Agent98 said:
Respectfully disagreeing...(this is a cool thread from a car geek standpoint) random thoughts:
Electrics are not there yet. The operating cost savings and insurance penalties don't allow for a reasonable payback vs a $16,000 Ford fiesta or Toyota corolla.
Powerpacks are non sustainable from a scarcity of rare earth elements standpoint, power/weight ratio still sucks
Electrics will soon lose their operating cost advantage as soon as government sees a dip in road tax revenue
Tesla had a $1B operating income loss last year, won't be solvent in five years. Gravity still works, cannot sustain losses indefinitely. The actual product Musk sells is hype, not cars...so that's why it hasn't hit the fan yet.
I'm not too thrilled about comping some millionaire $7000 tax credit so he can purchase a $50,000 golf cart then drive in the HOV lane and sneer at me in my ICE car...
How can this vehicle ever be mainstream with a sky high price tag and charger requirements? Waiting to see the first older apartment building in an urban area with row after row of charging stations. How many landlords will allow tenants to install chargers at rental properties...
Say what you will about GM, but they cannot make an EV that sells more than a handful of cars. They ARE fulfilling a niche market though...at 1.18% of total US demand. Interested to see how the largest car maker on earth VW will be able to thrive in the EV market with the next gen models coming out, If Ford GM VW cannot make it work, what hope is there for Tesla, Fisker, all these stock market pumpers.
I wonder about the safety of very high voltage systems bouncing over the road, catching fire in garages, being involved in MVA's and as they age.
There's much that can be done for ICE ---consolidate 24 grades of gasoline to two- summer blend and winter blend for the entire US. Roll back so called safety standards to 2000 levels - I can buy a new Harley without 15 air bags, back up cameras, lane warnings -why not a new car?
- ICE still owns the bottom of the market, the $16,000 Corolla (which is a fictional beast, given that MSRP of a Corolla is basically $20k). But if you move a bit upmarket into BMW 3-series territory, they're legit competitors and EVs will start to compete at lower and lower price points as things mature. We've already seen this. Note that the average price of a new car in the US is about $36,000, and the Model 3 (the most popular EV) starts about 10% above that. Not exactly sky-high prices.
- My Model 3 has almost exactly the same power/weight ratio as my E39 M5, so maybe it doesn't suck all that much. Oil's not all that sustainable either. As long as we insist on trucking our people meat around all over the place, there's going to be a cost. A battery pack with 300-500,000 mile lifespan seems like a reasonable option there.
- This is a valid concern - although you'll notice that operating cost was not part of my reasoning. Still, the Model 3 costs about 15% of what it costs to run the M5 in fuel costs, so we have a little way to go before they even out. That doesn't include maintenance costs, either.
- Who cares what Tesla's profit/loss is, or who the figurehead is? I didn't lay that out as a reason either. I looked at the actual product for sale. Tesla as a company is a different discussion, and one that's really hard to discuss without bringing in baggage such as...
- millionaire with a golf cart sneering at you? C'mon, you were doing well with logical points until this point. If we were talking in person, this is the point where I would end the conversation and wander away because you're obviously carrying around a bunch of baggage and malformed stereotypes and have disengaged your critical thinking skills.
- yes, the infrastructure is still building out. Eventually, landlords will learn that having chargers will make it easier to rent properties so they will be motivated to allow it or install their own.
- Right, GM is struggling with it. So are many of the others. But it is being done well by some of the majors, and more will learn or will license technology. Just because not everyone can do it yet doesn't mean it can't or shouldn't be done. GM is having too much fun selling big trucks and SUVs at high profit levels to be serious about EVs so far. VW has the potential to do some really interesting things because they're more motivated and are bigger in markets where this is a higher priority. Which is an argument for EVs, not so much against.
- ICE cars catch fire too. There certainly are different things to be worried about in an accident with EVs vs ICEs.
- this is an independent thought from powertrain choice. Modern cars are certainly far safer than those from 20 years ago. Harleys are not an example of where we want to be.