxes. Our infrastructure is financed by a large margin by MFT's. If 10% of cars aren't paying that tax, they will. It's coming. Like I've said, enjoy it for now.
My point is that the Tesla Model 3 is ALREADY cheaper than most ICE cars in the same class even before incentives. And the prices for Tesla will continue to drop as they increase scale.
If 10% of cars aren't paying that tax, they will. It's coming.
My point is that the Tesla Model 3 is ALREADY cheaper than most ICE cars in the same class even before incentives
Who are you arguing with? I agree that they will increase registration and other fees on EV's as more and more cars go electric. I think it is fair.
socal2 says
My point is that the Tesla Model 3 is ALREADY cheaper than most ICE cars in the same class even before incentives
What incentives?
$7500 Fed and up to $4000 CA
socal2 says
I didn't get any subsidies for my Tesla
Uhhhhhhj....right
RWSGFY says
$7500 Fed and up to $4000 CA
But socal2 said he didn't get any subsidies for his Tesla, remember?
Was he lying?
PumpingRedheads says
socal2 says
I didn't get any subsidies for my Tesla
Uhhhhhhj....right
It's not feasible guys. I think you know that. That's the point. The day of reckoning will come. You can show bills and say it costs you x, y and z. It does. Not for long.
My wife works in this industry, I know half the people she knows. Your cheap EV days are 100% coming to an end. I'm predicting by 2025. Either through utilities or an MFT registration tax. This is 100% being talked about. It's highly likely they will be MORE expensive to operate than ICE vehicles. We have the oil infrastructure and refineries for 100 years now Our electric grid 100% cannot handle a doubling of EV's hitting the road and needing a charge. This isn't even debatable.
Again, enjoy it now. You already bought an overpriced car and now the daily cost of running it will go through the roof. Call me out in the future. I know I won't be wrong.
But socal2 said he didn't get any subsidies for his Tesla, remember?
Was he lying?
It's highly likely they will be MORE expensive to operate than ICE vehicles. We have the oil infrastructure and refineries for 100 years now Our electric grid 100% cannot handle a doubling of EV's hitting the road and needing a charge. This isn't even debatable.
esla is 1,000% a golf cart dude, on an ICE designed frame and chassis. There are no engineering marvels. My friend and neighbor is a top Toyota Exec. Tesla made a fancy golf cart that is fun to drive.
When cars cost over $150k, only the rich and politically connected will drive, sorta like how private jets are now.
Everyone seems to be missing the point that mandating EVs and outlawing ICE is not about carbon, it is about getting the public off the roads.
Based on what I know today, you will be wrong. Looking forward to 2025.
I’ve owned my EV for more than 6 years. Have been enjoying it, not just now. My wife also went EV 1.5 years ago. Also been enjoying it. We’re not going back to ICE cars, and we’re not greenies.
Tesla will be producing a $25K version in the next few years.
RWSGFY says
$7500 Fed and up to $4000 CA
But socal2 said he didn't get any subsidies for his Tesla, remember?
Was he lying?
PumpingRedheads says
socal2 says
I didn't get any subsidies for my Tesla
Uhhhhhhj....right
My point is the government will do what they’ll do.
One of the perks of being a real estate investor is that you work on your own schedule. You get to write off literally everything while you hardly pay any taxes due to phantom losses while the tenants are paying off your assets. One doesn’t have to be a rocket science to figure this out.
HeadSet says
When cars cost over $150k, only the rich and politically connected will drive, sorta like how private jets are now.
That is not going to happen. Tesla's whole mission is to build affordable EV's at scale.
Tesla will be producing a $25K version in the next few years.
Tesla's most expensive cars (before Cybertruck) the Model X and S have dropped to $79K and are faster than $250K super cars.
Tesla's most expensive cars (before Cybertruck) the Model X and S have dropped to $79K and allegedly accelerate faster than $250K super cars.
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By Olivia Murray
In October, I wrote an essay on a “bombshell report” from a Texas think tank “which revealed that the actual cost of rechargeable cars and the E.V. industry is, in reality, much higher than they’re leading us to believe.”
The report is around 20-pages long, so I was only able to cover one of the explosive revelations—the average battery-powered car (E.V.) would cost “approximately $48,698 more to own over a 10-year period” were it not for the “staggering” handouts from the taxpayer via an extortionary and feckless government—but there were more.
Now, not only were the energy experts able to quantify the additional cost over time, but they were also able to put a dollar amount on the real cost of charging the vehicle, translated into price per gallon of gasoline. As you might guess, the price is astronomical, but that’s not the the end of it.
While EV advocates claim charging costs are equivalent to $1.21-per-gallon gasoline, the real amount is an order of magnitude more.
Including the charging equipment, subsidies from governments and utilities and other frequently excluded expenses, the true cost of charging an EV is equivalent to $17.33-per-gallon gasoline — but the EV owner pays less than 7% of that.
So if the E.V. owner pays less than 7% of that massively inflated cost to “fuel” a car, that means more than 93% of the financial burden falls on the taxpayer—as the NY Post authors also write:
This is socialism for the rich: a transfer of costs from higher net-worth individuals to middle- and lower-income taxpayers.
It’s the equivalent of levying taxes and fees on public-transportation users and those who walk or bicycle to work and using the money to reduce the price of gasoline.
At this stage, E.V.s, if forced to stand on their own, are an utter failure, and as I noted in my previous blog, bad ideas and inferior products only find security in a “free” market… rigorously controlled by big government fascists. If our market were truly free, an extremely expensive car that can spontaneously combust, only works in a limited temperature range, occasionally malfunctions and locks occupants inside before rolling backwards into bodies of water, and costs $17.33 per “gallon” to “fuel” up, would be dead on arrival—as it should be.