this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2024
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[–] [email protected] 24 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Price, range, infrastructure, in roughly that order of importance when averaged over the population. The article then goes into factors affecting price. (Of course, the article originated with the Financial Times and was only reprinted by Ars, so it makes sense that they would put money first.)

[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 months ago

For me, the last time I was in the market for a replacement vehicle, the 2 biggest factors were availability and price.

The dealers had zero stock (except maybe a rare fully optioned ridiculously priced example of the top of the line model), and I was not in a position to wait 2+ months for a factory order of a car that I couldn't even test drive.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Exactly.

I'm willing to get a commuter EV, but almost everything either has too little range (e.g. older Leafs) or too much range that drives up the cost. I'm not willing to spend $30k+ on something that can really only be a commuter.

EVs don't have the range to replace our family car since we do road trips, and anything with enough storage is already way more than a reasonable hybrid. Add to that high electricity rates at charging stations, and I'm just not interested.

So, make an affordable EV ($20k, ideally less) with 150-200 miles range, and I'll buy it. I'm looking at used Bolts, which seem to be ~$15k after the credit for used. There really should be something new in this category though...

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

That’s what I’ve been saying for the last several years: give me a good commuter EV to replace my more commuter ICE. I still think two car households in single family homes are the ideal market, but i divorced my second car and spent a little more in the EV that can get me places. So far so good with road trips up to 3 hours, but we’ll see this summer with bigger road trips

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago

Yeah, we regularly do 10+ hour road trips (10 to inlaws, 14 to my parents), and I think an EV would push those to 2 days. We take breaks for food every 300-400 miles (4-5 hours), so that's my range expectation between refuels (we'll sometimes refuel gas sooner if someone needs to pee). We usually eat in the car, but we could stop for 20-30 min once or twice without impacting much.

We occasionally do 2-3 hour trips (visit cousins, national parks), but it's usually short trips or very long trips. So a small EV + larger hybrid is our current ideal, but we currently have a small hybrid + larger ICE (looking to replace both).

Current EVs seem to be trying to replace our family car, when they should be replacing my commuter, at least until battery tech improves. The Leaf and Bolt are options, but they're kinda pricey new (used are looking very attractive).