I like it because it's a path to "something else." Is it perfect? Far from it. It's got limited appeal to a narrower audience than most mass-market vehicles, but I also see it as something that's considerably better than most of the early shots at Hybrids. I see steady progress in the technology, and I've got to support that.
It just rubs me a bit that so many folks go out of their way to find reasons to hate anything that isn't straight internal combustion running on dino juice. I have no issue with logical gripes about an imperfect vehicle, but so much of what you hear is either hyperbolic or just straight up contrarian.
The Volt intrigues me enough that we've done the math on it a a personal vehicle. My wife is slap in the middle of the driver profile that this vehicle would be perfect for. With a Volt, she'd have to buy gas about 4-6 times per year based on her average driving. That's awful intriguing.
And this post got me thinking that those early Priuses are reaching their first decade of life. Wikipedia says this about that:
"As the Prius reached ten years of being available in the U.S. market, in February 2011 Consumer Reports decided to look at the lifetime of the Prius battery and the cost to replace it. The magazine tested a 2002 Toyota Prius with over 200,000 miles on it, and compared the results to the nearly identical 2001 Prius with 2,000 miles tested by Consumer Reports 10 years before. The comparison showed little difference in performance when tested for fuel economy and acceleration. Overall fuel economy of the 2001 model was 40.6 miles per US gallon (5.79 L/100 km; 48.8 mpg-imp) while the 2002 Prius with high mileage delivered 40.4 miles per US gallon (5.82 L/100 km; 48.5 mpg-imp). The magazine concluded that the effectiveness of the battery has not degraded over the long run.[72] "
Not sure what their test methodology was, or how typical those results are, but that's interesting information.
What I REALLY want are some true "alternative" fuels. Give me a choice between electric, gas, diesel, bio, hydrogen, wind, solar, tidal, whatever. People can choose what technology suits them best, and competition will drive the price of all of them down.
jg