Slashdot Mirror


Chevy Volt Meets High Resistance, GM Suspends Sales

Hugh Pickens writes "The Hill reports that GM has announced to employees at one of its facilities that it is suspending production of the Chevy Volt for five weeks and temporarily laying off 1,300 employees. Back when GM launched the beleaguered electric car, it boldly targeted sales of 10,000 in 2011 and 60,000 in 2012 but GM only sold 7,671 Volts in 2011 and just 1,626 so far this year. 'We needed to maintain proper inventory and make sure that we continued to meet market demand,' says GM spokesman Chris Lee. 'We see positive trends, but we needed to make this market adjustment.' Although President Obama promised he would buy a Volt 'five years from now, when I'm not president anymore,' the Volt has come under criticism from Republicans in Congress because of reports of its batteries catching on fire during testing. Ironically, the shutdown comes as gas prices are soaring, exactly the time when an electric car should be an easy sell." If it's still true that GM was taking a loss on every Volt sold, perhaps this is a blessing in disguise.

599 comments

  1. Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Suspending production != Suspending sales. The two mean quite different things.

    1. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by geoffrobinson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It does mean there is barely any demand for the car, even compared to what they were hoping for.

      --
      Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    2. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Suspending production != Suspending sales. The two mean quite different things.

      Very true. The sales number are low, and that's possible related to the cost of a Chevy Volt. I just did a quick search in my area and they're about $40,000. I'm never going to save $15k - $20k in gas over the life of the car, so buying a comparable car that runs on gasoline is probably a better value. There are some tax credits for buying an electric car, but even with those the price is still going to be far more than a "regular" car.

    3. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Zemran · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If I had kharma points I would credit you. I am a fanboy of the Volt but it is out of my price range. There are a lot of hurdles to overcome with the car and they are not doing enough to make it attractive. If you live in an apartment or terrace, it is impractical etc.. If you have the ability it is still going to take some modifications like not everyone has power in the garage etc. So the overall cost is a big problem. I realise that this is an early concept and that prices will come down as people switch but I think that most people will agree with you.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    4. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, there are still _plenty_ to choose from. :-)

    5. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm never going to save $15k - $20k in gas over the life of the car, so buying a comparable car that runs on gasoline is probably a better value.

      Lately I've been finding this argument a little disingenuous. For example, if I were to lease a $38K all-electric vehicle my payments would be roughly $360/mo. At $4/gal the money I'd save on gasoline would make my monthly payments comparable to leasing a vehicle worth $20K under identical terms*. In terms of affordability, these who vehicles would almost the same for the duration of the lease. And yes, I figured the cost of electricity as well as gasoline.

      The cost difference manifests only in the residual cost, but I need not pay that if I decide not to buy out.

      =Smidge=
      *Your mileage may vary, of course.

    6. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by nschubach · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not everyone leases vehicles though. I did once, and I'll never do it again. Tracking how many miles you can put on in a year and hoping you don't change jobs to somewhere further away is a PITA.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    7. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by PRMan · · Score: 1

      Here's the problem. People in California buy a lot of cars, the most in the US. Electricity is so outrageous here, that you would lose money. The same is true in all the Southwest states that use a lot of AC, you know, the spread out ones where you need an economical car.

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    8. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's not the point, the point is that the headline is _FALSE_

      GM is _NOT_ suspending Sales.

      unbelievable sloppy editing here.

    9. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by couchslug · · Score: 1

      For that much money I could buy an old school big block musclecar and feed it avgas.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    10. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Guess that explains why California is the most popular market for all-electric vehicles. Oh wait, no it doesn't...

      To be on cost-per-mile par with $4.50/gal gasoline electricity would have to cost over $0.50 per kWh. (Comparing 30MPG to 3.5mi/kWh economies). Where in California are people paying north of $0.50 per kWh?

      Once you've answered that we can discuss TOU metering schemes that actually make electricity for charging EVs cheaper than the nominal daytime rate.
      =Smidge=

    11. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Admiral_Grinder · · Score: 1

      I have a old school big block musclecar (70 Chevelle SS454). I would rather have the Volt to commute so I can put more fix-em-up and gas money into the fun car.

    12. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Barbara,+not+Barbie · · Score: 0

      That's not the point, the point is that the headline is _FALSE_
      GM is _NOT_ suspending Sales.

      GM didn't have to suspend sales - the consumers already did it for them - which is way worse than if GM had suspended sales.

      --
      Let's call it what it is, Anti-Social Media.
    13. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, there are so many other cars I'd be more willing to put down that sort of money for. Hell, the used Lexus I purchased last year will cost me less over it's lifetime than a brand-new Volt would despite consuming so much more gas.

    14. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by fafaforza · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Selling close to 8000 vehicles where your projections were 10000 isn't that far off the target, and not enough to call it 'barely any demand'.

    15. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The energy used to manufacture the batteries will never be recovered from the operation of the vehicle. It. Saves. Nothing. The carbon is "in the air" before the car is sold.

      Fools, all!

    16. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by MrAl · · Score: 0

      No, it's 8k out of 30k. You're totaling two years of sales with only the first year of projections. Out of the 20k they hoped to sell this year, only 1.6k have actually sold. HUGE problem there.

    17. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      Read again. It's 8K (precisely 7,671) out of 10K for 2011.
      2012 is far from being finished.

    18. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by MrAl · · Score: 1

      Not too far. 3 months. The 2012 model year for the Volt started mid-2011.

      http://www.edmunds.com/futuremodels/2012/

    19. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Model year has got fuck all to do with it. It says "in 2011" and "in 2012... so far".

    20. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Volt is not really a "38k" vehicle in standard vehicle terms of quality and fit and finish, it's a $20k vehicle with $18k batteries. For comparison, the Chevrolet Cruze, a non-electric car which is built on the same platform as the Volt, is a 20k vehicle.

      You can lease a Cruze under similar terms as the Volt for $200/month less. So, yes, if you're spending $200 on gas and the electricity in your house is free, you pretty much break even. If you choose to buy instead of lease, $200/month over 36 months is comparable to the difference in depreciation between a 38K car and a 20K car. So you break even there too.

      Either way, you have to drive at least 20k miles/year to spend ~$200/month in gas for it to be financially worthwhile to go with the Volt. And you're not driving a car of any better quality or fit and finish than a Cruze.

    21. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm never going to save $15k - $20k in gas over the life of the car

      Really? Let's see.

      • 200k mi.
      • $5/gal gas. (you know this will be "cheap" in few years!)
      • 35mpg car

      Total gas cost: $28,571
      Gas @ $3.5/gal, total cost: $20,000

      Now, let's try examples from Europe, using metric units

      • 250k km
      • $2/l fuel
      • 4l/100km fuel usage (very efficient car)

      Total gas usage: $20,000

      So, if you believe gas prices will be higher than they are today and your car usage is to commute to work and back 1 or 2 dozen miles, then EV starts to make sense, even at $40k. If, on the other hand, you believe there is a "grand conspiracy" and gas prices will plummet, then go ahead, do not buy a EV.

      PS. In a typical cheap car ($15-20k), your insurance over lifetime of the car will be same as the price of your car, and the gas usage will add another 100% on there as well, making your car purchase effectively $45k for a $15k car. This is assuming your maintenance is "free" - and good luck with that! Having a car is a money pit.

    22. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 2

      Hybrids are one thing, but when it comes to all-electric cars, California is a much better place for them than Minnesota. Think about it: How much of your battery are you going to drain from running your electric heater? When there's actual combustion going on under the hood, you can blow the waste heat from this at the passengers. With a highly efficient electric motor, this is will basically do nothing.

    23. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by MrAl · · Score: 3, Interesting

      *Sigh*. Fine. Then using the linked article above, they sold almost 8k out of 10k for 2011(not bad) but only 1.6k out of 60k for 2012. Any way you look at it the numbers are disastrous. To argue otherwise is sticking your head in the sand and ignoring reality.

    24. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      It means their estimate of how many they would sell in 2012 was way off. But even if 2012 is totally flat for sales they will still sell more than they did in 2011.

    25. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You are absolutely correct that running the electric heater decreases drivable range. EV manufacturers and owners have employed various tactics to deal with this: Preheating the car while it's still plugged in is the primary one, which significantly decreases the load on the heating system. The Nissan LEAF comes with a heated steering wheel and heated seats to keep the driver and passenger(s) warm without heating the entire cabin. Some owners have tried 12V electric blankets, adding homebrew or aftermarket heating systems, or most often just dressing warmly for the trip.

      But the real issue is not cabin heating, it's keeping the battery warm. A cold battery means lethargic chemistry, which means reduced power and (temporarily) lost capacity. This is the true nature of EVs in extreme climates.

      Fun fact: If the Volt's computer deems it the most efficient method, the gas engine will run just to generate heat. What a waste IMHO...
      =Smidge=

    26. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by kheldan · · Score: 1

      According to an NPR report I heard on the way home from work yesterday, GM is temporarily suspending production of the Volt for 5 weeks, and thereafter will limit production to match sales figures.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    27. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      My problems with the Volt are:

      1) Not a great EV. Doesn't have the power or range of competitors.
      2) Not a great ICE vehicle. Chevy's own Cruze gets better mileage.

      So what do you get for your $40k? Flexibility? For the most part, people who can afford this don't need flexibility -- they already have a gasoline powered vehicle, and keeping a second vehicle gives much more flexibility than relying on the Volt as an all-purpose vehicle (short trips and extended trips). So they almost certainly gave up battery capacity for something most people probably don't want out of an EV -- an ICE. As the only hybrid of this sort, I think the tepid sales numbers speak for themselves in that regard. Maybe it's time for American car companies to start thinking *inside* the box again.

    28. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      True. GM suspended production. Consumers suspending buying.

      Currently, there's a $7,500 tax credit for buying one, which Obama wants to bump to $10,000. The average income of a volt buyer is $170,000, higher than any other line (except mercedes at $174,000)

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    29. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by 517714 · · Score: 1

      It means their estimate of how many they would sell in 2012 was way off. But even if 2012 is totally flat for sales they will still sell more than they did in 2011.

      They are hoping to do as well as totally flat. Frankly, it seems unlikely.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    30. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by 517714 · · Score: 1

      In order to get the savings in gasoline cost you project, you would have to drive a lot of miles. You can't get a lease on a $38K vehicle with a decent mileage allowance for $360/mo. Your math is in error, you would end up paying thousands of dollars in over-mileage charges and the residual value would be very important as buying the car would be the only way to avoid those charges.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    31. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by RigrmRtis · · Score: 1

      Suspending production != Suspending sales. The two mean quite different things.

      Very true. The sales number are low, and that's possible related to the cost of a Chevy Volt. I just did a quick search in my area and they're about $40,000. I'm never going to save $15k - $20k in gas over the life of the car, so buying a comparable car that runs on gasoline is probably a better value. There are some tax credits for buying an electric car, but even with those the price is still going to be far more than a "regular" car.

      People don't buy the Volt to save money. As you've already pointed out, that's stupid. They buy the Volt because it's a high quality, cutting edge, vehicle. Not worrying about the price of gas is just a nice way to help offset the upfront cost. Plus, it helps us get off of foreign oil. Which, in my opinion, should be one of the country's top priorities. I mean, if you really wanted to save money, buy a used Prius. Or use public transit.

    32. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Valcrus · · Score: 0

      There is plenty of demand most of us just don't have 40k to spend on a car. I'll buy a normal car with all the options I need that gets good gas mileage and call it at day for 20k

    33. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      could have something to do with the rediculous price for the thing. make it a $20k car, and then folks *might* consider it as opposed to a toyota' gas guzzling prius.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    34. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Kagato · · Score: 1

      The sales are low because the ads for the Car say it's only available in a limited area. Most people assume it's not for sale in their area. And then even then the marketing for this car is dumb. The car is actually most useful in smaller metropolitan markets where the commit is less than 20mi each way. You've almost never run the gas engine in those situations.

    35. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Jan/Feb is hardly peak car buying season.

    36. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of places are at $0.50/kWh. Redding, CA has rates of $0.55/kWh. Rather ironic with a hydro plant right there.

    37. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, my math is correct. Don't forget that if you lease, the dealer claims the $7,500 federal tax incentive (perhaps soon to be $10,000?) so that comes right off the top of the car's price. At that point you are no longer comparing $40K to $20K, you're comparing $32K to $20K. This makes ALL the difference.

      So... assuming MSRP minus incentive for a gross capitalized cost of approx. $32,000. 36 month lease, 45% residual. Bullshit fees and tax paid up front, plus $4,000 down (total money down: ~$8,100). Monthly payment is $370/mo.

      Based on the last 12 months of driving (9557.2 mi) and assuming $4/gallon + 28.88 MPG average over the past 12 months (yes, I keep detailed records), I would be saving about $110/mo. Based on mileage and electricity costs, I would be paying about $35/mo in electricity. Net savings of $75/mo which makes leasing this car comparable to $295/mo. Working backwards, with the same terms and down payment, that's equivalent to a $22,500 vehicle.

      So I rounded off from memory instead of re-opening my spreadsheet and was off by $2,500. Sue me. *shrug*

      You'll probably complain about the large money down sum. Fine, but it cuts both ways... How much I put down is irrelevant to the relative cost. Example: At $1,000 down the payments become $460 and $385 respectively - still a $75 difference.

      I used a 0.00224 money factor and a 15,000 mile/yr lease if you want to try it at home. I'll be happy to compare notes.
      =Smidge=

    38. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      One niggle about your fun fact. If it's the most efficient method, you could hardly call it a waste.

    39. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's all about flexibility. Your Cruze's overall energy cost (electricity + gas) will be much higher than the Volt for regular commuting, since the Cruze can't run on electricity, whereas the Volt can do so for 30-40 miles, which is enough for most commuters. A true EV like the Leaf can go farther, but 1) the Leaf is slow as shit, and tiny too, and 2) once you run out of juice in the Leaf, you're dead. In the Volt, you just switch over to gasoline and keep going. Then when you run out of gas after 300 miles (not too far from a regular car's range), you pull into a gas station and refuel and keep going. You can't do that with a true EV; it's limited to local driving only. So the Volt gives you the option of taking long-distance trips once in a while, even though the economy isn't as good as some smaller cars.

      So whether the car is for you depends on your usage pattern. If you mostly commute, but want the ability to take long-distance trips with the same car, it might be a good choice. If you just want to do a lot of long-distance driving, pick another car. If you want something for commuting only, and never plan to exceed 60-80 miles, then a Leaf might be a better choice. The main problem with the Volt as I see it is the price tag, which is $40k (but there's a $7500 federal tax credit too that you should take into account). However, Edmunds says the Leaf costs $35k (minus that same tax credit), so you're not saving that much going full-EV, and you're getting a smaller, slower car with probably a cheaper and more econobox-like interior (Edmunds says the Volt has the nicest and highest-quality interior they've seen in a Chevy). $35k is quite a lot for an economy car really. But the real one to beat is of course the Prius, which is downright reasonable at only $23k, though it doesn't have a plug-in option. There is a different Prius model just now coming out, with limited availability, that's a plug-in, but it costs $32k, a whopping $9k more than the regular version, though again the $7500 tax credit probably applies here; don't know if you can get that credit with the regular Prius but I doubt it.

    40. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      It could be charging the battery at the same time, putting a larger portion of the fuel's energy into something useful and STILL be generating the required heat. It does not do this AFAIK, however, so the engine just idles uselessly to make heat.

      Just because the computer determines it's better to run the engine than heat the battery electrically, doesn't mean there aren't further optimizations to be made.
      =Smidge=

    41. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      The highest rate I could find in Redding, CA is 32c/kWh, and that's at Tier 3 usages (>1400kWh per month). I don't know what the hell you're doing if your home us using >1400kWh per month... Probably not charging an electric car...

      Maybe you're citing some kind of commercial/industrial peak rate?
      =Smidge=

    42. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      I already addressed why I think the Volt's "flexibility" is a red herring.

    43. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by tftp · · Score: 2

      Getting that $7,500 from the IRS requires that you owe that much to begin with. But I guess people who buy a $40K car do that.

      Then when you run out of gas after 300 miles (not too far from a regular car's range), you pull into a gas station and refuel and keep going.

      Volt runs on premium gas, and the mileage is only 37 mpg. You'd go bankrupt before you reach your destination.

      There are several cars on the market, hybrid and not, that are better than that on highway, and they run on cheapest gas that there is. Volt is not a good choice for long distance travel.

      Volt is also not a good choice for local travel because it carries the ICE instead of more batteries. A 60-80 mile range would be good enough for driving around town.

    44. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by tftp · · Score: 1

      In order to get the savings in gasoline cost you project, you would have to drive a lot of miles.

      You can't drive a lot of miles in a Volt in EV mode. Unless you are charging on the route, your daily EV mileage is limited to 40 miles (or 80, if you can charge at work.)

      If the break-even point is around 100K miles then you will need 7 years of daily 40-mile EV driving or 3.5 years of daily 80-mile EV driving. But chances are that the real break-even point is farther in time because Volt consumes premium gas at 37 mpg. So unless your commute is of just the right distance you will be spending money on premium gas, when competition uses cheaper regular gas.

      The break-even point is also influenced by the fact that you pay the money up front. If you buy a $20K car and invest the $18K at 3% interest this will give you $12K of compound interest over 10 years. This money can buy you 7,500 gal. of gas today, and you can drive 300,000 miles on that gas. This means that you are better off buying a $20K car and paying for gas as you go.

      Also note that some municipalities are toying with the idea of extra taxes on EV owners because they are using the roads but pay no fuel tax. This is likely to happen, and it will further push the EV into the red.

      Rising gas prices may make an EV more appealing; however that depends on prices on electric power. There is also a possibility that the electric grid will simply not support charging of too many EVs at the same time (at night) and the power company will have plenty of interest in NOT fixing that.

    45. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by JamesP · · Score: 1

      Besides, the one thing gas engines are really good at is at generating heat

      Generating motion power comes at a distant second

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
    46. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by EdIII · · Score: 1

      Not every vehicle is available for lease on good terms either. That's worth pointing out was well. Leasing only makes sense when it is a fair deal. Plenty of horrible leases out there. I have had friends in dealerships look at me straight in the face and say I would get screwed on that lease and to just go with a different vehicle.

      I did own hybrid vehicles for awhile because I was willing to pay that premium as a sacrifice to help the environment and push the technology further. Not everyone wants to do that.

      Personally, I think I am doing my part already with the purchase of those hybrid vehicles, of which, I lost money on one of them when selling it before the economic collapse. Right now I have a very efficient vehicle under lease, simply because it is on good terms. At this point I can't afford to pay that premium for electric or hybrids. It's a purchase to make me feel like I am doing something for the environment, which I am, but it makes no economic sense.

      The exception being my Prius. I sold that for a profit in CA, which included factoring in every expense I ever had for the car (gas, car washes, insurance).

      While I can no longer afford my ideals with respect to a car, I can make a difference in many other ways and reduce my energy consumption and foot print across the board.

    47. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mikestew · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's a credit, not a deduction, so you get the $7500 regardless. Take my word as someone who bought a Leaf and is in the process of filling out the tax forms.

    48. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You addressed it, but I think you missed something: having a second car has its own costs. Now, instead of paying for insurance for one vehicle, you're paying double (no, the insurance companies don't give you a break for having a second car, even if you're a single person and are physically incapable of driving two cars simultaneously). You'll get a small, small break for one of the vehicles being "recreation only" with low miles/year, but it's still a lot more than only having one car. If one of the vehicles is really old and only has liability coverage, you'll get a good break for that, but then you're driving an old car; if you're looking at a Volt, presumably you want to drive around in a new car, not a 20-year-old one.

      The tepid sales numbers are almost certainly IMO the result of the high price. For $8k less, you can get one of the new Plug-In Priuses that should have all the advantages of the Volt. The Priuses have been around for a while, and they've been selling like hotcakes, so clearly people want hybrids, they just don't want to pay $40k for them. Also clearly, many people want plug-in hybrids, because there's been a giant underground movement of Prius owner modifying their cars to be plug-ins (even with the puny battery the Prius has), which is the entire reason that Toyota finally made their own Plug-In version of the Prius (which presumably will be better done than the homebrew versions, probably with a larger battery pack).

    49. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Edmunds says that the Volt gets in the very low 30s when it's running on its gas engine, not 37.

      No, the Volt is not a good choice at all for a lot of long-distance travel. It's a compromise; it lets you do long-distance travel occasionally if you have to, with the same car that you normally use for commuting or driving around town. If you do a lot of long-distance travel, you should get a different car, such as a Prius which gets 48mpg hwy (or, for the same mileage, a more upscale car like a Volvo or Mercedes or Infiniti that costs about the same as the Volt).

      A 60-80 mile range might not be enough for driving around town if you have to do a lot of driving on some days. I don't know about your town, but my town is about 70 miles across E-W and 50 miles across N-S. It's pretty easy to rack up 100+ miles driving around town here in a day if you have to go a bunch of places. This is Phoenix; I imagine the LA area is even worse. Obviously, if it's your regular driving pattern to go 100+ miles a day, then the Leaf isn't the right choice, but not all days are the same; what if you have a day here and there where you drive farther than that 60-80 mile hard limit the Leaf has? In the Leaf, if you go over the limit, or if something happens making the limit lower than you thought it was (suppose it's really hot or cold and the batteries don't put out their full charge), then your car dies, leaving you stranded and having to pay hundreds of dollars for a tow truck back to your house. With a plug-in hybrid, you don't have that problem; go over your electric range limit and you just switch to gas. Even if you stupidly run out of gas some time, you just have someone bring you some gas in a portable gas can; you don't have to be towed to a compatible charger.

    50. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by 517714 · · Score: 2

      You have ignored true cost of the car, confusing it with YOUR cost of the car. The true cost includes the subsidy ($7500) that I am helping to pay of $208 each month so that YOU can save $75 a month. It is a losing proposition for the country. When the taxpayers' subsidy drops below the monthly savings I'll be happy to compare notes.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    51. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      I just did a quick search in my area and they're about $40,000. I'm never going to save $15k - $20k in gas over the life of the car, so buying a comparable car that runs on gasoline is probably a better value.

      Disclaimer: I'm not going to buy a Volt. (GM stole my tax money AND had a viable electric car 15 years ago.. two reasons why I will shy away from a GM car, but will buy one if it is better and/or significantly cheaper than the competition.)

      People buy BMWs, Masseratis, and a whole bunch of other cars that are total wastes of money. (Heck, even small cars -- I like the idea of the smart car, but it takes premium gas and doesn't get very good mileage.)

      There are reasons other than saving money in the long term to spend more on one car than another.

      Unless my car completely dies and I immediately need another car, my intended next car is at _worst_ a Prius.. and probably a full electric car of some type.

    52. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Get rid of ALL subsidies. I'm all for it.

      But wouldn't you at least agree that a subsidy for more fuel efficient cars is better than an oil subsidy or a corn subsidy, etc?

    53. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by tftp · · Score: 2

      Take my word as someone who bought a Leaf and is in the process of filling out the tax forms.

      If so, you owe Slashdot an extensive report about this Leaf thing once you get used to it and learn what it is good for :-)

    54. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must really hate the planet to want to pollute it so much with those batteries. A battery powered car does more damage to the environment just by being made, than the lifetime use of a gas powered car does.

    55. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      now do your math on a $18K honda insight hybrid 2012 which goes 50mpg and has the lowest maint costs in the industry and compare it to your overpriced volt.

    56. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by kyrio · · Score: 1

      So, are you saying all cars are shit and people should ride bikes or take public transit (I agree, they should)? I'm not sure what your point is. The batteries in those shitty cars are going to cost about $10k to replace, every five to eight years or so - if they don't catch fire first, anyway. Completely ignoring the amount of damage the batteries have made to the environment, just from manufacturing them, anyway.

    57. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope... perhaps the outskirts have different rates than the city proper? Don't know what the total usage is, but an all-electric house takes a tremendous amount of power. Electric water heater, electric kitchen, electric laundry, heat pumps with emergency heating elements. It is possible to trip the 200 Amp breakers if emergency heat and water heater come on at once.

    58. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 0

      I show the math and you immediately fall back on the tax thing. Makes you look like a little bitch, y'know.

      So the ability to deduct your tax liability is a subsidy? Decreasing taxes is a subsidy, is it? Tax cuts are actually a form of spending? Are you sure you want to go that route? (Or perhaps you don't know the difference between a deduction and a rebate?)

      Fine. The petroleum industry gets tens of billions of dollars a year ($70+ billion to be more exact) in "subsidies" in the form of both tax breaks and direct spending. Let's end those, too. Now that gasoline is upwards of $10/gallon I'd be saving $240/mo and it's an even better deal for me. Thanks, wingnut!
      =Smidge=

    59. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Okay, 200 amps at 240V is 48kW. You'd have to hit peak usage every day of the month to reach 1400kWh. My home is all electric except for the heating (oil) which is fine since it probably gets a lot colder here than it does in Cali... if I use 200kWh in a month that's a lot.

      If you're hitting Tier 3 rates in a private home maybe you need to reevaluate your lifestyle for all sorts of reasons.
      =Smidge=

    60. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      *sigh*

      No. No it does not. You must be mistaking modern electric drivetrain batteries with nickle based chemistries like earlier hybrids used.

      And even then the claim is highly dubious.

      I suppose you also think the batteries end up in landfills?
      =Smidge=

    61. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by 517714 · · Score: 1

      $10 gasoline? Frankly I'm for it. Let each of us pay for what we consume. At that rate it would be beneficial to the country to subsidize the car. I support eliminating tax breaks and tax offsets for all industries, not just the oil and gas producers.

      The fact that you resort to name calling, and think it is a good idea for others to subsidize your lifestyle shows obvious character flaws, I'm sure you can get counseling for that.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    62. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Couple of points:

      1) If the grid can handle peak loads during the day (and it usually can), then it can handle additional load at night charging EVs. So much so that some utility companies are experimenting with domestic TOU rates so you pay a lower rate to charge your EV at night. Spinning reserve actually costs utilities money, and increasing off-peak loads actually does them a favor.

      2) The power companies have a LOT of interest in making sure their distribution grid and generating capacity is up to snuff. The problem, however, is not nearly as bad as it seems... adding an EV to a home is equivalent to adding a medium sized air conditioner or a small electric stove. Utility companies aren't idiots and have generally been keeping an eye on the future (PDF).

      3) I support a mileage based road usage fee adjusted for vehicle weight. With current state and federal tax on gasoline I pay only about 1 cent per mile towards road maintenance... I'd have no problem paying that if I drove an EV and the finances are hardly affected at all. Keep the taxes on fossil fuels to pay for the costs their burning directly contributes to, like national defense, environmental protection and health care.

      4) I originally did the lease comparison for an Nissan LEAF, but it works the same for a Volt if you just bump the base price up. With a Volt I'd still basically uses all-electric range. *shrug* I'd prefer a LEAF over the Volt, though, for various reasons.
      =Smidge=

    63. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      I'm surely subsidizing your lifestyle in some way. The fact that you seem to think you're not part of a society shows obvious character flaws, I'm sure you vote Libertarian.

      =Smidge=

    64. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What makes you think you as the lessor are going to benefit from the $7500 rebate fully? The dealer (by which you probably mean the leasing company, who is the actual buyer of the car) is under no obligation to pass those savings on to you 1:1 and in fact, most don't from my shopping experience.

      Furthermore, your numbers working backwards are wrong. Assuming your $75/mo savings on fuel is accurate, with $1000 down and 100% of the $7500 tax credit applied as CCR, the payments work out to $529 with your terms (ignoring the "bullshit taxes and fees" handwaving). Less the $75, you're looking at a competing car at $455/month. That is a car with a base cap price of $24,200.

      That's net cap. The $7500 incentive you're allowing the Volt but not considering the various incentives offered on models of normal gasoline-powered cars. A car with a base cap of $24,200 will probably retail from $25-28k.

      A basic, $20,000 MSRP passenger car like the one the other poster would rather purchase, with a modest $1500 incentive (Ford and Mazda are both offering them this month, for example, and both sell high-efficiency cars in that price band), would lease for $322/month. This results in a staggering savings of $130 per month, even assuming the $20k car gets an identical 28.8mpg to your reference vehicle. With many small cars in that class averaging in the low 30s, that number increases to $140-150.

      In other words, a typical $20,000, including fuel, payments, and insurance, is cheaper to less than a Volt and electricity, to say nothing of insurance on the Volt, even if the Volt runs fully electric at all times for the 9557 miles per year that this hypothetical person drives.

      If someone wants basic transportation, the Volt isn't an economically viable option, even if you get the full tax credit up front in the lease. They can either save money by going with a basic car, or break even with a car that is of higher quality than a Volt. The price of the Volt is too damn high if you're looking at your checkbook alone.

    65. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, let's work the numbers. I'm in the San Jose area and pay a marginal rate of about 30c/kWh (it's real easy to get in the top tier, we don't even have air conditioning). I commute 44 miles daily. At 30 MPG and 4.50/gal, that's $33 per week in gas. At 3.5 mi/kWh, that's about $19 per week in electricity, saving me about $14/week. It would take me 20 years to recover a $15k premium for buying electric. No thanks.

    66. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's always a smart move to dump money in to something for a predetermined amount of time where at the end of that time, you own absolutely nothing of it. Like renting a house, or leasing a car :)

    67. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      What makes you think you as the lessor are going to benefit from the $7500 rebate fully? The dealer (by which you probably mean the leasing company, who is the actual buyer of the car) is under no obligation to pass those savings on to you 1:1 and in fact, most don't from my shopping experience.

      If they don't - and it would be readily apparent by reviewing the paperwork - then I'd argue over it. If they refuse, I'll find another dealer who won't rip me off. I'm just as obliged to give them my business as they are to pass the incentive along to me.

      I've yet to hear of any anecdotes of this happening, though. If the revisions for the incentive get passed, not only will it increase to $10K but then the dealers WILL be obligated to pass it along.
      =Smidge=

    68. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by tftp · · Score: 1

      If the grid can handle peak loads during the day (and it usually can), then it can handle additional load at night charging EVs.

      Those are two big differences, as they say in Odessa. Daytime consumers are industrial facilities, and the power to them is delivered via thick underground cables. Nighttime EV chargers are connected to a residential distribution grid, implemented as overhead wires and transformers on poles. Loss of power will force you to miss the charging cycle and call for a taxicab next morning. That won't be free.

      The power companies have a LOT of interest in making sure their distribution grid and generating capacity is up to snuff.

      I understand what you are saying about the total power needs of an EV. However power companies are interested in pushing EV users into the far more expensive day rates. As matter of fact, that's what you will be paying if you charge at work. Businesses will not allow free leeching of a considerable amount of power by thousands of employees. The price will be set high, at very least to cover installation of chargers and to pay for daytime power.

      I'd prefer a LEAF over the Volt, though, for various reasons.

      I personally would be very uncomfortable on a freeway if I'm low on charge and there is an accident far ahead and nobody knows how soon it can be cleared. This is not a concern in a Prius or a Volt, but generally any gasoline-burning car will be OK as well. In a Leaf you may be watching the needle to go all the way to zero, and then lights dim and the car is off, surrounded by thousands of other cars. What you are going to do? There isn't enough power even for blinking emergency lights.

      Plans change, and even if I didn't intend to go somewhere I might have to do that. A single phone call can change all that. A Leaf is OK only if you are fully in control of all your plans. This rarely happens. Real life requires a car that can be fueled (with gas or electrons) quickly enough and easily enough. A trip to the airport (50 miles one way) will leave the Leaf stranded.

      Or, to put it the other way, machines should serve the needs of humans - and not the other way around. However a Leaf will be training his driver to do this and not to do that. The penalty for disobeying the Master is expensive (a tow truck to the nearest charger, and then camping there until the charge is complete.)

      IMO, the EV charger network needs to be built. However it's unwise to do "from the top," starting with super-expensive cars that nobody can afford. You need to flood the market with dirt cheap, all-plastic boxes on wheels; that will create demand for chargers. Once the network is deployed you can raise the bar and make more expensive vehicles. Perhaps electric bicycles and motorcycles should be included.

      This is also pretty obvious considering that an EV, especially a low-end one, will not be competitive with a gasoline car in range - not for a long time. So it can be assumed that many people will want to own two cars; one EV and one gasoline. The EV must be priced so that it makes sense to buy it and use it on a daily basis for short errands. The Volt, at $40K price, is not a good "errand car," and the EV mode is the only one where you can hope to recoup the investment.

    69. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Volt runs on premium gas, and the mileage is only 37 mpg. You'd go bankrupt before you reach your destination. Volt runs on premium gas, and the mileage is only 37 mpg. You'd go bankrupt before you reach your destination.

      You sound broke, as well as illiterate in matters of taxation.

    70. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mikestew · · Score: 1

      More of a Volt person, I take it? :-) I realize that you may not be entirely serious, so I won't entirely dump a full report on you. It has fulfilled expectations, getting us to where we expect it to go. No, we'll not be driving it from Seattle to San Francisco. But for roads trips we're probably taking the dogs (who are not allowed in the shiny new Leaf) anyway, so we'll pile into the 35mpg Scion xB.

      In summary, I probably enjoy the Leaf more than the Jaguar we got rid of to make room.

    71. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mikestew · · Score: 2

      I've yet to hear of any anecdotes of this happening, though.

      I'm pretty sure Nissan, in the case of the Leaf, said the tax credit was built into the price of the lease. So I could believe the same for the Volt. (Note that we bought our Leaf outright, so there is the possibility that I'm wrong.)

    72. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obligated to pass it along to buyers. The purpose of the tax credit is to help individuals invest in the vehicles. If the goal were simply to make the cars cheaper, the tax credit would be issued directly to the manufacturer to have it reflected in MSRP.

      As the individual leasing the car, not only are you eating one of the 200,000 slots for the tax credit, but you're contributing to sustained high prices by putting that money into a financing company's hands rather than into a consumer's pocket, where the money is supposed to go.

      The tax credit should be passed on to the individual purchaser of the vehicle and deferred to the end of the lease, not pissed away on a bank.

    73. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by tftp · · Score: 1

      More of a Volt person, I take it? :-)

      When I get down to 50-60 miles of range in my current car (a Gen.2 Prius) I'm actively looking for a gas station. However in a Leaf that's all the range it has, new. I'd be very uncomfortable being within 10-20 miles of travel from being stranded and having to pay an expensive towing bill. 10 miles is nothing if you need to make a detour around an accident ahead, on unfamiliar roads - and it happens from time to time. This is not a problem in a car that has 400 miles of range and can be refueled within minutes at any gas station in the country.

      I'm also living in a hilly terrain, so Leaf would be burning a lot of joules climbing all these hills. Its range would be likely pretty poor.

      I'd be buying Volt in an instant if only its price was in any way competitive (say, about $25K for the base model.) Most of my travel is relatively local (under 100 miles) and the rest can be handled on the gas engine and the generator. However at the current price Volt is out of consideration, unless I just want to get rid of some extra cash. As matter of fact, I'm finding my current Prius to be the best for me; Gen. 3 did some awful things with the center console, and the wagon has pretty poor fuel efficiency. So I don't have a worthy replacement for my car, even though it's slowly getting to the point, simply calendar-wise, when I will want to get a brand new one.

    74. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Uhm, this is slashdot. In order to suspend doing something, you must have done that at some point.

      Its like me saying that I'm suspending my rock star career.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    75. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, for the car to know how to generate heat, the car would have factor in the cost of gasoline versus the cost of electricity, Does the Volt know this?

    76. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Daytime consumers are industrial facilities, and the power to them is delivered via thick underground cables. Nighttime EV chargers are connected to a residential distribution grid, implemented as overhead wires and transformers on poles.

      Residential power use also follows a day/night cycle, and much of the light commercial sector uses the same substations and overhead wires that the residential areas do. Even if what you said were true - which it isn't - the utility company would freak over air conditioner installations because a central AC system would use several times the power an EV would.

      However power companies are interested in pushing EV users into the far more expensive day rates. As matter of fact, that's what you will be paying if you charge at work. Businesses will not allow free leeching of a considerable amount of power by thousands of employees.

      Let's assume an apocalyptic $1.00 per kWh. Employee #4628 deliberately waits until his EV is almost fully drained before abusing the company charge point. At most he is costing the company $20/day. Not insignificant, mind you, but it's not ripping the company off for thousands of dollars a year like this line of argument typically makes it sound like.

      If the company was really interested in promoting alternative energy, they'd install solar along with their EV charge points. Bonus: Any power not going to the vehicles offsets the company's own utility bills... and if you're actually paying $1/kWh then a solar installation will pay itself off pretty damn quick.

      Loss of power will force you to miss the charging cycle and call for a taxicab next morning. That won't be free.

      Assuming you needed an absolutely full charge to make it to work, anyway. Personally, with my usage I'd only need to charge every three or four days if I reliably got 80 miles per charge. Of course if you have a significant power outage lasting several days, getting gasoline might be difficult since gas stations need electricity too...

      . In a Leaf you may be watching the needle to go all the way to zero, and then lights dim and the car is off, surrounded by thousands of other cars. What you are going to do? There isn't enough power even for blinking emergency lights.

      Morbo says: "Electric cars do not work that way!"

      Seriously... if you're not going anywhere you aren't using any power. If you're not using any power you're not going to deplete the battery. There is no EV equivalent to idling the engine. The only exception would be climate control loads, which only "cost" you about 1.5 mile of range per hour to operate at full power (5kW). All other systems, such as lights and radio and the computer, run off of a fairly typical 12 volt lead acid battery.

      The LEAF, at least, gives you at least three warnings and offers two levels of reduced power operation (one of them optional, one automatic). If you're worried, turn the AC down. Everything else uses so little power compared to the battery capacity it's not worth thinking about.

      Plans change, and even if I didn't intend to go somewhere I might have to do that. A single phone call can change all that. A Leaf is OK only if you are fully in control of all your plans. This rarely happens. Real life requires a car that can be fueled (with gas or electrons) quickly enough and easily enough. A trip to the airport (50 miles one way) will leave the Leaf stranded.

      Maybe, maybe not. No doubt current EVs have these types of limitations. There is absolutely a wide range of usage scenarios where the LEAF is a perfect fit. For others, it could be a Volt or a Prius. These ranges overlap so it's going to take a case by case consideration. For me, a LEAF would work great - 99.9% of the time I could drive one carefree, and for those sudden n

    77. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      Yep.

      So GLAD that we the US taxpayers spent a load of $$ to try to force this thing down our own necks.

      Yep, the feds know more about marketing and markets that we do in the private sector.....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    78. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      Err...aren't both the Volt the the Prius hybrid cars...gas and electric???

      I mean..the Volt only goes about what...26 miles on electric alone before the gas engine has to kick in?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    79. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      It's a credit, not a deduction, so you get the $7500 regardless. Take my word as someone who bought a Leaf and is in the process of filling out the tax forms.

      Great...

      So, the rest of us US taxpayers are subsidizing you to buy a car??

      Ok...time to start over from scratch on taxes....this is BS.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    80. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      You know.....most people, like myself, that could afford a $40K car....aren't worried about gas prices.

      Hell, put a few more $$'s with that $40K and you can get a Vette or a used Porsche Cayman...and have something FUN to drive....that doesn't look fugly.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    81. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, first of all we're ALL buying Volts because of the giant government incentive. 2nd of all the car's biggest customer is GE who pays 0 tax in addition and its CEO (who makes 15M/yr) is Obama's "chairman of the Council on Jobs and Competitiveness". It's a deficit creating product bought by cronies.

    82. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Compared to the Prius and Leaf, the Volt is actually a pretty decent-looking car IMO. But yeah, add another $10k and you've got a Vette (except that that number is probably more like $17500 since you don't get a $7500 tax credit with the Vette). Even if you think of it as costing $32500, that's still pretty high for an economy car that, as another poster said, has the power and fit and finish of a $20k car, and even at $10/gallon, it'd take a lot of gas to make up that $12500 difference.

    83. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by tftp · · Score: 1

      Just a couple of random comments here.

      At most he is costing the company $20/day. Not insignificant, mind you, but it's not ripping the company off for thousands of dollars a year like this line of argument typically makes it sound like.

      The last large place where I worked at had about 2,000 employees working in about 5 buildings on the campus. $20 x 2000 = $40K per day, or $10.4 million per year (5 days per week.) That's not a chump change, it's a serious accounting matter.

      On that subject, the corporate beancounters will point out, instantly, that they can't write this off as overhead because this is a direct benefit to the employee. This will have to be counted as salary even if the CEO is crazy about green and is willing to spread the dough. He can't. If he does, some VP with a career interest will make it known, since the CEO can't run the company from prison. Solar doesn't help either, unless it's employees who pony the cash up and rent the land that the panels are sitting on. (That large company has installed solar panels at another site, actually.)

      The main criticism of the charger network is it takes a good amount of time to recharge: the current "quick" charge gets you from 0 to 80% in about 45 minutes.

      EVSE stations (or whatever does a quick charge) at a mall of any size will take care of that. 45 minutes is barely enough to order and carefully eat a sandwich or a pizza, or to browse a couple of stores, or to buy some groceries.

      I can agree that it shouldn't be your daily routine to charge there - it will be more expensive in all aspects. However this could alleviate the range problem because that problem is a sure deal killer. As I was commenting on Leaf I went to the Nissan Web site and used their Google Maps thingy to plot a couple of my typical routes. One was about 30 miles, but with a climb of 2,000' at the end. I was unable to ascertain the effect of elevation on the range. One Leaf owner says this:

      I have observed that climbing 0.5 miles up (and 10 miles forward) is about equivalent to 50 flat miles.

      I need to go 0.37 miles up and about 3 miles horizontally - so let's say I'll waste 20 miles of range on that. Then my combined trip will be at least 50 miles, with minimum range specified as 68 miles. This is cutting close. A charger somewhere might be a requirement. (Not that I'm considering Leaf seriously, I sometimes travel a couple hundred miles per day.)

      My other trip was 58 miles, with elevation of 1,000' at the other end. This makes it closer to 90 miles - basically at the far end of the range with all other factors being favorable (weather, daytime, no detours.)

      Assuming you own a fairly typical midsize type car, imagine you wake up every morning with a quarter tank of gas. If stopping at a gas station is not on your "absolutely must do today" list...

      It is. It means that there is about 2.5 gallons of gas in the tank. Within 50 miles the last fuel bar will start blinking. I may travel 50 miles today. I don't want to find myself in need of refueling when I can't easily afford that. It makes sense to fuel the car up when it is easy to do.

      Running low on gas also means that the fuel pump is not getting proper cooling. It also means that the tilt of the car (as you go up or down some ramp) may affect the gas pickup - and you don't want any air in that pump.

      A 1/4 of a tank in most cars amounts to 80-100 miles of range. This is enough for vast majority of the population (modulo my habits of sleeping, eating and fueling whenever you can because you may not get the chance later.) The Leaf does about the same; but the comparison is not accurate because a gas car can be fueled under 3 minutes nearly anywhere, with no fuss. Charging of an EV is a far bigger deal. As I said, if you must then you wait 45 minutes; but of course it's preferrable to not wait at all.

      To be p

    84. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by loshwomp · · Score: 1

      So, the rest of us US taxpayers are subsidizing you to buy a car??

      Shh, nobody tell him about how *all* cars are massively subsidized (along with their fuel) in the USA.

    85. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by loshwomp · · Score: 1

      Nighttime EV chargers are connected to a residential distribution grid, implemented as overhead wires and transformers on poles.

      No need to be Chicken Little about this. An EV is a 2-4 kW load when charging. On the order of an electric dryer or a pool pump. People add loads this size all the time, and utility companies deal with the incremental loads.

      However power companies are interested in pushing EV users into the far more expensive day rates.

      I'd ask for references to back up that assertion but I know you don't have them. The grid is already loaded more heavily during the day, and utility companies are highly motivated to use the existing grid as efficiently as possible. Adding new capacity (to handle mid-day peaks that only occur a few times per year) is enormously expensive.

      Around here we have low nighttime rates that are favorable to EVs, and the utility (PG&E) strongly encourages their (optional) adoption if you regularly charge an EV.

      IMO, the EV charger network needs to be built.

      Spoken like a true armchair EV driver. Virtually all charging happens at home, where it's (by far) cheapest and most convenient.

      I personally would be very uncomfortable on a freeway if I'm low on charge and there is an accident far ahead and nobody knows how soon it can be cleared.

      Seriously? The car uses negligible energy when it's not moving.

    86. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      When you lease a vehicle, the lessor is effectively the purchaser of the vehicle. Why should they not get the credit? And since they save money through the credit, they pass the savings on to you as incentive. Either way, the one who sees the financial benefit is the one leasing the vehicle.
      =Smidge=

    87. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      That's not a chump change, it's a serious accounting matter.

      So you honestly think that every single employee is going to be an EV owner, and they're all going to be bilking the company for all it's worth? I'm neither so optimistic for the first part nor so pessimistic for the second part.

      Running low on gas also means that the fuel pump is not getting proper cooling...

      You are totally overthinking this as a concept...

      A 1/4 of a tank in most cars amounts to 80-100 miles of range. .. The Leaf does about the same

      Yes, that's the point of the analogy

      but the comparison is not accurate because a gas car can be fueled under 3 minutes nearly anywhere, with no fuss.

      Hence the stipulations "absolutely must refuel today" and "at least consider an EV" - I'm well aware that just because ~80 miles may easily cover a typical day that you might need more on occasion. It's just a rule of thumb to see if you can immediately rule out an EV for consideration, not a definitive guide.
      =Smidge=

    88. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by arth1 · · Score: 1

      There are far more electric and/or hybrid cars out there than Prius, Volt and Tesla. For some reason, American dealers seem to be restricted in what they can carry - is there some sort of control by the car manufacturers that prevent dealers from also selling other brands beside the main brands? Where are the Citroens, Peugeots, Renaults? Why can't I buy a Toyota Auris, or a Fiat 500 EV?

      I looked into getting a Honda liquified gas-powered car, but the nearest fueling station is 50 miles away, and there's only _one_ in this side of the state. Thanks to the free market, no one will start selling gas gas until the customers are there, and the customers won't be there until they can buy the fuel. A good example of why reactionary capitalism doesn't always work well, and proactive regulation might be a good thing. Require that gas stations of a certain size sell both gas, diesel, propane and electricity, subsidize their investments, and people will start buying the cars too. And the gas station owners will make money. But no one wants to be first.

    89. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by arth1 · · Score: 1

      At a guess, I would think he runs air conditioning a lot more than you do.
      Personally, I think 72F is a comfortable temperature, but for some(?) reason, many people in the South-West seem to like their indoor temperature around 60-65F, and are willing to pay quite a lot to make it so. Add that most houses in the south aren't insulated the way houses up North are, so they leak cold.

      I have no problems believing that people use more electricity. But I'm sure that many of them could reduce the bill quite substantially by insulating their houses, use doors between rooms, and stop thinking 72F indoors is unbearably hot when they think 72F outdoors is nice and cool.

    90. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      It's a credit, not a deduction, so you get the $7500 regardless. Take my word as someone who bought a Leaf and is in the process of filling out the tax forms.

      Sorry, but that's not what "credit" means to the IRS. Credit means you get a dollar-for-dollar discount on your tax due, whereas deductions mean you get less than a dollar-for-dollar discount. However, tax credits are divided into 2 types: refundable credits and non-refundable credits. A refundable credit means that even if you owe no tax, you still get the full amount of the credit. This is what you are thinking of. However, there are also non-refundable credits, which means the credit can be used to reduce taxes owed, but can NEVER*** be used to get back more than you payed.

      The tax credit for these vehicles is filed on IRS form 8936. Reading the instructions from that form (http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8936.pdf), the credit is non-refundable:

      If you cannot use part of the personal portion of the credit because of the tax liability limit, the unused credit is lost. The unused personal portion of the credit cannot be carried back or forward to other tax years.

      So no, even though you are currently in the process of filling out the forms, I won't take your word for. But I will suggest that you might want to double check that you filled out the forms correctly. If you used this credit to get back more than you payed***, then you filled out the forms wrong.

      *** Note that since refundable credits are applied after non-refundable credits, it can APPEAR that a non-refundable credit gives you back more than you paid if you add it in after first figuring your taxes without it. However, that's not really the case. The non-refundable first gives you a credit up to the amount of tax liability (giving you back exactly what you already paid, but not a penny more) and THEN your refundable credits are applied giving you back money beyond what you already paid.

    91. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by loshwomp · · Score: 1

      GM [...] had a viable electric car 15 years ago.

      Don't misunderstand me--I'm a strong EV proponent, I work in the industry, and I'm no fan of GM--but the EV "community" has repeated this half truth until it's become "fact". The dirty little secret about the EV-1 is that the variable cost to produce one was about $200,000 (and the fully amortized cost was over $1M/unit). EV-1 fanboys like to talk about how many people wanted to buy the (lease-only) cars, but if you put a fair price tag on it, a lot of hands go down.

      Was the EV-1 a fun car to drive? Yep, sure was. Did it also have plenty of flaws that the EV "community" likes to gloss over? Affirmative.

      It was a pretty stupid PR move for GM to crush the cars (particularly in retrospect) but I am entirely sympathetic to GM for not wanting to continue production on a huge money loser.

    92. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Edmunds says the Volt has the nicest and highest-quality interior they've seen in a Chevy

      GM always knew that the Volt would be an expensive vehicle, purchased by the eco-elite as a green status symbol, not a mass market vehicle. This despite strenuous efforts by the Obama administration to portray the Volt as the "car of the future" for ordinary Americans, no doubt as part of an attempt to justify the auto-bailouts and pander to union auto workers. It was widely panned by the critics who correctly predicted that the vehicle would never be as popular as the Toyota Prius, which by the way has also been of relatively limited consumer interest when compared to sales of conventional vehicles (all hybrids, including Volt, Prius and all others supposedly represent less than 3% of vehicles driven on American roads). As for the $7,500 tax credit, it really irks me to see my tax dollars spent to subsidize rich people who want an eco-chic toy. I can tell you paying a bit less tax would be a huge help to me right now after nearly four years of Obama and this miserable economy. Instead, I have to watch smug limousine liberals drive around in their Volts. If they had any sympathy remaining for the common man, who's interests they always claim to represent, they wouldn't apply for the tax credit or they would donate it to the poor instead.

    93. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Spoke · · Score: 1

      A true EV like the Leaf can go farther, but 1) the Leaf is slow as shit, and tiny too

      The LEAF is not much slower than the Volt - 0-60 is 9-10 seconds or so, Volt is a second faster at most. The LEAF actually beats the Volt to 30 mph.

      If you're comparing the LEAF to the Volt, the LEAF is much roomier inside. It can seat 5 (only 4 in the Volt) and a good amount of space in the hatch. As far as overall size - it's the size of your typical hatchback - really medium sized unless you're comparing it to a full-size sedan or a medium/large SUV.

      But the real one to beat is of course the Prius, which is downright reasonable at only $23k, though it doesn't have a plug-in option. There is a different Prius model just now coming out, with limited availability, that's a plug-in, but it costs $32k, a whopping $9k more than the regular version, though again the $7500 tax credit probably applies here; don't know if you can get that credit with the regular Prius but I doubt it.

      The Prius plug-in only qualifies for a $2500 federal tax credit - the credit is based on the size of the battery and the Prius plug-in has a tiny one good for about 11 miles of EV range per charge. There really is not much difference in the price of the Prius plug-in and Volt similarly equipped after tax credits.

      The Prius plug-in with it's 50 mpg can't be beat for long trips. But for your average driving the Volt will use a lot less gas.

    94. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Raenex · · Score: 1

      As for the $7,500 tax credit, it really irks me to see my tax dollars spent to subsidize rich people who want an eco-chic toy. I can tell you paying a bit less tax would be a huge help to me right now after nearly four years of Obama and this miserable economy.

      If paying a "bit less" in tax would help you, then the idea that this tax credit is actually affecting you is a joke. Taxes have not gone up.

    95. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      1. Yes, I agree...all subsidies should go.

      2. No....there should be no subsidies.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    96. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      How are they subsidized directly by my tax dollars (state or federal)?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    97. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) the Leaf is slow as shit ... you're getting a smaller, slower car with probably a cheaper and more econobox-like interior

      Spoken like a person who has never driven a LEAF.

      The LEAF is quite quick, and is larger then the Volt.

    98. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      then the idea that this tax credit is actually affecting you is a joke. Taxes have not gone up.

      Taxes are high enough already and seeing the government hand out $7,500 checks to wealthy people to finance what is essentially a luxury purchase is obscene.

    99. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      You addressed it, but I think you missed something: having a second car has its own costs. Now, instead of paying for insurance for one vehicle, you're paying double

      Most UK households have two cars now, and I'd be surprised if the US was much different. Being on my mum's car's insurance as a named driver (so I can drive it when I want, it just isn't my primary car) costs me about £20/year.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    100. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The Prius has a clever solution to this. It has a vacuum flask that hot coolant is pumped into when the car is stopped, and then when you re-start it the coolant is pumped out again to instantly warm the engine up.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    101. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by guitardood · · Score: 1

      Uh, I believe what he was saying was that you are a retarded bloating pin head.

      --
      -- L8R, guitardood
    102. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is enough to get me to and from the commuter train 3 days before needing a recharge or 10 miles further than a round trip to the local Amtrak Northeast Corridor station with free EV charging with paid parking.

      Ah, I love living in the Northeast.

    103. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Auris is the Matrix here. And I'm sure the 500 EV is coming. I thought I saw something about it. As for Peugeot and Renault, they have forever scarred the American consciousness with the crapwagons they sold in the past, restricting them to only work in partnership with brands still tolerated over here. Doesn't Peugeot own Nissan now? Finally save yourself some time and search Google news for "GM Citroen". The cars for sale in each market share parts from both.

    104. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by aurispector · · Score: 1

      Very true. A competitive free market is the most efficient. Government meddling with the best of intentions always results in unforeseen consequences.

      Look at the entire mortgage industry collapse; the big push by barney frank & friends to "make housing more affordable" ignored the most basic economic fact of all: people who don't have a lot of money simply can't afford expensive things like houses. The influx of cheap, easy fannie mae home loans merely inflated prices, resulting in the biggest collapse since the great depression.

      The private sector needs to lead; government intervention should be limited to keeping markets free and competitive.

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
    105. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cost of Volt ownership today is absolutely on par with similar vehicles. The total of what comes out of my pocket is what I would have to spend on a 22k conventional vehicle (This is the case for anybody that drives less than 40 miles/day (15,000 miles/yr), has a access to 110 plug, and reasonable electricity prices). But it is silly to compare it to those - the fit, finish, technology package, sporty performance, handling, and ridiculously quiet environment are head and shoulders above. You really need to be in a $30k entry level sport luxury car to get the same package (think acura tsx or audi 3). I know it is built on a cruze platform, but it has different suspension, interior, technology and of course radically different engine system and transmission. Acura has done the same thing with honda platforms and nobody questions that value.

      As for comparison to Prius, leaf, etc. - Those look, feel and drive like econo cars - nothing wrong with that, but if you enjoy driving a car and want something more than just basic transportation (and just can't afford or wait for a tesla model s), there is nothing else close to the volt. It is a "fun" car to drive, and that simply can't be said for the others. A certain percentage of the population buys with just basic transportation in mind, but looking at most cars on the road, that is obviously not the rule. So if you are in the market for a car that is not bland, gets a lot of attention, and is genuinly fun to drive in the $20-30k range, then you are doing yourself a disservice by not checking out a volt.

      Government subsidy - bottom line is that the goverment spends a lot of mony encouraging certain behaviors. You get a tax credit if you install a new water heater or heat pump (30% of the cost - way more benefit for those manufacturers. Are we boycotting them?). Oil companies get $4 billion per YEAR in subsidies for finding and drilling for new oil whereas the electric vehicle credit for the Volt only has the potential of reaching $450 million. I get it - we need oil for our current way of life. But it makes no sense to bet everything on one technology (that we know for an absolute fact has a limited life). what the hell is our plan as world demand causes prices to go up and up - there is no amount of domestic production that will insulate us in the long run (even in the short run...). The Volt has the potential to be part of a solution.

      I have owned a Volt for 3 weeks now and driven about 700 miles on 1/2 gallon of gas. I expect to fill up once this year and my average spend per mile will be around 3.5 cents (compared to 18 cents on an average car at todays gas prices). You dont have to like the car (it is certainly a little different), but if you can get beyond the politics, it is more than just a curiosity, it is a fantastic car for people that want/need a "nice, sporty" car and who drive 40 miles per day.

    106. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with #2, it is just a very good ICE as it only on par with some of the other very good cars. A few beat it in absolute mpg, but only a handful and those generally have some significant tradeoffs. But yeah, your not buying this car for ICE performance.

      As far as #1, it is a GREAT EV vehicle, If you want a fun driving, 4 passenger, with the ability to occasioanlly go on long trips, there is nothing else on the market (at least until tesla ships a model s, and that is significantly more $$)

    107. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      Uh...yes, in the world of vehicle manufacturing sales of 10000 per year == death of that particular model. Americans derive some identity from their vehicles. I don't want part of my identity being derived from a Volt or any small shitty car for that matter. I need one that says, smart, sexy, sophisticated, refined, when I pull up. Two job applicants pull into the parking lot; one has a big black Benz and the other a Volt. You decide.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    108. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      That tax credit is getting gobbled up by the manufacture. Not what the credit is for, or is it?

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    109. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      Southern Ohio here. In my area just about everyone had their electric bill doubled recently. In the poor communities it has caused some serious problems for some people. I can imagine the thought of a plug-in electric vehicle being a real turn-off for others.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    110. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is NOT a $20K car.

    111. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that the lessor is a bank or leasing company is why they should not get the credit. A limited number of tax credits were made available to benefit American citizens having difficulty affording the high prices of hybrids and electric vehicles. It was not intended to lower the inventory costs for the finance arms of the manufacturers to carry inventory for three years while they wait for someone to buy the now-used car.

      And as lessee, you are not effectively the purchaser. You are expressly not the purchaser, which is the whole point of leasing. All you are doing is covering inventory maintenance expenses and depreciation while the manufacturer waits for someone to actually buy the car. It's that person, if there is one, who should be able to redeem that credit, because they're the ones actually increasing the adoption of such vehicles.

      As a lessor or a lessee, you aren't fulfilling the purpose of the credit, which is to offset the cost of buying alternative vehicles for American citizens, not to pad the pockets of banks and accelerate depreciation of the used vehicles. The person after the lease who goes to buy the car is robbed of a benefit enjoyed by the leasing company or bank and wasted on someone who drove a car around for a few years to use at a lower payment, which ultimately does nothing to promote the adoption of alternative fuel vehicles.

      This is all tangential to the core point, however, that your economic analysis of cost savings is flawed.

    112. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Totally agree. I only have one complaint about the Volt: I don't have $40,000 to spend on a small vehicle.

    113. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      If you think I should hire you because of your choice of automobile, especially if you consider your car to be part of your identity rather than the simple transportation it actually is, I'd never hire you. I'd prefer to hire someone not quite so stupid.

    114. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Taxes are high enough already...

      Federal taxes are lower than any time since Truman was President.

      ...and seeing the government hand out $7,500 checks to wealthy people to finance what is essentially a luxury purchase is obscene.

      I agree with that wholeheartedly.

    115. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      My deal was on a $45,908 Volt, got it at $43,208. 3yr 12k mi/yr, $3500 down, $369/mo. I'm saving about $200/mo in gas just on my daily commute to and from work. US Bank, my lessor and one of two doing the Volt deal (Ally Bank is the other), uses 45% 3yr 12kmi residual, 1.32% apr (divide by 2400 to get money factor) add the $7500 onto the residual (effectively making it 60%), and they also kick in a $2375 cap reduction. Since I own a 2009 Cobalt, Chevy tossed in another $250 loyalty rebate.

      $369 - 200 = net payment of $169/mo, for a fully loaded, 2012 Volt, Crystal Red Tintcoat ($495), with Navi/30GB HDD radio ($1995), Bose premium speaker setup ($495), Premium package (leather on all 4 seats + steering wheel, heated seats - $1395), rear view camera w/parking assist and sensors front+rear($695), 17" polished wheels ($595), Cargo Net ($45), Front Window Shade ($99), and rear seat storage/barrier ($99). Got it for $20/mo more than the base Volt, and $1000 more up-front than the base Volt, if a person just walked in like an idiot asking for the Chevy Volt national lease deal, and didn't negotiate a single penny off the MSRP. Most people don't realize that when leasing, you can STILL negotiate on the price - every 1K you get off the price on a subsidized lease, is roughly worth $20/mo off your pmt. Give or take. My $45,908 Volt should have properly leased at WELL into the 400's/month, but because I ended up with a few grand off, the monthly dropped. The car had been on the lot for a while (Super-high MSRP - with "dealer add-ons" it was $46,606, which I declined), and had a couple hundred miles, although it was not a demo.

      Is it worth $169/mo? Damn straight it is! The more I drive on EV, the more I save. My lease buyout at end is like $26-27K, and I'll probably buy it, unless battery/EV technology progresses dramatically, which it most probably will. In that case, if they have a Volt II, then I'm signing on the line again. In my case, I needed to add another car to the family anyway, so having a net monthly payment for the Volt of $169 is a freaking GIFT! And as gas prices continue to rise, and you folks continue to whine and cry, I'll be happy as sh!t in my totally completely loaded-to-the-gills Volt! The car is an absolute dream, rides like a dream, quiet as a whisper, can cruise at 80mph on the highway sans engine (until battery is depleted), and is comfortable as hell.

    116. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the residual is effectively 30% (you said 60%). And that's an illustration of the flaw, before the discussion went off on a tangent--that $7500 doesn't come off the top of the vehicle price, it comes in the form of a capitalized cost reduction on the back end. It's still a very good deal and a nice perk (aside from the questionable issue of whether the tax credit serves its purpose by going to the leasing company), but it doesn't work the way Smidge204 had been claiming.

      Even if the dealer gives you the full $7500 (which I agree they should if they're claiming it for themselves), it doesn't make the car "effectively" $7500 cheaper. All of the other numbers in the calculation are based on the negotiated capital cost (i.e., the MSRP minus any incentives and negotiated discounts at the dealer level). The $7500 comes into play later in the equation, and its overall value is therefore somewhat less than $7500.

      With the numbers posited in Smidge's hypothetical, the numbers just don't work out in his favor as he initially suggested. Comparing against a more expensive gasser or against a lengthier commute might have changed that, but he was responded to a post talking about the fact that the payments on a $20,000 car and the cost of fuel would still be less than the payments alone on a Volt, which is true for a large number of people.

      Clearly for you, with a much greater commute and the various unique perks of the deal you found, it works out great, though there is nothing so alarmingly special about that deal that it can't be replicated in other vehicles. There are, for example, a number of cars priced in the low 20s that have special lease deals at $159-169/month with less money down than you used. That's outright price. If they spend less than $200/month on fuel, they're still coming up ahead of where you are, even with your various perks and discounts. That's the fundamental flaw--for someone seeking the most basic transportation over typical commutes, hybrids remain overpriced and will remain so at least until gas breaks $7-8/gallon.

    117. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Nope... perhaps the outskirts have different rates than the city proper? Don't know what the total usage is, but an all-electric house takes a tremendous amount of power. Electric water heater, electric kitchen, electric laundry, heat pumps with emergency heating elements.

      ...rooms full of arc lamps, apparently...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    118. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Seriously... if you're not going anywhere you aren't using any power.

      I thought of that, but then I thought about it happening on a cold night. You're going to need the heater, the blower, and the lights. The blower and the lights will consume ~200W on a typical car, I doubt they could have squeezed it down below 100W. If you're sitting there for hours, which is not impossible, it will be an issue.

      Maybe EVs should come with an emergency chemical heater :)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    119. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Blaming Obama and Liberals is hilarious. Yes, the things that harm jobs usually happen while the Democrats are in office. But when the Republicans are in office, they only engage in pork scams which, if they produce jobs, do so only by coincidence. You're offtopic and flamebaiting as a result. I'm just offtopic :p

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    120. Re:Slashdot Suspending Editing by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      You quoted me three sentences too early.

      The only exception would be climate control loads, which only "cost" you about 1.5 mile of range per hour to operate at full power (5kW).

      Plus heated seats and steering wheel would allow for cooler, more energy efficient cabin temperatures.
      =Smidge=

  2. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by darkHanzz · · Score: 1

    Aren't Fords made in the US ? The ford focus is quite a nice and fairly popular car.
    And the Crown Victoria is awesome of course, just a bit expensive at the gas station :-)

  3. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by zach_the_lizard · · Score: 1

    Hyundai, BMW, Toyota, Honda, etc. all have plants in America. So we have those, at least. Apart from that, the coolest American car is probably the Tesla Roadster. Maybe a Jeep.

    --
    SSC
  4. 7671 by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 4, Funny

    Anyway, 7671 volts is more than they used in an electric chair.
    The lawyers saw this number and stopped production: a customer might get hurt and sue...

    --
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
  5. Simpler than that by Kupfernigk · · Score: 4, Insightful
    One of the reviews summarised it as:

    Less economical than a Prius

    Not as good as a Prius

    Costs more than a Prius

    Buy a Prius.

    To use a reverse car analogy, it's Motorola Xoom to iPad2.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:Simpler than that by Dunega · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Buy a Yaris and actually save gas and money.

    2. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      TROLLOLOL

      The Xoom is objectively better than the ipad2. The only (and quite legitimate, don't get me wrong) reason to buy the ipad line is because you like iOS better than Android.

      I've used both, and prefer the Xoom only because I can develop on it for free. Usage wise, while I prefer Android over iOS, I see nothing that 1 can do that the other can't.

    3. Re:Simpler than that by Entropius · · Score: 1

      I've got one, and it's a great car. Cheap, reliable, great gas mileage, and handles shitty dirt roads a lot better than you'd expect. Now if it only had a built-in defense against ghetto folk tossing rocks through the windows...

    4. Re:Simpler than that by russotto · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Buy a Yaris and actually save gas and money.

      Too bad the Yaris is also a piece of shit, retaining Toyota's dumb idea from the Echo. I mean, if the driver is sitting on the left, shouldn't the instrument panel also be on the left? Putting it in the center may make it easier to produce for both left and right-hand-drive markets, but it's terrible for actual driving.

    5. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the yaris's instrument panel is on the left.
      It's the prius that has a center instrument panel

    6. Re:Simpler than that by silverhalide · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You can't compare the Volt to the Prius. Reviewers who do so are technically incompetent and dishonest.

      If you go by just putting gas in the thing, then yes, the Prius comes out favorably. If you compare a Corvette to a minivan by how many passengers you can haul in it, yes, it sucks.

      You're not supposed to regularly put gas in the Volt. If you are, you're using it wrong.

      The Prius is a gasoline-only hybrid (ignoring the new short-range plug-in version this year which only goes 8-11 miles on a charge or half a typical commute). The Volt is an extended-range electric vehicle.

      The Volt is a new class of vehicle. You plug it in regularly, and ideally you almost never put any gas in it. The Prius doesn't do that.

      So if you don't want to plug in your car and you want to keep using gas, yes, buy that Prius.

    7. Re:Simpler than that by bzipitidoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This!

      Hybrids are all the rage. But they really aren't that green. Batteries use metals that can be difficult to obtain and energy intensive to produce. They take far too long to recharge. And then they don't last. Pure electric would be the way to go if we had decent batteries, by which I mean batteries that approach the convenience of the humble gas tank. So we have this hybrid approach which uses both gas and electricity in combination. And it still needs a bit of battery capacity. All the expense, trouble and weight of both kinds of drive in one package!

      As if battery troubles aren't bad enough, a conventional gas powered direct drive vehicle is quite capable of beating the fuel economy of a hybrid. There's lots of low hanging fruit that manufacturers are still ignoring. They are finally improving transmissions, putting in more gears and dumping that huge, huge waste of gas known as the torque converter. Took them long enough, and there's plenty more. Aerodynamics could so easily be much better. Instant on/off for the gas engine would save big time, and erase the one big advantage hybrids do have: the better city fuel economy. Put up with bad batteries, and then not even get better fuel economy?!

      The Yaris is a start, but it is only a start.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    8. Re:Simpler than that by spire3661 · · Score: 0

      God forbid you pay $99/yr dev costs......Its such a burden i know... Lets see your Xoom do Airplay or Airprint or anything even closely equivalent.

      --
      Good-bye
    9. Re:Simpler than that by KreAture · · Score: 2

      True, but I still say they went wrong when copying the rediculous gearbox system of the prius making governments doubt it was indeed electrical drive only.
      The power-generator should have been a seperate pluggable module so one could swap it out for a hydrocarbon or pure hydrogen fuel-cell later. Or, even with something completely unknown at this time. A micro-turbine generator would be fun.
      It was really disappointing to learn they used an insane gearbox solution.

      What I really want is a car based on the Michelin active-wheel and with a range-extension module that can be replaced as technology improves.
      I would expect to have the car for almost 15 years, and replace that module every 5.

    10. Re:Simpler than that by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That comparison will become more realistic when the Prius Plug-In comes to market this year. And it will become a complicated comparison. The Prius Plug-In has a rather short electric-only range (11 miles vs. 35 miles in the Volt as measured by EPS, according to Wikipedia). So

      -if you daily commute is short enough that the 11 miles will do, you can compare by price and consumption of electric power. Neither car will need fuel.

      -if you drive more than 11 miles per day, but have the option to recharge over night, the Volt might come out favorably.

      -if you drive hundreds of miles between recharging, you might want a diesel instead of a plug-in hybrid. ;-)

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    11. Re:Simpler than that by RigrmRtis · · Score: 1

      Or: Handles better than a Prius Has more power than a Prius For most folks, burns less foreign oil than a Prius. Has a much better trim level than a Prius. Doesn't look like you're driving a wedge like a Prius. Buy a..... Prius? Why buy a Prius when you could buy a bicycle? That's even less expensive and even more reliable. Uses a lot less gas too.

    12. Re:Simpler than that by creepynut · · Score: 1

      Funny, my 2008 Yaris has the instrument panel in the dead center. The Echo had it that way too except it was turned slightly towards the driver. I actually like it that way, gives me a glove box behind the steering wheel and the steering wheel can't block the gauges. Driving other cars that has been a problem for me.

      They moved it behind the steering wheel for the 2012 model.

      Back to the OP comparing the Yaris to the Prius, I don't think that's a fair comparison. The Prius is a larger, roomier, comfier car. If you're looking at a Yaris you don't choose a Prius to save gas.

    13. Re:Simpler than that by silverhalide · · Score: 2

      They actually went right with this solution.

      The planetary drive is actually really similar to the Prius gearbox and is quite an elegant proven solution. It allows for higher efficiency when running in the gas-only discharged state (since you are avoiding an unnecessary mechanical->electrical->mechanical energy conversion), and also doubles as a CVT so you lose your manual-gear-select transmission and save lots of weight. Weight is your #1 killer for efficiency. You also get higher peak performance as you can bring in the gas engine in a wide-open throttle emergency acceleration situation. You have the power available, why not use it when you really need it? Still, the vehicle runs EV-only under normal driving conditions which is brilliant.

      You won't see active wheel technology on the road for a long time, if ever. The extra weight on the wheels makes the ride and handling on these vehicles really lousy and most consumers won't accept that.

    14. Re:Simpler than that by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      Thank you, at least someone understands the proper comparisons around here.

      Things will get interesting because the definition of what "fits your needs" will become very complex, which will spawn an interesting market of EREVs optimized for different market segments until the battery technology gets to a point where we're all humming along for 200 miles on a charge.

    15. Re:Simpler than that by Macman408 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Hybrids are all the rage. But they really aren't that green. Batteries use metals that can be difficult to obtain and energy intensive to produce. They take far too long to recharge. And then they don't last. Pure electric would be the way to go if we had decent batteries, by which I mean batteries that approach the convenience of the humble gas tank. So we have this hybrid approach which uses both gas and electricity in combination. And it still needs a bit of battery capacity. All the expense, trouble and weight of both kinds of drive in one package!

      As if battery troubles aren't bad enough, a conventional gas powered direct drive vehicle is quite capable of beating the fuel economy of a hybrid. There's lots of low hanging fruit that manufacturers are still ignoring. They are finally improving transmissions, putting in more gears and dumping that huge, huge waste of gas known as the torque converter. Took them long enough, and there's plenty more. Aerodynamics could so easily be much better. Instant on/off for the gas engine would save big time, and erase the one big advantage hybrids do have: the better city fuel economy. Put up with bad batteries, and then not even get better fuel economy?!

      There's so much hybrid misinformation and hate out there...
      The NiMH batteries are highly recyclable and are very reliable (my hybrid has a 10-year/150,000-mile warranty on the battery). Yes, a car that you plan to keep for 20 years is likely to need a battery replacement; these are often taken from totaled vehicles at a significantly reduced cost compared to a new battery, and total costs are no more expensive than the expected maintenance for a non-hybrid of similar age.

      Plug-in hybrids are great, because you can charge them whenever you have the opportunity, but you don't need to. The Prius plug-in can be recharged in under 3 hours from a regular 120V outlet, or in 90 minutes from a 240-volt outlet. And if you can't recharge, you still get 50 mpg. Obviously, plug-ins with a longer range need longer to recharge. Pure EVs are good for some people, but not all. They're often a reasonable choice for a family's second car, so they still have one car that can be used for road trips. Alternately, some people realize that the frequency of needing to drive 100+ miles at a time is low enough that they can just rent a car.

      If a conventional commercial gas vehicle can beat a commercial hybrid, why don't they? Instant on/off is a start, sure, but doesn't buy a huge amount of fuel economy. It also requires a beefier 12V battery and a bigger alternator/starter motor. On a hybrid, there doesn't have to be a separate alternator/starter motor; it can just use the same electric motor it uses for propulsion. And city economy isn't just bad because of idling; a huge amount of energy is wasted in braking. How often do you accelerate from a red light, just in time to hit the next red light? In my area, because the lights are not timed, that happens to me all the time. Timing the lights to each other would help, but is impossible to do on every street. Most cities do it on one or two major roads (I've heard all of San Francisco has only 6 timed streets). So any time you brake, you're wasting huge amounts of energy, unless you can recover that somehow. That's what hybrids do.

      Hybrids aren't perfect, but given today's technology, they're often one of the better choices. When the day comes that vehicles can all drive themselves (and be programmed to do so efficiently, and communicate with each other), it would be very possible to make a conventional vehicle that meets the current economy of hybrids, and we can revisit this topic.

    16. Re:Simpler than that by danlock4 · · Score: 1

      Hybrids are all the rage. But they really aren't that green.

      I'll take that idea and run with it. The hybrids will get you to second base, even if they're long in the tooth or strike out once in a while while being raked over the coals. After all, you're not out scout until after the third strike, after which touching base is no longer feasible. Dry as a dead dingo's donger and cold as a witch's tit, the "green" hybrids seem a little blue, no matter how far out or groovy they seem, know what I mean?

      --
      To .sig or not to .sig, that is the question.
    17. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go lick Steve's cold snatch, faggot.

    18. Re:Simpler than that by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      The Volt is an extended-range electric vehicle.

      If it truly had an "extended range" by any useful definition, people wouldn't be trying to compare it with the Prius. The fact of the matter is that it is a half-assed compromise between a proper hybrid and a proper EV, with all the disadvantages of both.

      The Chevy Volt's battery-only range is a paltry 25-50 miles, which in the worst case is less than twice the battery-only range for a Prius. If you drain the battery to the bottom (which you probably can't before the gasoline engine kicks in to charge it back up), that means that when new, the battery will barely handle the average daily commute in the U.S. (32 miles). After a few years, you would expect a significantly lower capacity, at which point the average driver will be using the engine every day.

      I desperately want an electric vehicle. However, I would never even consider an EV with double-digit range. I want some assurance that with ten-year-old batteries, I'll still be able to get a hundred mile round trip. That means EVs will become interesting when they can get, on average, 300 miles to a charge—an order of magnitude greater than the joke of a range that the Chevy Volt can achieve. Until then, they're really just glorified hybrids, not usable EVs. Thus, it is completely fair to treat them like hybrids for review purposes.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    19. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's easier than that. No wireless, less space than a Nomad*. Lame.

      *No, not _that_ Nomad. _this_ Nomad.

    20. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's so much hybrid misinformation and hate out there..

      You really ought to stop misusing the word "hate". It diminishes the meaning, and you sound like a rap sheeple.

    21. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not nearly as fugly as a Prius.

    22. Re:Simpler than that by VoltOwner · · Score: 1

      The Volt is an extended-range electric vehicle.

      If it truly had an "extended range" by any useful definition, people wouldn't be trying to compare it with the Prius. The fact of the matter is that it is a half-assed compromise between a proper hybrid and a proper EV, with all the disadvantages of both.

      The Chevy Volt's battery-only range is a paltry 25-50 miles, which in the worst case is less than twice the battery-only range for a Prius. If you drain the battery to the bottom (which you probably can't before the gasoline engine kicks in to charge it back up), that means that when new, the battery will barely handle the average daily commute in the U.S. (32 miles). After a few years, you would expect a significantly lower capacity, at which point the average driver will be using the engine every day.

      I desperately want an electric vehicle. However, I would never even consider an EV with double-digit range. I want some assurance that with ten-year-old batteries, I'll still be able to get a hundred mile round trip. That means EVs will become interesting when they can get, on average, 300 miles to a charge—an order of magnitude greater than the joke of a range that the Chevy Volt can achieve. Until then, they're really just glorified hybrids, not usable EVs. Thus, it is completely fair to treat them like hybrids for review purposes.

      Going beyond the rated Plug-In Prius documented range of 11mi, most will probably see 14-15mi.

      The Volt is rated at 35mi - I routinely get 44-46mi, and even then, it's telling me I'm only being 75-79% efficient, as my driving style still leans towards gas engines. I'm learning as I go. people who have owned Volts for 6mos or more, have been able to get 48-52mi consistently

      On the few occasions I have used gas, after running out of battery, it's gotten me near 45mpg on the highway, cruise set to 73mph.

      It's one thing to read the BS online, and another to own and drive one daily. People can make comments, but they're commenting on what others have written, and those others don't have a clue - usually they have an agenda. I don't need to read any BS reports, and FauxNews reports - I drive one every single day, and am 110% satisfied. It has the fit and finish of a mid-grade luxury car (think IS-250 or Acura TSX) drives like mid-size sedan with 200-225hp, and has enough toys inside to keep most people satisfied and entertained.

      All I'm saying, is don't knock it until you try it. Drop by a nearby Chevy dealer, take a look at the interior, and take one for a test drive. THEN form your opinion. Until then, it's just unsubstantiated banter, because you haven't even seen one, touched one, sat inside one, or driven one. Your just going by what others are saying, and most media are just using it as a pawn in a political fight. It's not about politics. It's about one of the most technologically advanced vehicles ever put into the hands of consumers.

    23. Re:Simpler than that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually they have made conventional vehicle that do meet the economy of hybrids, we just don't hear about it.

      I've got a 2001 vw jetta tdi wagon (5 speed), my wife has a 2009 prius. I consistently average better mpg..
      The wagon is a much larger vehicle, fits the 2 kids and 2 80lb+ dogs, is MUCH quicker, and can tow 2500lb.
      It's also reliably done 275k and I fully expect to hit 500K before a rebuild is needed.

      My wife (the hybrid fan girl), is totally convinced, As soon as we can find a mk4 tdi golf at a fair price we'll sell the prius.

      It's a real shame VW is putting out such shit now, >03 they were producing vehicles the current crop still can't match by any reasonable metric,
      Not to mention my 81 rabbit, that thing will hit 60mpg, although i think it is probably not refined enough for people today.

      Also, What really strikes me when ever i visit Cali is how ridicules the utter lack of public transportation is, that is a an infrastructure problem a car is not going to fix. Here is West MA, when we want to go to NYC(for example) we take the train, or if the weather is nice we drive to Bridgeport CT and take the ferry. And our traffic isn't nearly as bad, i really can't imagine willingly driving in that every day.

    24. Re:Simpler than that by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Many days, my round-trip commute is around a hundred miles. Thus, for me, this vehicle would basically be a hybrid, running on gas about half the time. Hybrids are fine and all, but I don't want a hybrid. I want an electric vehicle, which the Chevy Volt would not be for someone like me.

      Of course, it's somewhat moot because I regularly drive on a road that has a high accident rate, so I wouldn't drive a mid-sized car even if they paid me. :-) I'm waiting for something more like the upcoming RAV4 EV, ideally with a bit better range, but it at least starts to be in the right ballpark.

      Either way, my point was not that the Chevy Volt is a bad vehicle. My point was that with low-double-digit pure-electric range, it is disingenuous to claim that it isn't effectively a hybrid or to claim that MPG on the gas engine isn't important under the dubious assumption that most people will use it as a pure EV. The range is nowhere near good enough for that.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  6. expected outcome by UncleWilly · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's kind of a do-nothing-well car for $40,000USD

    1. Re:expected outcome by Troyusrex · · Score: 2

      Exactly. I was considering buy a Volt but not only are they hideously expensive but the resale value is almost nil because the batteries need to be fully replaced after 10 years and that costs $20,000.

    2. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the batteries need to be fully replaced after 10 years and that costs $20,000.

      [Citation needed.]

    3. Re:expected outcome by Kagetsuki · · Score: 1

      Can you not use google? Hybrids have expected need for replacement at 10 to 12 years, electrics seem to be estimated at 10* but I'd bet it will be less in reality (and Chevy took that into account because they set the warranty at 8 years). This is information you can get with a simple search for "chevy volt batter replacement". If you have to write [Citation needed.] because somebody didn't write a bibliography for their post then you fail at using the internet.

      *assuming they don't burst into flame 2 days after you buy the damn thing.

    4. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear optimist.
      Battery technology is iffly. Honda realized their battery prediction for replacement will never be that high. Plus it's about how you use your battery too. The hypermiler using more battery charges will degrade their battery faster than the lead foot driver that constantly charge their battery using the IC engine. 10 years is a realistic number. The only way you can get 12 years life from a battery pack is if you test it in a temperature controlled environment.

    5. Re:expected outcome by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      Just like the claimed range of a Prius that dropped by 40-50% in cold temperatures. Honestly, who believes company estimates? Do you also take at face value battery life claims from laptop manufacturers?

    6. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, there has never been a Volt battery replaced yet by anyone, anywhere, for any reason related to the chemistry itself (there's a few anecdotes about sensors and electronics, all warranty covered). In fact I've yet to hear of even a Prius battery needing replacement for reasons other than collision damage. There are RAV4EVs still on the road with their original NiMH battery packs and they stopped making those a decade ago.

      People go on about battery replacement as if it's a foregone conclusion, but it's yet to actually happen.

      Meanwhile, there's an entire industry built around replacing and refurbishing engines and transmissions but nobody seems to say anything about those...

      Regarding the fire bullshit: There have only ever been two battery related fires with the Volt: One happened two weeks after a crash test at the NHTSA testing facility when the techs didn't follow post-collision safety procedures outlined by GM. Second was deliberately trying to recreate the first incident to confirm how it happened and to help engineer a fix. There has never been a single battery related fire in the wild. Only Tesla uses the explody kind of cheap, commodity lithium cells used in laptops, and they engineer the holy fuck out of their packs for safety.

      Meanwhile, another gasoline powered car bursts into flames every two minutes in this country but nobody seems to say anything about those...

    7. Re:expected outcome by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      If you have to write [Citation needed.] because somebody didn't write a bibliography for their post then you fail at using the internet.

      It is not someone else's job to check your facts. Its YOUR JOB to cite your statements.

      Otherwise, I an do this: Kagetsuki is an asshat who uses general statements with no citations to make a statement on public forums.

      See what I did there?

    8. Re:expected outcome by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      If you have to write [Citation needed.] because somebody didn't write a bibliography for their post then you fail at using the internet.

      I should save this and use it as my sig line here.

    9. Re:expected outcome by tftp · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, another gasoline powered car bursts into flames every two minutes in this country but nobody seems to say anything about those...

      About zero of those cases occur in garages, after the owner inspects the car and finds nothing wrong with it.

      However Volt's battery is delivering exactly that. A hit by a small stone on the road, or a pothole, can turn the battery into a fire hazard weeks after the incident. You park the car in the garage, go to sleep, and wake up burning. This is something that gasoline cars don't do often.

    10. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish my cell phone batteries lasted that long. Well, more than 2 years would be nice already.

    11. Re:expected outcome by kyrio · · Score: 1

      Their expectancy is less than eight years, and that's coming from the manufacturer.

    12. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's kind of a do-nothing-well car for $40,000USD

      Like most GM cars?

    13. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it years or number of charges? I have a friend whose hybrid civic just got traded in as the battery died. Cheapest available was almost 3000 dollars. This failure happened at 107k miles, which is close to 10 years on some low yearly mileage estimates. I wouldnt plan on putting high miles on anything with batteries, as the sooner you get to replacement, the sooner the dollars per mile of operation go right through the roof.

    14. Re:expected outcome by Kagetsuki · · Score: 1

      Actually what you should do is register that on Wikipedia so that when other people search for it you get a hit from a source people generally assume to be reliable.

      If you're not interested enough to check others facts then why bother asking for citation. Even if someone posts a bunch of links backing up their statements it doesn't mean they are true - that's up for you to judge. And if it's up to you to judge in the fist place you're better off NOT basing that judgement off of what someone [with an assumed bias or agenda] is providing you.

      Also it's a pain in the ass to have to provide links because someone didn't take 2 minutes to type 4 words into a search box and read the previews of the first few links.

    15. Re:expected outcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the Google, battery replacement is between $8000 and $15000, projected to hopefully fall to $3000 in 10 years. That's 25% to 80% less than your $20000 figure.

      The problem with not sourcing your post is that you look like a tool when your information source isn't obvious.

    16. Re:expected outcome by Macman408 · · Score: 1

      Expected replacement? What are you smoking?

      I'll grant you this: I expect *somebody* will need to replace their hybrid battery at 10 to 12 years. Is that an average time? Certainly not. For examples to the contrary, how about 350,000 and 500,000 km before battery replacement on some Australian taxis (the only two battery replacements in the country as of the date of the article)? And of course, the plural of "anecdote" is not "data", so here's some statistics: The first-generation Prius had a failure rate of about 1% post-warranty; they were sold in the US from 2001-2003. The second-gen Prius had a failure rate of 0.003%, probably helped by improved design after Toyota's experience on the 1st gen, and it being a newer car. Similarly, Honda reports a failure rate of 0.2%.

      My hybrid has a 10-year/150,000-mile warranty on the battery. You can bet that if the failure rate were above a couple percent by 10 years, they wouldn't be able to provide that warranty economically.

      The battery is not like your electric razor or computer, where the battery dies after a few years. They put huge amounts of engineering and testing into these things; for example, the Prius only uses about 40% of its total battery capacity - when it says "full" on the gauge, the battery is 80% charged. When it says "empty", the battery is 40% charged. By doing this, they get hundreds of thousands or millions of cycles on the battery during its lifetime. And most of the time, a "charge cycle" is just a few percent of the battery's full capacity (e.g., accelerating from a stoplight discharges it a percent or two, then stopping several blocks later puts a percent or two back in).

      Yes, a few unlucky people will have to replace their battery. But the total maintenance cost is about the same as any other vehicle. In fact, my regular maintenance is quite a bit lower than most; I change my oil once a year/10k miles. Every three years/30k, I replace the air filter. And at 10 years/100k, the coolant needs to be replaced. That's pretty much it; everything else is just the "visually inspect" or "adjust fluid levels if necessary" type stuff.

    17. Re:expected outcome by guitardood · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately that is the same expectancy of your retarded bloviating you pinhead

      --
      -- L8R, guitardood
    18. Re:expected outcome by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

      Something like that unfortunately actually happened to our old family station wagon (Oldsmobile?) around 1970. Basically, the car had issues on the trip (we might have even stopped for some repair) and the rear axle somehow eventually caused heating (sparks?) that caused the flammable rearmost seat to catch fire eventually, which happened overnight and smoked up and then burned much of the interior of the car. This happened on a long car trip to take my sister to college just after we had reached the destination. Fortunately, the car was parked outside in a hotel parking lot, and someone else at the hotel noticed the flames when they got going and they were extinguished quickly. Unfortunately, the car had all my sister's clothes and other items for starting undergrad college which had not yet been unloaded, essentially ruining them. That rough start was a contributing factor to ending her promising college career as a "doctor of tomorrow" pretty much before it got started at RPI's then new BA/MD program.
      http://www.rpi.edu/dept/bio/undergraduate/physician.html

      Although I was told much later that some harassment by an administrator there who did not think women should be doctors was probably a bigger compounding factor. I'm sure RPI is much more progressive 40 years later now. Also, I think her roommates then and some others tried to help make up some for her losing all her clothes and belongings. I was pretty young then, so I don't know all the details. But in some ways, perhaps losing a career is much worse than losing a house?

      BTW, more reasons to be cautious about tying your hopes in life to college:
      http://p2pfoundation.net/backups/p2p_research-archives/2009-October/005379.html

      And how medical programs got so bad in the first place that some women had to become pioneers again:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexner_Report
      "One of the consequences of Flexner's advocacy of university-based medical education was that medical education became much more expensive, putting such education out of reach of all but upper-class white males. The small "proprietary" schools Flexner condemned, which were contended to be have been based in generations-old folk traditions rather than relatively recent western science, did admit African-Americans, women, and students of limited financial means. These students usually could not afford six to eight years of university education, and were often simply denied admission to medical schools affiliated with universities. While many such doctors continued to practice, they did so under proscribed circumstances and for less pay. It also made it more difficult for people of color, residents of rural areas, and for those of limited means generally to obtain medical care in any form."

      We were of "limited means" then ourselves, or so I was told, so my father had to keep old cars going as best as he could.

      So, it can be true that we tend to ignore what goes wrong with older technology. Right now, people are all worried about the first time a "self-driving" car will kill someone in an accident, ignoring that 35,000 or so people are killed in the USA in car accidents every year, and maybe 1.2 million people die a year across the globe from car accidents, and self-driving vehicles will probably greatly reduce that number. One reason is especially because many accidents happen at night, and cars can use sensors to see better than people in the dark and won't fall asleep at the wheel. Also, self-driving cars can talk to each other and negotiate right of way, and so on.

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    19. Re:expected outcome by Kagetsuki · · Score: 1

      Hey I'm just going off of information I got from searches pertaining to Chevy - it's not my fault Toyota uses superior technology and engineering! But I digress, what's the use in comparing the shiny and delicious apples of Toyota to the rotten oranges of Chevy?

      And I'll have you know I'm smoking nothing - I'm currently saving up to buy a Toyota Vellfire Hybrid.

      Now somebody with points mod Macman408 Informative.

    20. Re:expected outcome by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      EXPECTED, ESTIMATED, hence [citation needed].

      WE STILL DON'T KNOW. The vehicles have not been out long enough for us to truly know the answers to these questions.

      If you have a citation that doesn't just make expectations or estimates, and deals with real world numbers, it's from the fucking future and I want to see it.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    21. Re:expected outcome by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      However Volt's battery is delivering exactly that. A hit by a small stone on the road, or a pothole, can turn the battery into a fire hazard weeks after the incident. You park the car in the garage, go to sleep, and wake up burning. This is something that gasoline cars don't do often.

      It happened to my dad's Toronado right in my driveway in Aptos around 1980. Electrical failures used to cause these kinds of problems fairly regularly. They'd put a fusible link someplace stupid wrapped in flammable insulation and WHOOM. And guess what? Still today virtually all automotive wiring is wrapped in PVC, just like the wiring in your house is by code, and when it burns, PVC releases massive amounts of toxics.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  7. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    My Crown Vic was made in Quebec. That's in the US, right?

  8. Ramping up... by It'sVersusItsGuy · · Score: 0

    1626 / 8 * 52 = 10569

    --
    - Tweaking the ears of the grammatically challenged since 2002.
    1. Re:Ramping up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they were building 60,000 for this year then it's no wonder they stopped production for the time being.

  9. EV1 lovers are MIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where are all the EV1 lovers? Claim was that people wanted electric cars...

    1. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by jo_ham · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The do, and people do.

      I don't live in the US any more, but I'm hardly unique (ie, there are people like me still there) who would really love to go electric since our driving patterns are ideally suited to having a small, quiet, economical electric car that you recharge at night at home. (DISCLAIMER: yes, I'm aware, you need to tow your boat from LA to NYC every 2 days while simultaneously carrying 8 people and their luggage and there are no charging stations on route... electric cars useless for everyone etc etc, no possible use case etc etc...)

      However, the current economics aren't making them viable - they're just too expensive at the moment but it's a chicken and egg problem since it's early generation tech and in low initial demand.

      Don't mistake slow sales of a very expensive electric vehicle as definitive proof of a lack of interest. When (if?) I can buy one for a similar cost (also factoring in fuel costs) to the 2 litre turbodiesel minivan I drive right now (53 mpg EU / 44.1 mpg US) that can easily haul 5 adults and luggage then I am sure sales will pick right up. Cracking that early adopter and economy of scale problem is not easy though. Bear in mind that I also pay around $8 per gallon for diesel in the UK and it's still cheaper than going all-electric right now (or even to hybrid).

    2. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      The Volt isn't an electric car, and that's part of the problem. It's a serial hybrid. GM's marketing has been extremely disingenuous with their claims and how they manipulate figures.

      As for the EV1 lovers, many of them are doubly miffed at GM for still not taking the electric car market seriously and producing an expensive hybrid instead. Enthusiasts have long memories.

      While Volts sit in dealer's lots gathering dust, Nissan can't produce their LEAFs fast enough. There is demand for a pure electric vehicle.
      =Smidge=

    3. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by couchslug · · Score: 1

      They are already driving a PHEV-converted Prius.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    4. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by pnewhook · · Score: 4, Informative

      While Volts sit in dealer's lots gathering dust,

      I went to the local GM dealer, and while they had one, they said it wasn't for sale. And if I wanted to buy one I'd be put on almost a year long waiting list. He basically said they were near impossible to get so dont bother right now.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    5. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not about electric cars!! It's about free money Obama distributed to a group of inner circles and unions ... of course for kickbacks!! the stupid thing for Obama is that he just went to GM last week and even touted that he would buy a Volt in 5 years after his second term!!! Very bad timing or just a curse or just pure stupid!!

    6. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by jo_ham · · Score: 0

      Amusing, but weak.

      Not bonch, never been bonch, never been anyone else.

      Your desperate reach for an ad hominem attack is telling though, although I'm not sure whether I fuck men or not is relevant to the discussion at hand. Also, you forgot to log in! Schoolboy error. How embarrassing for you!

    7. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Where do you live?

      We can blame this on GM corporate for having their heads up their asses. If what you say is true and your local dealer has such a waiting list with no on-lot inventory, then he needs to call in a complaint. Just a few weeks ago there were stories of dealers turning down deliveries because they weren't selling.
      =Smidge=

    8. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not lack of interest. I considered buying one. The cost is *HIGH*. For that money range I can buy a *NICE* 335d bmw... Which blows the doors off the volt in value (and even gives it a run in mpg).

      It is priced in the luxury market range. It is that simple. People buying in that range want a nice car. Leather, cool gadgets, etc etc etc. Most American cars look cool on the outside. Get in them they are made cheap. The fabric is cheap. The plasticy feel on everything is cheap. Hell they switched out the one thing that is usually good on American cars, the engine. Most American cars are like that. A hell of an engine wrapped in a crap car.

      So it is not selling because people dont want one. They do. Just most people do not drive expensive cars. They drive used cars or something in the 15-25k range.

      GM was stupid pricing it that high. There is a reason they went out of business a couple of years ago... They are just rinse and repeating as they learned nothing.

    9. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by igaborf · · Score: 1

      When I leased my Prius two years ago on a three-year lease, it was in hopes that I would be able to switch to a plug-in hybrid at the end of the lease because it would fit my driving profile perfectly (the vast majority of my trips are <40 miles, with an occasional trip of 200-300 miles). Which I still want to do, but the car has to be reasonably decent. The Volt doesn't impress, but the new plug-in Prius may fit the bill. And on a lease, you aren't paying for the entire cost of the car, so a somewhat higher sticker price doesn't bother me.

      Plus, I'm not at all sure that gas prices in the US won't be $6-7/gal within the next couple of years, which changes the calculation somewhat.

    10. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by dropslowly · · Score: 2

      I am looking for an electric car now (I just got solar panels and I want to reduce my driving expenses). But I would never consider the volt. It is $40,000 and its range is only 35 miles. For $5,000 less I can get a leaf that goes 80 miles per charge and for the same price I can get a focus that gets 100 miles per charge.

    11. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      A range of 35 miles? I see over 350 miles.

    12. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

      Never mind... you are right for electric only.

    13. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Volt isn't an electric car, and that's part of the problem. It's a serial hybrid.

      Unfortunatly that's not exactly true. The Volt's gasoline engine does directly drive the wheels under certain circumstances, usually highway driving, it's the only way they got the mileage as high as they did. GM has built both a parallal and serial hybrid in the same package. They have a failry well built bad solution. This is GM in a nutshell.

    14. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by wonkavader · · Score: 2

      I would love an electric car. If I total the car I currently have, I will definitely buy an electric to replace it. But the Volt really turns me off. It has bucket seats my aged parents couldn't in and out of without pain. It has less glass than I would want. It's made by GM, who have showed us time and time again that they couldn't find their ass with both hands. And it has an internal combustion engine I'd have to haul around but never use.

      I have a Scion Xb. If I could find something like it -- upright, not made for speed but for utility, small, light, tight turning radius (my Xb has a tighter turn radius than either the volt or the leaf), I'd buy it. But I can't afford to do so unless my Xb gets totaled, or shows some expensive wear, or the EVs get cheaper.

      Give me a converted Scion Xb or a 1961 BMW 2002, and I'd be ecstatic. Seems like everyone's trying to sell cars with chassis made to hold internal combustion engines and go 90 mph for cars we're just going to drive around the city in. We need to go 80 MAX in them, and then only in the worst pre-rush hour speeding on highways. Mostly we need to go 60 or less, and we need to be able to see. We need room for passengers and groceries. We need to be able to park them easily. We don't need trucks or sports cars. We need a smaller version of a mini-van built to be safe and support and electric drive.

      The Volt is the wrong design by the wrong company at the wrong price.

      I suspect that the next car I buy will be European (not just a VW, for example, but one sold in France/designed for Paris driving) or Chinese.

    15. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by SpryGuy · · Score: 2

      But with the leaf, you range is 80 miles PERIOD. If you get caught out and run out of charge, you're screwed. if you want to take a road-trip that is longer, you're screwed.

      The Volt is no-compromise. Drive just like any other car, without worries. Go any distance. Refuel anywhere you need to (gas or electric).

      That peace of mind and freedom of movement and convenience is definitely worth a premium over something like a Leaf, which has a very limited practical use.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    16. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      The fact that the engine can drive the wheels directly at all is another minor gripe many have with the Volt, since that was revealed after GM's representatives swore up and down that it never happens. But that's another discussion since the circumstances under which this happens are fairly rare for most people.

      99% of the time, the Volt runs as a serial hybrid.

      Just to be clear, I've nothing against the Volt as a machine nor anything against GM's engineers. It's their corporate douchebags that are screwing everything up.
      =Smidge=

    17. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by tsotha · · Score: 1

      The volt isn't even a fully serial hybrid, since the engine feeds power directly through the transmission when required. It's more like a parallel-serial hybrid hybrid. I don't imagine something this complicated is actually very reliable over time.

    18. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You got that backwards: the Volt is the one that compromises; compromise is the whole raison d'etre of the car. Instead of being an all-out EV like the Leaf, or an all-out high-mileage car like the Prius (48mpg hwy), the Volt is a compromise between the two. Not saying this is bad, just that it is what it is. The Volt goes 30-40 miles before running out of electricity, and has to switch over to gas. But on gas, it's not exactly quick, and the fuel economy isn't great, only a little over 30mpg. Lots of much nicer and faster cars get that on the highway, and the Prius gets about 15mpg better. So if you're going to do a lot of highway driving, the Volt is a terrible choice, because the fuel economy sucks. If you're going to do a lot of commuting and the occasional long trip (and not having to worry about being stranded the way the Leaf will leave you if the battery runs out), the Volt is a reasonable choice, with the only problem being that the cost is high. The new limited-availability Plug-In Prius at $32k looks like it's probably a better value here.

    19. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where are all the EV1 lovers? Claim was that people wanted electric cars...

      I believe they were last seen leafing for Nissan.

    20. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by mikestew · · Score: 1

      But with the leaf, you range is 80 miles PERIOD. If you get caught out and run out of charge, you're screwed.

      Well, more like 100 miles if the heater isn't running, but whatever. We've run our Leaf more than 100 miles before plugging back in at the house because in the Seattle area chargers aren't hard to find. In the worst case, if you run to empty, Nissan (for the first three years) will send a truck at no charge. I've tried to run the Leaf to "turtle mode", the state right before running out. Even with an estimated 4 miles left on the batteries, I got bored of driving around the block and gave up before it hit "turtle mode". It's incredibly conservative in it's estimates when it gets low, it gets incredibly naggy, and you'd have to try harder than I did to run it until it stops.

      If I want to take a road trip, I take the Scion. We didn't buy the Leaf to drive to LA every other weekend.

      The Volt is no-compromise.

      The Volt is nothing but compromise. It makes for a crappy EV, and an even more crappy ICE vehicle. More mechanically complex than the Leaf, with less room. It just wasn't what we were looking for if we were going to buy something "different", and pay a premium to do so. If you're enjoying your Volt, great; at least it's not yet another gas-guzzling SUV. But when it came time to put our money where our mouthes were, the Volt didn't make the list.

    21. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by mikestew · · Score: 1

      I have a Scion Xb. If I could find something like it -- upright, not made for speed but for utility

      We have a 2005 xB, ordered one the day they were available to order in WA. We're going to shed a tear when that delightful little car finally dies. We also have a Leaf. The back with the seats down isn't quite as roomy as the xB, especially height, which is important for carrying the two mutts or furniture. But it's otherwise darned close. Almost or equal headroom, plenty of seating room front and rear.

      Would the Leaf replace the xB (range excepted)? Sadly, no. The Leaf just isn't the "cube on wheels" the xB is. It's still more utilitarian than I imagined. Carries people and cargo from Costco just fine, just not the big stuff.

      (my Xb has a tighter turn radius than either the volt or the leaf),

      Really? I'd swear the Leaf is tighter than the xB. Even if not, I don't think the difference is huge. They're both just shy of a Dixon lawnmower.

    22. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      More nonsense from those who have no clue. Have you driven a Volt on gas?

      Good - thanks. it gets way more than 30mpg, and this is just more nonsense being spewed by those who've never seen one, touched one, or driven one. I own one. I dive one every day. I get to work and back, 41mi round-trip, on 60-66 freaking cents of electricity. When I drive further, and gas kicks in, it's in the 40's Best of all, it looks WAY better than the hideous Prius's, and there's NO WAY I'd drive one of those ugly beasts no matter gas prices rise to.

      And the Plug-In Prius is nearly $33K - don't leave out the destination charge. PiPrius is only eligible for $2500 tax credit, $39995 VOlt is eligible for $7500, so in the end, it's about a $2k difference. Now, sit in a PiPrius, and sit in a Volt.

      Case closed. You get WAY more in a Volt, and it doesn't feel like a cheap bargain-basement sparsely appointed plasticky piece of crap econobox.

      Not only that, but the Prius only goes about 13mi on battery, and even then, at 62mph or below, else the engine fires up. You accelerating hard? engine fires up. I can do up to 100mph on nothing but battery, thanks.

      There is a serious amount of volt-bashing going on, and I really wonder what the agenda is. All the bashers are talking trash, but have probably never even SEEN a Volt in person, yet feel they can comment on it.

      Go ahead - enjoy that $5/g gas that's coming. I'll be laughing all he way home in my Volt, with comfy leather, and Navi, and a Bose stereo with surround sound, with a 30GB HDD playing my MP3s, driving 40mi/day on less than a value menu item!

    23. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by VoltOwner · · Score: 1

      The Volt isn't an electric car, and that's part of the problem. It's a serial hybrid.

      Unfortunatly that's not exactly true. The Volt's gasoline engine does directly drive the wheels under certain circumstances, usually highway driving, it's the only way they got the mileage as high as they did. GM has built both a parallal and serial hybrid in the same package. They have a failry well built bad solution. This is GM in a nutshell.

      More incorrect info.

      The cases where the engine drives the wheels are so rare, it's not even worth discussing.

      DO a little more research before ASSuming to know.

      The Volt will do up to 12.6kWhr worth of nothing but electric driving, and up to 100mph, without ever starting the engine up.For me, 12.6kWhr has translated into anywhere from 38 up to 45-46mi, depending on speeds, driving habits, etc... 12.6kWhr for me is 92 cents of electricity (7.305 cents per kWhr, off-peak rates, which is when I charge, ie, after 10pm)

      There are circumstances outside of the driving situation where the engine may start up, but it's not to drive the wheels, ie, if outside temp. is 25deg or under. If they just cranked the engine all the time like a Prius, it wouldn't be worth it. I know one instance, is when you have run out of battery, and the engine is running to run the second motor as a generator for the first, and, for example, you are going uphill for an extended distance, ie, mountain driving.Now, I live in Florida. Remind me again how many mountains there are here?

      It's posts like those above that are misleading everyone, and it's from people who haven't even a minor clue about the Volt. If it's not for you, that's fine, but there's no need to spread lies and misinformation.

    24. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      So your answer is to own TWO cars, while claiming the Volt is too expensive and nothing but compromise? Talk about paying a premium. Sorry, I don't want to pay for two cars, when I can pay for one.

      Sorry, read the AC reply above you. I think it's a pretty good rebuttal to your claims.

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    25. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      All the bashers are talking trash, but have probably never even SEEN a Volt in person, yet feel they can comment on it.

      My comments are based on the professional review by Edmunds. I put a lot more faith in Edmunds than in the comments of an Anonymous Coward on Slashdot. Edmunds says the Volt gets low 30s on gas.
      http://www.edmunds.com/chevrolet/volt/2012/?sub=hatchback#fullreview

      "In an Edmunds test of a Volt with the battery pack depleted, the car averaged 31.4 mpg in mixed driving. This isn't a bad mileage figure compared to regular gas vehicles, but it is seriously subpar when compared to the mid-40s mpg that a standard hybrid typically provides."

      So sorry, but you're full of it.

    26. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by CtownNighrider · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you're financial range is but a Tesla Model S base is about 50k and has a range of around 120 miles. It's a luxury sedan too. You won't be able to get one for a year or two though.

    27. Re:EV1 lovers are MIA by VoltOwner · · Score: 1

      All the bashers are talking trash, but have probably never even SEEN a Volt in person, yet feel they can comment on it.

      My comments are based on the professional review by Edmunds. I put a lot more faith in Edmunds than in the comments of an Anonymous Coward on Slashdot. Edmunds says the Volt gets low 30s on gas. http://www.edmunds.com/chevrolet/volt/2012/?sub=hatchback#fullreview

      "In an Edmunds test of a Volt with the battery pack depleted, the car averaged 31.4 mpg in mixed driving. This isn't a bad mileage figure compared to regular gas vehicles, but it is seriously subpar when compared to the mid-40s mpg that a standard hybrid typically provides."

      So sorry, but you're full of it.

      There - seeing a name make you feel better? Want some cookies? As to quoting Edmunds, at least quote it without changing it - they claim 33mpg, which is still off, at http://www.edmunds.com/chevrolet/volt/2012/?sub=hatchback

      Lies, misleading, and BS is all you folks can come up with. And as to electric range, here;s a pic of my dash this morning, after driving in almost 20mi:

      http://i92.photobucket.com/albums/l33/Sharkonwheels/2012%20Chevrolet%20Volt/IMG_20120306_095705.jpg

      as you can see, the center console computer says I travelled 19.2mi, consumed 4.9kWh, and if you check the dash, oh my, what's it say? Yes. 21mi left.

      Want me to help you with the math? that's almost 41mi. estimated. And guess what, I did the almost 20 home again, and the dash STILL said I had 5mi left in EV mode.

      Want me to help you remove that foot that you so vehemently shoved down your throat?

      You're quoting some dumbasses you've never met - I'm taking pictures of my dash. We done Einstein? Or you want more pictures and proof?

      Oh, and if you look even HARDER at the center console, you'll see it says 66.6mpg lifetime. And that's with dealership idiots putting a couple hundred miles on it, and not driving efficiently.

      Never ceases to amaze me the gullibility of people, and believing everything they read as if it's the gospel. How about getting off the computer, and learning a few things on your own, and gathering your own information, instead of taking the lazy way and having someone else do it for you? Knowledge is empowering. Ignorance is the easy way out.

  10. Too expensive by dietdew7 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Without significant subsidies GM would have sold even fewer cars. The subsidy is a just transfer payment to the well off. High efficiency diesel engines are probably the most cost effective option for the masses and our stupid EPA requirements keep best ones out of the USA.

    1. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is the Nissan Leaf selling? Knowing demand for it would be a decent indicator of whether people don't want an electric vehicle, or don't want an electric vehicle from Government Motors.

    2. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Without significant subsidies GM would have sold even fewer cars. The subsidy is a just transfer payment to the well off. High efficiency diesel engines are probably the most cost effective option for the masses and our stupid EPA requirements keep best ones out of the USA.

      Yes, it is quite stupid of the EPA to worry about nitrogen dioxide. The masses need cost-effective cars, not healthy lungs.

    3. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Volt = $10,000 subsidy
      SUV = $25,000 subsidy (use to be $100,000)

      What a country

    4. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worse still, the EPA aren't taking the threat of Dihydrogen Monoxide seriously.

      And wifi signals haven't been banned.

      Won't SOMEBODY think of the children ??!!

    5. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      look up hyponatremia

    6. Re:Too expensive by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      It's hard to tell what demand is like for the LEAF since there is still a registration list to get one, and the market has only recently been expanded to include the entire US - it was limited to select states for the first year of availability. The only place you're likely to find one on a dealer's lot without a deposit on it is in the initial rollout states, and it might be an orphan (a car someone reserved online but did not follow through with purchasing).

      We probably won't know until 2013 or 2014 when the Tennessee plant opens up and starts production. Right now every LEAF is built in Japan and distributed to markets around the world.

      ...and the Volt is not an electric car. It's a hybrid.
      =Smidge=

    7. Re:Too expensive by cynyr · · Score: 1

      wait, i thought the EPA cared about CO2 levels more than NOx levels? where as europe cared about NOx(acid rain and monuments don't mix) more than the CO2 levels. I also though tuning combustion processes allowed trading one for the other for the most part.

      --
      All of the above was encrypted with a Quad ROT-13 method. Unauthorized decryption is in violation of the DMCA.
    8. Re:Too expensive by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Really? My $50k SUV used to have a $100k subsidy??

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    9. Re:Too expensive by ozborn · · Score: 2
    10. Re:Too expensive by dietdew7 · · Score: 1

      Apparently it's NO2 is not a problem in Europe. And yes the masses do need cost-effective cars.

    11. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are incorrect.The Volt has a fully-electric drive-train and is considered a PEV by all metrics (Including the ability to use both Level 1 and Level 2 charging). The gas engine is only used as a generator to supplement/recharge the battery packs.

    12. Re:Too expensive by xclr8r · · Score: 1

      The study is talking about an enclosed environment (mine) with possible shoddy ventilation. This is not the same environment as having the exhaust expelled outside you car while you are inside. I'm not discounting that there could be medical or environmental impact but we need studies that address those specific issues.

      --
      Beware of those who profit off the docile and persecute the unbelievers.
    13. Re:Too expensive by Smidge204 · · Score: 2

      The mere fact it has a gas engine makes it a hybrid.

      It's a serial hybrid, like a diesel-electric locomotive, rather than a parallel hybrid like the Prius and every other hybrid passenger vehicle on the road, but a hybrid nonetheless. it will never not need gasoline to operate properly: Even if you never exceed the all-electric range, it will burn gasoline.

      GM's misguided attempt to redefine things is part of what is giving them problems. The early adopter, electric-vehicle-wanting crowd they are trying to sell to is, in my experience, overall technically savvy when it comes to this sort of thing and they do not appreciate the games GM is playing.

      Also, there is a special case where the gas engine is mechanically coupled to the wheels.
      =Smidge=

    14. Re:Too expensive by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      The infamous Section 179 "Hummer Deduction" was essentially a loophole in the tax code that allowed businesses to write off the full price of SUVs under an incentive plan intended for commercial grade trucks and other equipment.

      Basically if you owned a business you could buy luxury SUVs pretty much for free.

      They fixed that a few years ago but there's still some tax incentive to buy unnecessarily heavy vehicles for personal transport.
      =Smidge=

    15. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Actually recent information would indicate that perhaps the regulations aren't so stupid after all. [sciencemag.org"

      You are stupid. Let me say that again : YOU ARE A FUCKING MORON.

      The diesel exhaust to which miners are subjected is very different from the exhaust
      emitted by a modern diesel passenger car.

      Do the world a favor and read the articles you post before you post them in a pathetic attempt to
      appear you might be making a worthwhile contribution to the discussion, you fucktard.

    16. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but I can only call this American Irrationality. A Diesel operated in an underground mine if of course effecting lots of micro-particles inside the restricted space of a mine. Any sane safety policy would mandate extreme levels of filtering of both particles and carbon monoxide in this application.
      Operating a Diesel in free space is totally different from that, as the dilution of the particles and CO is obviously dramatically different. Still, Europe now mandates technologies which will both reduce particles and CO dramatically. The solutions are quite complex: for example Daimler/Mercedes uses an Urea Solution in a catalytic reaction to reduce emissions dramatically. Filling stations now also sell that stuff called "AdBlue".

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diesel_exhaust_fluid

      In addition to that, every town must now monitor particle count in the air and meet certain EU-mandated objectives or face fines and further measures such as full traffic blocks.

      The Diesel engine is clearly the future, for the simple reason that it is the best thermodynamic engine of all engines, despite all the talk of Sterling engines. With the Chinese hitting the road, America must go Diesel as much as Europe already does. I predict 90% Diesels in 10 years in Europe and America,

    17. Re:Too expensive by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "The diesel exhaust to which miners are subjected is very different from the exhaust
      emitted by a modern diesel passenger car."

      Isn't that the point?

      Exhaust emitted by a model diesel passenger car is very different because of, and only because of, strict government regulation of emissions.
      The strong health problems of miners, exposed to dirty emissions, is evidence the regulation was well justified.

    18. Re:Too expensive by dietdew7 · · Score: 1

      I promise not to drive my diesel underground.

    19. Re:Too expensive by Rich0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Probably because in Europe they actually use clean diesel fuel. All those EPA laws that resulted in smog reduction on cars were never applied to diesel, because of lobbying by the trucking industry. If you applied the same standards to diesel fuel as unleaded it would be plenty clean.

    20. Re:Too expensive by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

      Dear god, have you actually read into diesel emissions in the USA? US Diesels are CLEANER than European diesel engines.

      If you did you would have found that EPA2010 regulations require more stringent emissions than the current Euro5 diesel emissions (Euro6 comes into play around 2013/14 I believe and will bring Europe down to or past US diesel emissions). EPA2007 required less soot which was taken care of by diesel particulate filters and in EPA2002 EGR was required. So over the past 10 years diesel has become MUCH more clean. The smoke belching diesels are a thing of the past. The ones you still see running around are pre 2007 emission trucks or trucks with a big engine problem.

      No one was lobbying for anything. Please stop spreading misinformation.

    21. Re:Too expensive by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      A couple of things:

      1. I do agree that the Volt is TOO expensive a vehicle. A better solution are the more conventional hybrid drivetrains that Toyota and Ford developed, both of which offer very good fuel economy without totally silly prices. Indeed, a Toyota Prius Model III hatchback at around US$25,000 is actually a bit of a bargain, considering that conventional sedans that have the same interior space as the Prius cost almost as much as a Prius Model III!

      2. As for turbodiesel, the combination of higher NOx output and diesel particulates makes to quite expensive to make such engines meet EPA "Tier 2 Bin 5" emission standards. However, with the arrival of Euro6 emission certification, that might change, since Euro6 is very similiar to the EPA standard. Europe loves diesels, but they're doing it at the expense of higher air pollution from diesel exhaust.

    22. Re:Too expensive by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Dear god, have you actually read into diesel emissions in the USA? US Diesels are CLEANER than European diesel engines.

      Did you read my post? I'm not talking about engines - I'm talking about the fuel...

    23. Re:Too expensive by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      Well, that's not exactly correct. The section 179 deduction would let you take a tax deduction only for the purchase price of the vehicle, up to $100k max. So if you spent $50k on the vehicle, then your deduction was only $50k. If you spent $150k, you only got $100k.

      Furthermore, those are deductions, not credits. That means you take the deduction amount and multiply it by your marginal tax rate to get the amount of the deduction (roughly...it will be slightly less than that if the deduction then knocks you into a lower tax bracket). That means a $100k deduction is only equivalent to tax credit of less than $40k.

    24. Re:Too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a couple of years out of date. US now uses ultra-low sulfur diesel--as clean, or cleaner, than European fuels.
      http://www.epa.gov/otaq/highway-diesel/regs/420f06064.htm

    25. Re:Too expensive by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Just not true I'm afraid, even here in Europe diesel pumps out significantly more soot than petrol. MPG is good which helps get the emissions/mile level down to levels comparable to petrol, but the law is focused more on CO2 than soot which is a shame because the latter has more direct effect on people's health.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    26. Re:Too expensive by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Isn't that the point?

      No, no it isn't. Because in between off-road commercial vehicles without smog controls and USA-spec diesels with DPFs and urea injection, there are lots of small diesels which have quite good emissions, if not as good as those of the modern USA-spec models. And also because gasoline emissions are worse than previously thought, remember the recent study on gasoline soot? And also because the diesels may emit more pollution per gallon burned, but they also burn less gallons per mile traveled. Even my 1982 300SD gets half again more mileage than the "competition" of the day (American or British rattletraps built with no pride with big, smoky V8s, often with carburetors for fuck's sake) which makes up for quite a lot. Does even better by comparison around town, when the turbo does nothing and I'm putting around on my little three liter diesel.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  11. No surprise by msobkow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can buy TWO Ford Focus 40mpg cars for the same price as a Volt.

    Unlike other districts, there are no subsidies for the Volt in Saskatchewan.

    $20,000 buys a HELL of a lot of gasoline.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:No surprise by Locutus · · Score: 1

      IIRC, early on they were telling the world+dog it was going to be priced in the low $20K as the Prius was/is. How that changed and as you noted, it ended up being priced in the low $40K.

      I guess they think they can compete with Tesla. Wrong.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    2. Re:No surprise by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      IIRC, early on they were telling the world+dog it was going to be priced in the low $20K as the Prius was/is.

      More like mid $20K for bare-bones Prius. Up to low $30K....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    3. Re:No surprise by Nuitari+The+Wiz · · Score: 1

      $20,000 buys a HELL of a lot of gasoline.

      Well let's do more math. I'm driving an Altima, that costed about 29k new.

      40k - 29k = 11k for gasoline.
      I'm spending about 60$ per week on gasoline, so that comes out to 3120$ per year.
      I always lease for 4 years ( I just don't have the time to always fix the car ) so that comes to 12480$ overall.
      The average price I pay for gas is probably around 1.28$/liter. The prices in QC tend to follow a sin wave of +/- 10c on a graph, trending up or down. Not only that, but the supply for Montreal comes from the Brent barrel, which tends to be more expensive then regular oil.

      Most of my commute is (return) well within the 35 miles EV range, and from what I understand the heating is electric.

      This is before the subsidy in QC for the Volt (not sure how much, but afaik it's in the 5 to 7k range).

      So in my case it would make sense to switch to a Volt or even a LEAF once the lease on my current car finishes.

      One of the problem with the Prius in Montreal is that you need heating 6 months in a year. Last I heard, the heater was still powered through the gas engine which means that I'm using fuel most of time. Also having to use gas to go about 30kph is retarded.

    4. Re:No surprise by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Use on the heating and lights, go through 4 years of battery cycles, and you'll be pushing your Volt home quite a bit, I suspect.

      Also, you seem to have costed your electricity at zero. Can you sell me a few thousand kWh at those prices?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    5. Re:No surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Implicit in your post is the assumption that gas won't go up over the ten year lifespan of the car. In Saskatchewan, at current prices, you could buy about 15,384 litres of gasoline for $20,000. The average person uses 729 gallons per year http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_much_gasoline_does_the_average_person_use_each_year , or about 2759 litres per year. In Saskatchewan, you likely use more but we'll stick with this assumption.

      Dividing that out, you get 5.57 years worth of gas (again, assuming that gas never goes up.) If you live nearby work, and cut your fuel consumption to nothing and nearly always recharge the volt, and assuming gas prices continue to increase on schedule, you could pay this back in four years or so, a reasonable payback period. That doesn't make the Chevy Volt a good investment, but never get dazzled by big numbers. You're paying $20,000 anyway.

    6. Re:No surprise by msobkow · · Score: 2

      You're neglecting to include the costs of electricity for the Volt and the fact that it actually uses gasoline on long trips and to run the heater (a big issue in Saskatchewan winters.)

      The Volt does NOT have a run-rate cost of $0, so the total bill at the end of the 4-5 years I've been running on gas paid for by buying a cheaper car means you paid EVEN MORE to own and operate a Volt than the initial $40K.

      If this is the best GM can do, the money bailing them out was a complete and utter waste, because their incompetence is going to lead them right back to bankruptcy in a few short years anyhow. We can NOT afford to support North American industries which can't support themselves without government subsidies and "tax incentives."

      It's not fair to the competition. It's not fair to the taxpayer. And CLEARLY it's of no benefit to the consumer.

      Anyone working for GM or supplying GM with parts better start looking for work NOW. Because when the bankruptcy comes (again), the job market is going to be flooded with people desperate for work. Better to beat the rush.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    7. Re:No surprise by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      $20K / $5/gallon = 4,000 gallons of gas
      $20K / $6/gallon = 3,333 gallons of gas
      $20K / $7/gallon = 2,857 gallons of gas

      This also assumes you haven't lost your job and still have any cash to purchase fuel.

      Electric vehicles are not just alternative fuel vehicles. They are a hedge against oil price volatility.

    8. Re:No surprise by Nuitari+The+Wiz · · Score: 1

      There is an 8 year warranty on the pack.

      As for the cost of electricity, too much data is missing, but it would be less then 350$ in any case

    9. Re:No surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The low $30K for the larger one with all of the options... The Prius is very affordable for new car buyers. It's priced a few thousand more than similar sized and equipped cars. And at $4 a gallon gas it comes close to making up for the extra cost. Plus it's a solid car, which often makes it cheaper to drive than some competitors.

    10. Re:No surprise by Mana+Mana · · Score: 1

      > I can buy TWO Ford Focus 40mpg cars for the same
      > price as a Volt.

      This logic kind myopia always astounds me. Here try this one on for size.

      For the price of a Ferrari 458 Italia I can ~30 Foci, give or take. Or a handful of of Honda Fits to a BMW M3. Or shiz if you want to compare 4-seater saloon types, an FF to your hatchback/sedan. IOW, Folks buy with dissimilar tastes, and god bless them for it. If it wasn't for all those fuckers in the '80s buying ABS, air bags, cruise controlled, etc. German luxury cars I wouldn't be able to buy an appliance Corolla for peanuts with those same features installed; citizen led, government mandated rules or not.

      Why drive your VW GTI R for ~40K when a nice 9k USD Hyundai would do? Because you want what you want. One size does not fit all, nor you. So what the fuck are you bitching at?! Dumbass.

    11. Re:No surprise by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      True, but look at the comparisons. The closest thing you'll find to a Prius is probably a Camry. The Prius has a little less room, and is a few k more for the same options. You can spend $28k on a Camry, and you can spend a little over $30k on a Prius. You can also get down close to $20k on a Camry if you skimp, and I'm guessing the Prius is available for under $25k if you skimp.

      I think the issue with the Volt is that even with subsidies it is $12k more than any comparably configured alternative. You can't compare a Volt to a BMW in features.

    12. Re:No surprise by Locutus · · Score: 1

      they were $21K but I can see them being $24K/25K now and that's "bare-bones". They decided to add lots of "extra's" to the Volt for some reason. I still think they were telling everyone they were going to be priced around the Prius and some of us didn't believe them. The Volt is interesting technically but unlike Toyota, they have not build a economical vehicle. It only took a couple of years before the Prius was being built on standard production lines and was selling for a profit.

      The Volt reminds me of the EV1 in that it's not something they really care to continue. The Volt commercials aren't very convincing and lots of them seemed more like branding promo's.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    13. Re:No surprise by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      2,857 gallons of gas in my '98 Ford that gets about 30 MPG is about 86,000 miles. If I continue driving as much as in the past, making no effort to conserve by driving less, then that should last me 28 years.

      So, it appears that extreme drivers who do 10-20K per year and refuse to reduce that might benefit eventually benefit from electric when gas is $7/gallon. Unfortunately, those same drivers are the ones by far most likely to be doing the kind of long trips that electric isn't good for. As well, any of them who aren't wealthy will still have to cut back on driving and stay with gas instead. It looks like electric won't be economical for the average person for a long time to come. Hopefully there's enough money in selling it as toys for the rich to develop some breakthrough that'll make it practical for the masses.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    14. Re:No surprise by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      You won't be "fixing" a Nissan after 4 years.

      You can drive that Altima for another 6 years and 60K miles without significant repairs

      Buying a new car every 4 years is a luxury, not a necessity, Once you admit that, then the economics are actually much clearer.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  12. Surgeon General Warning: subsidizes are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    "If it's still true that GM was taking a loss on every Volt sold, perhaps this is a blessing in disguise."

    It isn't GM that takes the loss ... its every tax payer that has money taken from them to subsidize this vehicle just because some poll-itician thinks they know what is best for the market.

    GM should of never received the bailout ... they should have been allowed to go bankrupt to gives companies like Tesla Motors a chance to do something better with those resources.

    1. Re:Surgeon General Warning: subsidizes are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Politicians aren't thinking what's best for the market.

      They're thinking what's best for their constituents, and anybody who knows anything about a free market knows that the two are not necessarily the same thing.

      Now the free market zealots will say that the free market will produce the ideal result on its own, and that it's the interference of politicians that causes less than favorable circumstances.

      But they're fooling themselves. There's far too many actors with agendas for the market to stay free.

      Now personally I have no love for GM, and I do wish some other corporate culture had been allowed to replace it, but the fact is, the executives at GM wouldn't have gone bankrupt, like vultures they'd have gone to scavenge some other corpse instead, and the only people that would have suffered would have been the workers and lower-echelon personnel.

      So no, better for Tesla if the GM executives stay distracted.

    2. Re:Surgeon General Warning: subsidizes are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yea because tesla's model X is really going to be a peoples car...

    3. Re:Surgeon General Warning: subsidizes are bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because being able to mass produce with a equiped factory and trained workers wouldn't have reduce the cost of the product or allowed for more types of vehicles.

    4. Re:Surgeon General Warning: subsidizes are bad. by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      Politicians aren't thinking what's best for the market.

      They're thinking what's best for their constituents, and anybody who knows anything about a free market knows that the two are not necessarily the same thing.

      Worse:
      Politicians are thinking what's best for winning the next election. Which may not necessarily be what's best for their constituents.
      At best, they to do this by trying to find out what the constituents really want and promoting that, in the hope of being reelected as a reward.
      At worst, they take barely disguised bribes in the form of campaign donations, in the hope of winning through a flashy campaign (and stupid voters are at fault when this approach works).

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
  13. Set up (capital) costs can be huge by dbIII · · Score: 1

    With some things you can afford a loss on the first N units if you later sell M and get more than your setup costs back.
    So yes, a lot of things that are low volume but expected to sell later at a high volume can initially be sold at a loss without it being a total stuffup. Then of course you can have total stuffups where things are sold for less than the cost of the materials but that's rare.

    1. Re:Set up (capital) costs can be huge by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      With some things you can afford a loss on the first N units if you later sell M and get more than your setup costs back.

      Yep. The old "we lose money on every sale, but we make it up in volume!"

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
  14. A Joke by chill · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Volt costs $40,000 before tax rebates and only gets you 35 miles on an electric charge. Then 35 MPG city/40 hwy (gas) for 375 miles.

    The Toyota Prius starts at $24,000 and goes to $30,000 for their top end. Mileage is 51 MPG city/48 hwy for approximately 600 miles.

    So Chevrolet's market was people who have lots of money, are willing to spend it with abandon, want a car, but don't really need to drive much. In short, semi-rich idiot hipsters.

    I think they probably just saturated their customer base.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:A Joke by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So Chevrolet's market was people who have lots of money, are willing to spend it with abandon, want a car, but don't really need to drive much. In short, semi-rich idiot hipsters.

      You forgot "willing to drive a car that looks like total dogshit". The Prius is ugly but it looks futuristic. The volt is ugly, and it's also ugly.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:A Joke by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      It gets decent mileage on the highway (almost as much as the prius prius) and has a decent range (as much as any Corolla or similar). The benefit is for people who work or do whatever close to home. If your work is within 15 miles (mine is) you could potentially never use gas for a given week. Even if you needed to do some errands, 35 miles is decent just for tooling around your neighborhood. Never using gas is a huge plus. The only joke is the initial price. If you can overcome that, the prius has got nothing on it for the majority of driving time. 35 * 365 is about 13000 miles per year which is pretty reasonable (a little lower than average I think).

    3. Re:A Joke by Entropius · · Score: 1

      Wait, it's that bad? I had heard something like 60 miles/charge and then 50-60MPG back when I looked at Chevy's plans. Is the real car that bad compared to their claims?

    4. Re:A Joke by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      The market is further restricted to people who would buy a GM. Their reputation for build quality is less than stellar. I think the government should have let them fail. I will never buy a GM.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    5. Re:A Joke by hey! · · Score: 2, Informative

      Didn't we have an article here recently about the impact of innumeracy?

      The problem with the Volt / Prius comparison is that it's not that simple. You've got to factor in operation costs. The Volt costs $0.90 less per mile to run on electric mode than the Prius. When the gasoline engine kicks in, the Volt costs $0.80 *more* per mile.

      So the more affordable choice depends on what your transportation needs. Let's start somebody who is a ridiculously ideal Volt candidate. She uses her car to commute and run errands around town. She runs the car 30 miles / day on average and never goes over the limit. That works out to $9855 savings annually. She's well into the money within two years, not even counting any tax rebates.

      Now let's suppose every weekend our Volt owner drives to grandma's house to deliver a basket of goodies. Grandma lives 153.5 miles away, so our Volt owner drives 35 miles on electric, 118.5 on gas. She stays over night and does an identical return trip, so she's drive a total of 237 miles on gas, at a marginal cost of and additional 189.5 for the entire weekend round trip relative to the Prius. Over the course of 52 weeks, that adds up $9859 in additional operating costs, almost exactly canceling out her electric savings, so the Volt represents $10K-$16K out of her pocket she'll never see again.

      And how about Grandma? Well she only uses her car to drive to church on Sunday, and it's a mile each way, so it really doesn't matter *what* she drives. She's better off sticking with her 1980 Plymouth Volare sedan that the nice man downtown keeps running, even though the beast only gets 18 mpg.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    6. Re:A Joke by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Eh, I don't think the Prius looks futuristic at all. All the electric cars are ugly as hell. The Leaf looks like an overweight catfish with a fat ass. The Volt looks like a patchwork doll with pieces and parts pasted on. The only thing the volt has going for it is 17" rims. The Prius looks like mini-van that got squashed in the back after someone replaced all the tires with shopping cart wheels. Yeah, I don't like tiny wheels on cars... but I thought electric vehicles were supposed to be high torque? Why is there a need to have smaller diameter wheels?

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    7. Re:A Joke by recursivedescent · · Score: 5, Informative
      Hmm, looks like none of the other ~7000 Volt owners read /. Had to go and create and create an account to provide at least one pro Volt response here. I bought my Volt in December, the pessimal time to get an electric car unless you live in LA or Florida. Yep, cold weather knocks a good 5 to 10 miles off the range. Even so, I really like this car. Growing up my parents had Pontiac station wagons, and I never thought I'd spend a dime on an American car, so I've owned a Saab, a Subaru, a VW, and a Toyota (Prius).

      I work out of two offices, my primary one which is a 36 mile commute, and another regional office, which is an 84 mile commute. Generally I go to my primary office 4 days a week. In cold weather, I'm on the gas engine maybe 2 to 3 miles, but if it's warm I'm electric all the way. I'm on gas for about 44 miles on the longer commute.

      I'm getting around 109mpg. Since early December, I've bought around $60 in gas. It's hard to tell due to the mild winter, but I think my electric bill has gone up around $25/mo.

      Sure, I could have bought a cheaper car, and I'll never save enough in gas (well, unless Iran destabilizes the middle East and we end up with $10/gal gas) to recover my cost, but I actually like driving the Volt. It's not a sports car, but it's not sluggish either. 0-60 is 9.2 seconds, but the instant torque from the electric engine makes it feel much faster. In "Sport" mode, it does 0-30 in 3.0 seconds.

      And it's made by Americans who seem to have figured out how to make a car that's as fun as any import I've owned. GM has plenty of problems, but maybe some of the cool Volt engineering will seep into their other cars.

    8. Re:A Joke by srh2o · · Score: 0

      The prius is the most dogshit looking car there is. Nothing futuristic about it in the least.

    9. Re:A Joke by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      The Volt costs $0.90 less per mile to run on electric mode than the Prius. When the gasoline engine kicks in, the Volt costs $0.80 *more* per mile.

      How did you get those numbers? Even at $5/gal gas, fuel costs would only be around $0.15 per mile. Where are these other expenses coming from?
      =Smidge=

    10. Re:A Joke by stabiesoft · · Score: 1

      I'd thought about getting a volt as well when they came out, but wanted something bigger to carry cargo. I think you are a unusual cross between someone willing to buy domestic and someone who wants to be green. Kudos to you. By and large, the greens are anti american cars, they flocked to the prius in the beginning even though they were quite expensive at the time they came out. I agree (and so did a large number of auto mags) that the volt was a brilliant combo of electric primary with a backup gas. The Leaf is just plain stupid imo. Who buys a car that only goes 50 miles. Enjoy your volt and as a american, thanks for buying american. (ok let the flames begin...)

    11. Re:A Joke by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      The problem with the Volt / Prius comparison is that it's not that simple. You've got to factor in operation costs. The Volt costs $0.90 less per mile to run on electric mode than the Prius. When the gasoline engine kicks in, the Volt costs $0.80 *more* per mile.

      Where does your $0.90 per mile figure come from? The cost of gas could only account for about $0.10 per mile (even assuming that electricity is free). Maybe the Volt requires less maintenance or something, but especially given its higher price it's hard to imagine that accounts for another $0.80 per mile.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    12. Re:A Joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Volt costs $0.90 less per mile to run on electric mode than the Prius. When the gasoline engine kicks in, the Volt costs $0.80 *more* per mile.

      Maybe I have a problem with innumeracy too. Where are these numbers coming from? I can't see how any car's total costs per mile are anywhere near that high (a little back-of-the-envelop calcs are that my car's purchase+fuel has worked out to around $0.20 per mile), and I'd expect cost differences to be an order of magnitude less than the figures you're giving.

      Do you have some decimals misplaced, or do I? ;-)

    13. Re:A Joke by defcon-11 · · Score: 1

      Priuses are popular with wealthy individuals. People don't buy them because they save gas, they buy them because it gives them green cred, geek cred, or just because they want toys with the latest tech

      I think marketing a more expensive car for this market is the right thing to do. Car companies need to get into a different mindset. It doesn't necessarily matter if your car has the best tech anymore. 1st to market and a strong track record now have a huge influence, just like in the tech device market.

    14. Re:A Joke by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      You don't need a lot of torque to move four people, and smaller wheels are lighter, affecting mileage more than if you lost the same amount of weight from inside the car.

    15. Re:A Joke by mrmeval · · Score: 1, Troll

      No, it mostly was built by government handouts from taxes taken from productive people. More than just the handout most think about there are a gravy train of subsidies on that car and it's still too expensive to be economical.

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    16. Re:A Joke by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      You can't compare the Volt to the Prius. I've posted this to other subthreads here.

      If you go by just putting gas in the thing, then yes, the Prius comes out favorably. If you compare a Corvette to a minivan by how many passengers you can haul in it, yes, it sucks.

      You're not supposed to regularly put gas in the Volt. If you are, you're using it wrong.

      The Prius is a gasoline-only hybrid (ignoring the new short-range plug-in version this year which only goes 8-11 miles on a charge or half a typical commute). The Volt is an extended-range electric vehicle.

      The Volt is a new class of vehicle. You plug it in regularly, and ideally you almost never put any gas in it. The Prius doesn't do that.

      So if you don't want to plug in your car and you want to keep using gas, yes, buy that Prius.

    17. Re:A Joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going 100k miles at 50 miles per gallon at $4 per gallon will cost you $8,000 dollars in gasoline.
      Going the same distance in a 4 cylinder 2012 Honda accord (27 mpg combined) will cost you about $15,000 in gasoline.

      If your drive a car for 150k miles, you're in the neighborhood of break-even or better depending on how you drive you volt and how much gasoline you actually have to use on a regular basis. I think many people underestimate what fuel costs over the life of a car because they only pay for it $70 at a time. If $4 or $5 gasoline becomes the norm, a Volt or Leaf won't seem like such an outrageous prospect, especially when you consider that many people have no problem paying 50k for a luxury car.

    18. Re:A Joke by tknd · · Score: 1

      Sure, I could have bought a cheaper car, and I'll never save enough in gas (well, unless Iran destabilizes the middle East and we end up with $10/gal gas) to recover my cost, but I actually like driving the Volt. It's not a sports car, but it's not sluggish either. 0-60 is 9.2 seconds, but the instant torque from the electric engine makes it feel much faster. In "Sport" mode, it does 0-30 in 3.0 seconds.

      That's great for you. But here's what's going on in my mind: I could buy the upcoming Toyota Prius C for $20k, use it for the lame commute. Then later buy the upcoming Scion FRS (Toyota GT-86 outside of US) for ~$23 to $25k (official price not announced) for my "sporting" desires.

      Buying the Volt is asking me to subsidize GM's plans without much benefit. Furthermore, I only have the capacity to afford at maximum a $25k car. I could afford more, but it isn't a good use of my income at my level.

      At least a Tesla Roadster was something to be interested in. A Tesla Model S as well. GM really tried to meet too broad a market with the Volt. And the sales prove that.

    19. Re:A Joke by Rakishi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your numbers are way way way off. You probably missed a decimal point, it's $0.09 less (at best) per mile and not $0.90. Not counting maintenance and so on.

      That changes your examples significantly.

      Now your hypothetical ideal Volt candidate only saves $985.50 per year. And pays $20000 more for the car. In other words even the ideal user would lose money by buying a volt because they'd never make up the cost premium

      So yes, the comparison is very simple. The Volt sucks and no one should buy one.

    20. Re:A Joke by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      And as others have said in this very thread, it doesn't matter. Even if neither car is used for more than 30 miles per day the Prius still comes out ahead.

      Even the most ideal Volt user in the world would be better off buying a Prius.

    21. Re:A Joke by tsotha · · Score: 1

      I live less than five miles from work, and most of my errands are within that distance. A couple times a year I drive a few hundred miles to visit family, so if I bought a Leaf I'd have to rent on those occasions. So I'm the ideal Volt customer - all electric normally but I do need the range.

      Of course at $40k the numbers will never work, and the Volt is so complicated I question its reliability. But if they could get the price down I'd sure consider it.

    22. Re:A Joke by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      And how many years will it take you to drive 150k miles of electric on the Volt? Remember you gotta recharge for hours every 30 miles or so. Don't forget that after 10 years you need to spend $10+k to have the batteries replaced.

      Electricity also isn't free so you need to cut those gasoline savings down a bit to make up for it.

      I get around $0.05 savings/mile for a Volt versus a Prius for the first 30 miles assuming some rather inexpensive electricity. At 150k miles that only $6000 in savings so you're still out the extra $20k you paid for the Volt. Worse, at 30 miles per day it has taken you 13 years to get that many miles. So 3 years ago you had to pay another $10k to get new batteries.

      So basically at it's current price the Volt is worthless from every economical perspective one can think of.

    23. Re:A Joke by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      It does matter. What does it comes out ahead in?

      It is not possible to run a Prius (again, excluding the new plug-in version which isn't really out yet) without using gas. It is possible to run a Volt without using gas. Why does everyone overlook this one simple detail?

    24. Re:A Joke by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      What does it comes out ahead in?

      In terms of how much you pay which is what most people care about. That's, btw, if you don't put a single ounce of gasoline in the Volt. Even in it's best potential environment and usage it'd still cost more overall than a Prius. There is no way to make up the cost premium of the Volt through the cost savings of not buying gasoline.

      It is not possible to run a Prius (again, excluding the new plug-in version which isn't really out yet) without using gas. It is possible to run a Volt without using gas. Why does everyone overlook this one simple detail?

      So? Why would I want to pay more to use a less convenient form of energy?

    25. Re:A Joke by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      What does it comes out ahead in?

      In terms of how much you pay which is what most people care about. That's, btw, if you don't put a single ounce of gasoline in the Volt. Even in it's best potential environment and usage it'd still cost more overall than a Prius. There is no way to make up the cost premium of the Volt through the cost savings of not buying gasoline.

      OK, so you're using a Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) comparison. Nobody has ever claimed the Volt has a lower TCO than the Prius execpt for people looking to trash it. If you can't afford it, you are not a target user of the first-generation Volt. This first generation of the Volt is targeted at folks that want to not use gasoline, and are willing to pay a premium to do it. The strategy is simple and it worked for the Prius. When the Prius came out, it was not a lower TCO than other cars on the market either. Now, 10 years later, it's approaching parity and it is successful as such.

      The cost of the Volt WILL come down in subsequent model years as the technology improves.

      It is not possible to run a Prius (again, excluding the new plug-in version which isn't really out yet) without using gas. It is possible to run a Volt without using gas. Why does everyone overlook this one simple detail?

      So? Why would I want to pay more to use a less convenient form of energy?

      You don't, which is why you haven't bought it, and GM couldn't care less about you right now. You're not the target demographic, YET.
      If you're looking for the lowest TCO, you're not getting it with the Volt. You're not going to pay for it, which is why you haven't bought it.

      HOWEVER. Cars evolve. This is a step in the evolution. Soon, in a few years, you will be seriously considering purchasing an EREV. And you can thank this generation of Volts and its well-off "foolish" buyers for paving the way for you.

      I defend the Volt, and I haven't bought one for the same reasons. I can't afford it. Yet. But I can see the vision that GM is executing on here and I think it's a great thing.

    26. Re:A Joke by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      car isn't free, so 0.80/mile may include price of car depreciating over 2 years.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    27. Re:A Joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm getting around 109mpg. Since early December, I've bought around $60 in gas. It's hard to tell due to the mild winter, but I think my electric bill has gone up around $25/mo.

      You are NOT getting 109mpg.

      You ARE falling victim to the doublespeak created to 'help" the average electric car owner "understand" the fuel/energy economy if his vehicle.

      MPG works for the gasoline engine. According to all reports, your Volt gets 35mpg. Electric motors work in miles per kWh, the Volt getting slightly above 2 miles/kWh. The electric car industry and the EPA have decided to mix apples and oranges in an effort to help the confusion caused by introducing new terminology (kWh) to a public that doesn't understand it.

      If it hasn't already happened, someone is going to put one gallon of gasoline in his Volt, and try to drive 109 miles. It just doesn't work like that.

      Note: CAPTCHA word = "recall"

    28. Re:A Joke by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Nobody has ever claimed the Volt has a lower TCO than the Prius execpt for people looking to trash it.

      Odd, one of the Volt supporters in this very thread tried to make that claim (using wrong numbers but still).

      When the Prius came out, it was not a lower TCO than other cars on the market either. Now, 10 years later, it's approaching parity and it is successful as such.

      First of all, the TCO difference for the Prius were much smaller and for some segments the TCO was in fact positive (ie: heavy city driving). The Prius always had an actual market while the Volt does not.

      Second of all, magnitude matters. Paying $5k extra is acceptable to many people. Paying $20k extra is not.

      The cost of the Volt WILL come down in subsequent model years as the technology improves.

      Assuming GM doesn't go bankrupt again or doesn't kill the whole project from lack of profitability and then go bankrupt again.

      GM couldn't care less about you right now

      Given TFA, it seems that they should have.

      Soon, in a few years, you will be seriously considering purchasing an EREV.

      Nope, doubt I ever will. See, I like cities and so I tend to live in them. Perfect for an electric car you say. Except in cities you live in these things called apartments and use this thing called street parking. So charging an electric car is impossible. Although my old job did have electric car spots but all the non-plugin Prius drivers took them so that was a bust.

      Granted I haven't used my car in months now, thank you functional public transportation, so I'm not much of a customer demographic for car companies anymore period. TCO wise getting a zipcar membership would make more sense right now.

    29. Re:A Joke by tftp · · Score: 1

      Even at $5/gal gas, fuel costs would only be around $0.15 per mile.

      Volt needs premium gas. It is already close to $5. But let's say it's the price you pay. Volt can do 37 mpg in gas-assisted mode. 37 miles = $5, 1 mile = 13.5 cents.

      Looks like you are correct.

      On the other side of the equation, Prius runs at 50 mpg. The $4/gal (regular) gas results in 8 cents per mile.

      Volt needs about 10 kWh to drive 40 miles. With each kWh bought at 10 cents at night, the effective cost of a Volt's EV mile is 2.5 cents.

      So the GP post is off by about an order of magnitude. Volt in EV mode is cheaper than Prius by 5.5 cents per mile, but the same Volt in gas mode is more expensive by the same 5.5 cents.

      A standard Volt costs about $13K more than a loaded Prius. Driving Volt in gas mode is a total loss, so we won't go there. Let's see how many miles you need to drive Volt in EV mode to beat Prius. Since each mile earns you 5.5 cents and you need to win back $13K, the number is ... 236 thousand miles. It's safe to say that both cars are junk by that time. Besides, to drive Volt that much in EV mode you need (counting on 80 miles, two charges per day) 11 years of weekday driving. If you dare to use headlights, A/C or windshield wipers then your break even date is even further away. The car will not live long enough, especially given that the battery needs to be replaced after 10 years. Prius's battery is about $3K, Volt's battery is about $18K, which puts Volt into a deep abyss of red again and forever.

    30. Re:A Joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not supposed to regularly put gas in the Volt. If you are, you're using it wrong.

      True, and I'm just waiting for some of the people that barely drive the Volt past the EV-only range with 10% ethanol in it start finding out the gas has spoiled. It's a PITA when it happens with a lawnmower or chainsaw.. Can't wait to see some bills when it happens in a Volt.

      Any Volt owner really should be using the Stabil additive for Ethonal-added gas. If they arn't and they don't put much gas in it, sooner or later, I think they're in for a surprise..

    31. Re:A Joke by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Eh, I don't think the Prius looks futuristic at all.

      Well, not any more. And not at all, compared to the MkI Honda Insight, but there are numerically zero of them on the road after rounding. The Prius looked fairly conceptish at launch time (in terms of what other automakers were bringing out) and does have a very modern design overall in terms of cab layout and so on.

      Yeah, I don't like tiny wheels on cars... but I thought electric vehicles were supposed to be high torque? Why is there a need to have smaller diameter wheels?

      All that is irrelevant because you gear around it at the differential and the ratios come out the same. The smaller wheels are there because if you have a large wheel with a skinny tire it is both expensive and has high sidewall flex, and the skinny tires are desirable for maximum fuel mileage.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    32. Re:A Joke by tftp · · Score: 1

      People don't trash Volt because it is Volt. It's just the math doesn't make sense. When GM starts selling a car that gives people a reason to buy then things will change.

      At this moment Volt can be sold only to wealthy individuals who have a free spot in one of their garages. It is not a practical car, and it is not bought for its practical qualities. The number of such buyers is always small, and Volt already ran out of its "target demography."

      Volt needs to become much cheaper to be even considered by majority of car buyers.

      The strategy is simple and it worked for the Prius. When the Prius came out, it was not a lower TCO than other cars on the market either.

      I own a Prius for last 7 years. Its TCO was always low, and remains low today. Back in 2005 I needed a new car, and Prius was both technically interesting and economical in the long term. It was also a nice car in every other aspect. But the most important point is that Prius was reasonably priced. Perhaps it was a few $K more expensive than the average, but it was in the ballpark. Volt is outrageously outside.

    33. Re:A Joke by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Possibly the clue is that the Prius is for people forseeing a dogshit future.

    34. Re:A Joke by jmactacular · · Score: 1

      The unfortunate thing is the Volt prototypes were pretty futuristic looking...

    35. Re:A Joke by toddestan · · Score: 1

      You have to remember the Prius uses about every trick in the book to make an efficient car. The teardrop shape is due to aerodynamics, and the small tires is done to reduce the unsprung mass. This is also why other electric cars also have a similar look. Of course, the Prius also has some Toyota-ugly baked into the design, but it's not nearly as bad as, say, the Camry.

    36. Re:A Joke by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      we end up with $10/gal gas

      We are there. In the UK petrol costs over $9.50/gallon.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    37. Re:A Joke by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      the small tires is done to reduce the unsprung mass.

      Smaller wheel arches also means less drag, which is probably more significant. You can have large light wheels but they are expensive. Check out Advan's catalog sometime for a shocker.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    38. Re:A Joke by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      Bunch of people "according to reports" who have never even SEEN one, much less driven one.

      I will by LAUGHING my ass off when you dopes are paying $6/gallon, and my Volt gets me 40mi to work and back for like 80 cents. It's this kind of nonsensical drivel that leads to misinformation. When, and for only like .3g, I have run on gas, it's returned 43 on the highway.

      Everyone's a freaking genius because they're reading other peoples drivel, everyone then misinforms everyone else on here, and all of a sudden, volt goes 5mi on battery,which takes 19hrs to charge at a cost of $27, takes $75 to fill the tank, and does 17mpg. And then we wonder why Europe thinks we're a bunch of morons. They've already got like 6-8K orders for the EU equivalent, because they're smart enough to understand that it does, and what it offers, and that as gas goes higher, the ROI just climbs up. So, you geniuses keep on burning gas. I hope you guys won't be able to afford to drive, and when you ask an EV owner for a carpool, that he send you to where you belong. You'll have noone to blame but yourselves, for continuing to send money to terrorist nations and American haters for oil.

      Enjoy that $6/g gas that's coming. And for those criticizing the tax credit, I assume you do NOT fill in your tax form for earned income credit, and also turn down the child credits, and I'm also sure you don't even mention your mortgage interest.

    39. Re:A Joke by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      These people don't understand that we're on borrowed time, and have been living a farce with government subsidized oil/gas. When the nation can no longer afford to subsidize oil, and they see the REAL price, like the EU and UK, they will be in for a major shock. UK pays like GBP1.50 per LITRE that's GBP5.50 per gallon, equaling like nearly $8-9/g. When they see that at their local BP station, then reality will bitch-slap them with the ferocity of a hammer.

      So go ahead, and keep the blinders on. Let's see how those Tahoes and Excursions work out for ya when gas is $7-8/g.

      Me? I'll be driving my 2012 Volt, with leather, and Navi, and the Bose surround speakers w/sub, listening to MP3s on the 30GB HDD, happy as sh!t that I made a smart decision, and purchased an American car, designed by Americans, built by Americans, for driving by Americans, and running on American-generated electricity to the tune of 1.6cents/mile. I'll be laughing all the way to the bank.

    40. Re:A Joke by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      Again, Volt buyers, we aren't cross-shopping to a freaking prius. That's a butt-ugly baby carrier that looks like hell. WTF? Are you folks that dense? That's like telling the guy that bought a Vetter, that he was better off with a Scion Tc, because the TCO was lower.

      Well, NO SHIT. But I'm not shopping for a stripped-down, POS, etch-a-sketch plastic 4-door hatchback, with the ugliest rear ever devised by man, with space for 3 car seats, and 2 weeks worth of diapers in the hatch, instead of a Volt. I simply do NOT see how people can create that bridge. The fit and finish on the Volt, as well as the standard features, make a Prius look like a damn Yaris or Echo compared to it. If you want to STILL build a fantasy bridge, and compare to the Plug-In Prius, that starts at $33K, and only gets a $2500 tax credit. Volt starts at $39995, and after Tax Credit of $7500, it's like $2100 more than that POS. How's that for math?

      Then, you factor in, that if you even fart in the PiPrius, it starts the engine, you're basically burning gas 90+% of the time.

      Can't accelerate hard... Can't go over 62mph... Can't climb hills... Can't have excessive torque load... Please... The PiPrius is not EVEN in the same league as the Volt, yet it will cost you only $2100 less, and that's the VERY POINT we're trying to make. You folks need to read a little less, be less of a sheep, and check the Volt out, so at the very least, you can be informed enough to formulate your OWN opinion. That's all I'm saying. Forget Faux News, forget the rags, just go DRIVE one, experience one, and then get back to us.

    41. Re:A Joke by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      The Volt is ideal for a person who has a daily round-trip commute up near it's battery max, or one-way near it's battery max if they can charge at work.

      Take me for instance. My round-trip is right near 40mi, and I can easily coax 44-46mi out of my Volt. Costs me about 90 cents to fully charge it (7.3cents/kWhr per Florida Power and Light off-peak residential rates) and I can get to work and back on one charge.

      Well, even in a 2003 Suzuki Aerio, that ride used to cost me about $5 each way, because there was some stop-and-go, some highway, all factored in, it was about $10/day. Now, I spend about 90 cents. I save over $9/day, averaging 22 workdays/month, that works out to right around $200/month saved. All of a sudden, the payment doesn't seem so bad, does it? You basically lop $200 right off the top, and you get a VERY nice car (trust me - I have a 2009 Cobalt SS/Turbo, and the fit and finish and materials used in the Volt are not just a step up - they are a quantum leap forward for a Chevy!) to boot!

      And as gas continues to rise, so will my savings. When gas is $5/gallon, I'll be saving $240-260/mo, and it'll only continue to increase as gas prices do. Face it - $2.49 gas is over, done with, and gone. It's NEVER coming back.

    42. Re:A Joke by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      Actually, your math sucks, and noone should listen. I'm saving over $200-210/mo with my Volt. Need me to do the math for you? It definitely does NOT compute to $985.

      Also, there's no 3-5Kmi oil changes... should I keep going? My Volt ended up basically at $35K after tax credit, which is a measly $2-3K more than a bare-bones stripped-down Plug-in Prius which is basically an ugly snooze-inducing, fun-lacking, butt-ugly road appliance, and in my Volt, I ride in leather, with Navi,and all the other toys.

      There's your math. Prius != Volt, not in EV efficiency, not in fit and finish, not in standard features and options, not in looks. Not.In.Same.Class. Even your beloved magazines and sites that misinform the public say it - it is NOT a typical Chevrolet, and it is leaps and bounds beyond a Prius. Volt shoppers do NOT cross-shop a dang Prius, and to insinuate that, and continue to compare them apples-to-apples, just shows your ignorance of market forces, and demographics.

    43. Re:A Joke by tsotha · · Score: 1

      You replaced a car that gets only twenty miles to the gallon with a car optimized to save gas, and it still takes you almost seven years to recover the difference in price over a $20k car that gets only twenty miles to the gallon. If you'd replace the Aerio with a 30 mpg econobox you would have come out far ahead even assuming gas jumps up to $5 and stays there. And you represent the absolute best case for a Volt, with your commute distance and the fact you live in a warm state.

    44. Re:A Joke by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, your math sucks, and noone should listen. I'm saving over $200-210/mo with my Volt. Need me to do the math for you? It definitely does NOT compute to $985.

      You don't know that yet, you haven't owned the vehicle long enough to determine how much it's going to save you over the period you've owned it. If it's like other GM famous firsts, it's going to be an awful lemon you regret ever buying.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    45. Re:A Joke by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You can't compare the Volt to the Prius. I've posted this to other subthreads here.

      Yes you can. Apples and oranges are both fruit and the Volt and the Prius are both HEVs.

      You're not supposed to regularly put gas in the Volt. If you are, you're using it wrong.

      And if you receive poor reception on the iPhone because of a shitty antenna design they didn't tell the users about before they bought it, you're holding it wrong. Asshole.

      The Volt is a new class of vehicle. You plug it in regularly, and ideally you almost never put any gas in it.

      Thanks for telling me how I want to drive my car, I was confused without your help.

      So if you don't want to plug in your car and you want to keep using gas, yes, buy that Prius.

      Or if you happen to go more than 70 miles in a trip regularly, which is true for thousands upon thousands of commuters in California, the most populous state (because people want to live here) with the most cars, buy that Prius. Or, you know, buy a TDI, which makes more sense by far.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    46. Re:A Joke by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I own a Prius for last 7 years. Its TCO was always low, and remains low today.

      If you haven't done a battery replacement or sold the car you don't have a clear picture of the TCO.

      But the most important point is that Prius was reasonably priced. Perhaps it was a few $K more expensive than the average, but it was in the ballpark. Volt is outrageously outside.

      True.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  15. Who would have guessed? by medcalf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When you make a product for political reasons, not because there's a market, and then subject it to the market, it tends not to do well. Huh.

    --
    -- Two men say they're Jesus. One of them must be wrong. - Dire Straits
    1. Re:Who would have guessed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Volt was not made for "political" reasons, but it's success or failure has been turned into a political issue by right wingers. In fact, the first concept cars that led to the Volt were shown in 2007, during Bush Jr's term, and the technology was in development for years before that. Yes, the Volt is a risky product that GM is trying to develop to counter the success of the Prius. Sadly it sure doesn't help sales when you have an entire political party (and its popular party-run media outlets) dedicated to seeing the American auto industry fail just so they can get elected. Not a week has gone by that we have not seen Republican gasbags and the conservative-controlled media attacking the Volt in particular with false claims about battery fires and government subsidies. I know you folks really want to win the next election, but do you really have to cheer for America to fail to get it?

    2. Re:Who would have guessed? by Stickybombs · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This! Exactly this. The auto 'bailouts' saved probably a couple million jobs. If the auto companies fail, you lose suppliers, dealers, etc, etc., not to mention the massive tax impacts to the towns with factories. The loans have been partially repaid, and will be finally repaid whenever the government decides to sell its GM stock holdings (they are waiting for the price to go up). Even if they sold their shares right now, the total cost for the 'bailouts' would be about $14 billion. What about the bank bailouts? Those cost taxpayers anywhere from $15 billion to $90 billion. (It is pretty tough to find a good estimate, they range wildly all over the place) Have we seen any benefit from those bailouts? Or just a bunch of rich bankers getting richer? And yet, all we hear complaints about are the auto company loans. Everyone seems to forget about the banks, which likely cost us far more, and with less benefit.

    3. Re:Who would have guessed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still think this argument is bullshit.
      Let's say you let GM fail and put all your weight behind Chrysler. They share many (if not all) suppliers. There is still the same demand for vehicles. If Chrysler picked up most of the slack from the domestic buying crowd the same people at the same suppliers would be making the parts hopefully giving you about the same total employment.
      Except for GM, Good riddance.

    4. Re:Who would have guessed? by khallow · · Score: 1

      The Volt was not made for "political" reasons

      Sure.

      Sadly it sure doesn't help sales when you have an entire political party (and its popular party-run media outlets) dedicated to seeing the American auto industry fail just so they can get elected.

      I will not buy a GM car ever, until they pay back the debt they owe to the US, both directly and indirectly. GM goes bankrupt and gets split up is an solution I'm willing to accept. This is a part of America that failed long ago and it's about time it got out of the way.

    5. Re:Who would have guessed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for having a rational post amongst the idiocy here. Right on my friend.

    6. Re:Who would have guessed? by medcalf · · Score: 1
      Disclaimer: I worked at GM during the time the Volt was being designed and prototyped. But not in engineering: I don't claim special insight from that.

      You are beating that strawman good. That's not what I said. The Volt was designed for political reasons (CAFE standards, looking good with environmentalists, etc), more than as an engineering challenge (that part was what EV-1 was for). Regardless of what Republicans may claim or not claim, it is nonetheless true that the reasons for the Volt were far more political than engineering or market driven.

      --
      -- Two men say they're Jesus. One of them must be wrong. - Dire Straits
  16. I know, I know by Kupfernigk · · Score: 2

    Cannot get 4 adults plus dog plus ancillaries in a Yaris. But that, or. Fiat 500 twinair, will be our next town car.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:I know, I know by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's pathetic how few vehicles get decent mileage. but this one will fit your adults and dog, http://www.cars.com/kia/soul/2012/

      Dunno if the Soul is any good but Kia has really come up

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:I know, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every time I drive by one of those, I expect to see a hairy overweight hamster...

    3. Re:I know, I know by cynyr · · Score: 2

      Jetta Sportwagon TDI comes to mind 30 / 42 city/hwy. The touareg TDI gets 19 / 28MPG city / hwy which isn't great, but isn't a hummer either.

      --
      All of the above was encrypted with a Quad ROT-13 method. Unauthorized decryption is in violation of the DMCA.
    4. Re:I know, I know by couchslug · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Cannot get 4 adults plus dog plus ancillaries in a Yaris."

      Have multiple vehicles. I don't drive my F350 Ford or 366 big block Chevy truck unless I need to, but liability insurance is cheap and they are paid for.

      Multiple vehicles allows selection of the right tool for the job.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    5. Re:I know, I know by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The Jetta probably costs a lot more, I haven't looked but VWs with TDIs don't come cheap. And the tourwfhweipeg is heinously overpriced.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:I know, I know by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      I get better mileage than that in my Ford Escape hybrid, mines bigger, carries more passengers and cargo, and its a hell of a lot more reliable than a shitty VW.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    7. Re:I know, I know by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Cannot get 4 adults plus dog plus ancillaries in a Yaris."

      Have multiple vehicles. I don't drive my F350 Ford or 366 big block Chevy truck unless I need to, but liability insurance is cheap and they are paid for.

      Multiple vehicles allows selection of the right tool for the job.

      Or rent what you need when you need it. We have a small car which we mainly use for commuting. When we need something bigger or with more cargo space (like a pickup), we rent from the city carshare program or a regular car rental agency which has surprisingly good weekend rates since they have a glut of cars from business travelers). The city carshare program is especially nice when I have to work late unexpectedly, they have cheap overnight rates and there are several locations within easy walking distance from work so I've always been able to get a car when I need it, even last minute. The overnight car rental rate is cheaper than it would cost to take a cab home.

      Our occasional car rental bill is much lower than our car payment would be on a second car.

    8. Re:I know, I know by HungWeiLo · · Score: 0

      What gas money initially saved with a VW is quickly repaid at the repair shop, and then some. TDI or not.

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    9. Re:I know, I know by blueforce · · Score: 1

      That's crap. I have a Scion xA, which is a fancy Yaris. We're a family of 4 - me, my wife, and our twin boys. I'm 6' 4" 220 pounds so I have to drive it with the seat all the way back. We drove that car from NE Ohio to Myrtle Beach and back with all of our ancillaries twice with no problem at all. We regularly take trips to D.C., Chicago, and other points over 3 hours driving distance and we never have a problem packing a week's worth of ancillaries.

      --
      If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
    10. Re:I know, I know by PsychoSlashDot · · Score: 1

      It's pathetic how few vehicles get decent mileage.

      The definition of "decent mileage" keeps changing.

      --
      "Oh no... he found the .sig setting."
    11. Re:I know, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because "decent" can mean something different to me than it does to you. The relativity of certain terminology is indecent! Can't we have a little regularization, some DECENCY here!?

    12. Re:I know, I know by couchslug · · Score: 2

      "Our occasional car rental bill is much lower than our car payment would be on a second car."

      I buy used vehicles for cash and run liability insurance. Requires saving and shopping, but I save far more by not going into debt.

      The "tears" of buying non-new vehicles were easily wiped away with the deed to my home, which I paid off early by eschewing new car debt!

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    13. Re:I know, I know by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Every time I drive by one of those, I expect to see a hairy overweight hamster...

      As opposed to a denuded, anorexic one?

      You haven't seen many hamsters, have you? Aside from the hip-hop bling (and the human-sized stature!), they all look pretty much like the ones depicted in that overplayed Kia commercial...

    14. Re:I know, I know by toddestan · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? Decent mileage has been something like 30MPG or higher for decades.

    15. Re:I know, I know by adolf · · Score: 1

      We have a small family sedan, and a work van (which is generally full of tools and bolted-in Weathergard accessories).

      So when we need to move something big (we're in the middle of a never-ending remodel), we just either hire it done or rent something. Even the local home centers have pickup trucks for rent, which while "pricey" at $20 for 75 minutes, are awfully convenient.

      If there's more stuff than that to move, a remarkably small stack of 20's and a trip to U-Haul will get any of several sizes of box truck for about 24 hours of local use.

      Hell, when we drove to from Ohio to Florida and back recently, we looked at rental prices just as a curiosity when we got back: I don't want to own a Chevy Aveo because they're no fun to drive, but renting one would've been just a couple of hundred bucks for a week's use, with unlimited mileage...and fuel savings from the relatively modern and efficient Chevy would've paid for a lot of its rental. Factoring wear and tear and risk on our own car, we're renting something next time we head down there. It's cheaper.

    16. Re:I know, I know by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      THANK YOU. The simple truth is that we keep getting more and more powerful cars offered (and marketed) to us in the USA instead of more and more efficient cars.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:I know, I know by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      A TDI VW made in Wolfsberg will still be on the road when your Ford has collapsed into a pile of rust, probably next week sometime if you live in one of the salt states.

      I say this as someone who owns an F250 with an IDI 7.3... but I also own a W126 300SD.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    18. Re:I know, I know by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Every friend / coworker I have regrets their VW purchase. Everything fails on that thing, from power windows to ABS to water pumps. Rust is not an issue with a VW they just fall apart on their own.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    19. Re:I know, I know by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm interested in hooking up with someone who regrets buying a German-made (not Mexican-made) TDI Golf.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    20. Re:I know, I know by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm interested in hooking up with someone who regrets buying a German-made (not Mexican-made) TDI Golf.

      Ummm this is a tech site, not a gay hookup site.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  17. Suspending Production != Suspending Sales by EmagGeek · · Score: 0

    They have not suspended sales, duh. They're trying like hell to sell them.

    They've suspended PRODUCTION while they try to reduce the backlog of inventory.

    Are we living in a world full of illiterates or something?

  18. Ohm I God! by Anna+Merikin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Volt meets Resistance. I couldn't resist.

    On a serious note, GM does not have a good record with respect to embracing effective change. Its management is still intellectually corrupt, except it is no longer led by executives who came up through sales/marketing and now has had government surrogates put in their places.

    GM has never had a working grip on the obvious, and I'm old enough to remember when GM-made cars were more than half of the world's output. They no longer have a monopoly, nor the world's biggest dealer network, and only, apparently, one profitable brand of auto -- Cadillac.

    So, as I told a friend who had inherited money in 2001 -- "Sell GM short. They're going down."

    It's true again, How long must GM wait before it can return to the courts for relief?.

    1. Re:Ohm I God! by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Funny

      Volt meets Resistance. I couldn't resist.

      It's good that Slashdot is here to help us keep up on current events.

    2. Re:Ohm I God! by lexsird · · Score: 1

      /rimshot

      --
      Take the Red Pill.
    3. Re:Ohm I God! by DarkOx · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yea, I can't help but laugh Obama's little UAW trash the rule of law give away is about to blow up.

      Its time to short GM, they will NOT be repeating their record profits next quarter or the one after it. The numbers are rigged. Its come out in recent days that GM has stuffed the channel like never before. Makes it look like the parent company sold a ton of cars (and technically they did) but the dealers and resellers did not move the inventory; so there will be FAR fewer re-orders.

      Also Consumer reports just rated them near the bottom as usual; so much for that turn around and building cars American's want to buy. After a couple years on the road its being revealed the changes are all window dressing and the quality problems are still there. I only hope the next time these fools go bankrupt we let it get handled by the courts like its supposed to so that all that tooling can get sold off cheap to someone who is going to do something worth while with it.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    4. Re:Ohm I God! by pnewhook · · Score: 0

      The numbers are rigged.

      yea I've heard fox news and the political idiots say this. What the hell is wrong with you crackpots anyway? Yo want Obama to fail so badly that when the economy numbers look good you just throw up your hands and shout 'rigged! rigged!'. Get you head out of your ass will you?

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    5. Re:Ohm I God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which economic numbers look good and why are they not rigged?

    6. Re:Ohm I God! by rickb928 · · Score: 2

      Watt?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    7. Re:Ohm I God! by russotto · · Score: 1

      If the numbers are rigged, the numbers are rigged. Even if Fox news says so.

    8. Re:Ohm I God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Historically when GM was great (think 50's) GM was run by a combination of bean counters AND engineering types. They may have been surrounded by Marketing/sales guys but both types had input. Roger Smith, quite possibly the worst CEO in GM's history came up via accounting, not sales, not marketing, accounting.

      Good books to read on the subject include
      Rivethead, Call me Roger & On a clear day you can see General Motors.

      G.M. problems are nothing new. They became so big they could literally coast without have to do much for years. The above list help give a proper historical perspective from the top to the bottom.

    9. Re:Ohm I God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their SUVs and trucks make money, as does the Corvette, as does overseas sales, but their other cars don't sell well at all.

    10. Re:Ohm I God! by Dripdry · · Score: 1

      Look, the economic numbers, unfortunately, ARE pretty rigged. You have wallstreet analysts and economists looking at each other going,"Um, where did these huge profit numbers come from? We can't figure it out, can you?"

      It's rigged because that's the best the government can do to prop up a very broken system, corrupt as it is. It's another bubble, and when this pops it's likely to get interesting.

      I don't think it's Obama's fault, though he shares some blame. Money hasn't gone where it needed to, America did not go through a massive investment in its infrastructure, it went through an enormous corporate handout. That's coming home to roost.

      The fault? It lies with Nixon, Reagan, Bushie 1, Clinton, Bushie 2 (more than anybody perhaps), and Obama doesn't have the cajones to stand up and try to stop a careening boulder that's likely to squish America at some point.

      --
      -
    11. Re:Ohm I God! by khallow · · Score: 1

      What the hell is wrong with you crackpots anyway? Yo want Obama to fail so badly that when the economy numbers look good you just throw up your hands and shout 'rigged! rigged!'.

      The numbers look so good they have to be faked. Companies don't turn around that fast. And we already see that GM can't maintain that wonderful quarter.

      Also, why shouldn't we want Obama to fail hard? He's probably the most dishonest president we've ever had, including such recent gems as Nixon and Clinton. Why should we ever want to reward that sort of behavior? Do we look that stupid?

      My view is that GM's business model is in large part milking the political game in order to generate enough profit to stay alive. I have not even the slightest qualm in letting them go bankrupt. If I were the incoming president, I'd do what I could to make sure that the US government never bought another GM product again (as well as the other businesses such as the music industry, GE, solar power industry, etc who exploited their access to the Obama administration to make lots of profit at our expense). There should be very negative consequences for abusing the public trust and consuming public funds for selfish reasons.

    12. Re:Ohm I God! by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Why do you think Obama is dishonest? I don't get where that comes from.

      No one can be more dishonest that Reagan and the Bushs. Pretty much everything they said was a blatant lie (ie, 'I have no idea where those weapons came from', 'the contras are freedom fighters', 'read my lips no new taxes' and the favorite 'they've got wmds!'

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    13. Re:Ohm I God! by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      But why would you believe the numbers are rigged anyway?

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    14. Re:Ohm I God! by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Hussein had chemical weapons. He'd used them on the Kurds, and still had some in storage when we invaded.

      Contrast this with Obama claiming the government has recouped its investment in GM, which will never happen unless GM triples in price.

    15. Re:Ohm I God! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Why do you think Obama is dishonest? I don't get where that comes from.

      Why hasn't Obama fired his Attorney General, Eric Holder yet? Holder has yet to prosecute several law enforcement officers for their part in contributing to the deaths of a federal law enforcement officer and perhaps a couple hundred people in Mexico through the "Gunwalker" program which sold guns to smugglers in the US, but failed to take even rudimentary precautions to prevent the use of these weapons in crimes in Mexico.

      Holder has also lied to Congress, claiming he wasn't informed about the program even though records subsequently show otherwise. And then there's Holder's embarrassing "apology" to the family of the slain officer which came only a few days before testimony to Congress. It's also possible that Holder is directly involved in the scandal. Plenty of reason to replace Holder. But Obama hasn't done this.

      There's the petty and tiresome deceptions that appear in most of his speeches. He presents himself as a uniter and respecter of bipartisanship while simultaneously engaging in insults and partisan attacks.

      There's Obama's personal history. Consider basic requests for documentation. He stonewalled on the birth certificate for years and still hasn't released his college transcripts. The former was a valid request simply because it was otherwise possible that he wasn't constitutionally allowed to run for president. The latter is valid because it helps evaluate the quality of a degree even from nice schools like Harvard.

      He sat in a church of a blatant racist for twenty years and never noticed something was wrong until the pastor in question became a political liability. He's never talked about his involvement with radical groups during his college and "community organizer" days.

      He's been the recipient of a number of sweet deals. Two luxurious book writing deals (who wrote those books BTW?), a great real estate deal with a new neighbor, who just happened to both be a major Obama fundraiser and be indicted on corruption charges a few years later, and some low impact academic positions. Dubya didn't get padded any better when he was growing up.

      Could it be his remarkably corrupt means for doling out recovery money to his cronies and allies? Could it be his economic bailouts which favor Democrat allies like labor unions? Could it be healthcare waivers to democrat allies ever since Obamacare passed? Or giving away billions in guaranteed loans to "green" industries who seemed incapable of ever generating a profit? Or his numerous attempts to protect the *IAA business models at the expense of the US public?

      Or perhaps it's his obvious intransigence and obtuseness when it comes to entities that he doesn't like, say like his obstruction of fossil fuel industry activities on bogus grounds. Or his bizarre insults to loyal foreign allies (particularly, the UK).

      How about the economic lies? It's infamous that no budgetary projection made by the federal government ever nears reality. But Obama's projections are notoriously bad even by those standards. He'll have trillion dollar plus deficits that were never predicted. He'll have high levels of on-the-book unemployment that was never predicted.

      He claims to "create or save" jobs while simultaneously implementing policies in the environmental, health care, and economic policy realm that kill jobs. The above unemployment curve is more consistent with a president that is destroying jobs than one that is creating them.

      No one can be more dishonest that Reagan and the Bushs. Pretty much everything they said was a blatant lie (ie, 'I have no idea where those weapons came from', 'the contras are freedom fighters', 'read my lips no new taxes' and the favorite 'they've got wmds!'

      How about someone who refused to speak out on Iran, a country that was trying to develop nuclear weapons while simultaneously using that fact behind the scenes as a neg

    16. Re:Ohm I God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Not to belittle the dishonesty of these other presidents, but Obama tops them."

      Only if you consume Fox News and the Republican talking points. Luckily, most folks still prefer factual information.

    17. Re:Ohm I God! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Sad how one can give factual information (well, plus my not inconsiderable bias on what I think those facts mean), things that actually happened, and the rebuttal is "Bu-bu-but those are Republican talking points!"

      Keep in mind that the sharpest and most effective propaganda is true. And there's a lot of that for the Obama administration to face.

    18. Re:Ohm I God! by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Companies don't turn around that fast? What about all the banks (e.g. Goldman Sachs) that are posting record profits not long after being baled out? Do you think they're faked too?

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    19. Re:Ohm I God! by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I'd sell GM based upon the fact that they seem to have based their business around trucks and SUVs (again), and the price of gasoline is starting to climb (again). I see their generic GM small SUVs and crossovers driving around all the time, but I don't see a nearly as many of newer cars like the Cruze or Malibu driving around. If the bottom falls out of the SUV market GM is going to be in serious trouble.

    20. Re:Ohm I God! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GM reported record profits last year (http://money.cnn.com/2012/02/16/news/companies/gm_earnings/index.htm) "Overall, GM reported full-year net income attributed to common shareholders of $7.6 billion, which comes to $4.58 a share. That's up from the $4.6 billion it earned in 2010." "Overall global sales volume rose 7.6% to 9 million for the year, enough to allow it to recapture the global sales title it held for 77 years before it fell behind Toyota Motor (TM) in 2008. Revenue rose 10.8% to $150.8 billion." - cnn money.

    21. Re:Ohm I God! by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Hussein had chemical weapons

      Yes he did because Reagan GAVE them to him!!! You really think that selling arms illegally to a country (then selling arms to the opposite side) to raise money for another illegal under the books CIA war in central america has any comparison to an economic statement whether its true or false??? Geez get your head out of your ass and look at what is really going on the world would you?

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    22. Re:Ohm I God! by RivenAleem · · Score: 1

      I know, and it had so much potential!

    23. Re:Ohm I God! by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      So you're switching from "WMDs are a lie!" to "Reagan gave Hussein WMDs?"

      Ok, good to know, thanks.

  19. So with 9297 Volts... by srussia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How much resistance was there exactly to cause no current to flow?

    --
    Set your phasers on "funky"!
    1. Re:So with 9297 Volts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      infinite

  20. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hyundai, BMW, Toyota, Honda, etc. all have plants in America. So we have those, at least. Apart from that, the coolest American car is probably the Tesla Roadster. Maybe a Jeep.

    With the globalization of the auto industry - like every other industry - and the consolidation of the parts makers (down to VDO, Bosch, Walbro, and a couple of others), more than likely those "American" cars are also, German, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Swiss, English, Mexican, and Canadian.

  21. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by drinkypoo · · Score: 0

    If the Crown Vic is awesome now, it's the first time. I've worked on them and driven them and they are unremitting pieces of shit... the older ones anyway.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  22. Re:Suck my troll cock by lexsird · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    No thanks, we choke on small bones.

    --
    Take the Red Pill.
  23. The title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Should have been "Chevy Volt meets high resistance, GM suspending current production".

  24. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by jedrek · · Score: 2

    Ford is the second best selling car brand in europe.

  25. HAHA, this is so hilarious! by fredan · · Score: 1, Informative

    if they had continue with the EV1 they would have been the world leader in electric cars by now.

    stupid americans.

    1. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The EV1 cost twice as much as the volt. Probably would have been even more than that if it had actually been for sale. There are regulations in the US that if you sell a car, you have to make replacement parts for it for X number of years. It was a sure loser for GM, which is why they didn't sell any at the end of their test.

      That said, the volt sucks. It's not an electric car, it's a plug in hybrid. So in addition to paying for an electric motor and high tech batteries, you also have to pay for (and haul around) a gasoline engine. How many more miles on a charge would it get if you just ripped out the gasoline engine?

      As other posters are saying, buy a Prius. At least the Prius knows what it wants to be.

    2. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Locutus · · Score: 1

      and had they not sold the patent on NiMH batteries to the Texaco when they destroyed the EV1 they would also be the leader in high capacity vehicle battery technology.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    3. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Entropius · · Score: 2

      Plug in hybrids make a lot of sense in the USA. Out West it can be 200 miles between towns. Until and unless every gas station also has a battery-pack-exchange facility (I give you my empty pack, you give me a charged one for a fee), cars with a 60 mile range are not so practical.

      There's a large chunk of potential car buyers who would look at the specs of a pure electric car with even a 100 mile range and say "Wait, so I can drive this in the LA area, the SF area, and the Boston-DC corridor, and that's it? Screw that, Imma buy a Prius."

    4. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      As someone who lives in So. Cal. I'm well aware of the distances involved and for us, the Nissan Leaf is a non issue simply because we live in a rural area. Many times, our round trip distance is in excess of 180 miles and we do that only 1-2 times a month. Our routine driving (groceries, medical, work) is a meager 30 miles round trip and the Volt would be almost perfect for it but we can't justify the cost of one when the Prius is $10k less, even with the damn federal subsidy. There are plenty of models out there in the 30k range that look and perform better then the poor Volt.

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    5. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Entropius · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's the other issue with the Volt -- it's not even a very good electric car. I'm befuddled by the bad mileage it gets -- I thought one of the ideas was that a true series hybrid like the Volt (where the gas engine only exists to generate electrical power, as in trains) could be more efficient, since the engine can be engineered to have a very sharply peaked efficiency curve and can always be run at the peak of that curve. Yet this thing gets less mileage than my $12k Yaris, with a bog-standard engine, on the highway.

      Chevy could have done better by just bolting bigger batteries to the Prius (so it could be used as a plug-in hybrid) and writing "Volt" on the side in crayon, it seems.

      Honestly, everyone's needs differ so much that electric carmakers ought to just sell cars that accept variably-sized batteries. Someone like me, who either drives 5 miles or 500, would want a Volt-type car with a small battery pack. Someone whose daily commute is 50 miles roundtrip would want a battery of that size.

    6. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Jethro · · Score: 1

      The EV1, which was around for a VERY short time, had improved DRAMATICALLY over that period. The first gen had a range of 60 miles, and the second had a range of 100. And that was with NiMH batteries which at the time were the highest tech in batteries.

      They didn't sell any of them because they REFUSED to sell any of them. People were literally BEGGING to buy their leases out. Some people refused to return the things because they knew they were going to be destroyed!

      I'd love an all-electric vehicle with an 100 mile range, and the EV1 could do that in 1996. 1996! Imagine if GM hadn't just taken them back and trashed them, but continued to make them, and did serious research. Imagine what the EV5 would've been like today, 16 years later.

      --


      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is kinky.
    7. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by tsotha · · Score: 1

      How many more miles on a charge would it get if you just ripped out the gasoline engine?

      Not very many, as you can see with the Leaf. The reason battery powered cars are niche vehicles is the energy density of hydrocarbon fuels is so much higher than that of batteries. From a back-of-the-envelop perspective, plugin hybrids make a lot of sense. The problem is the added complexity raises the price such that you'd have been better off just buying the extra fuel.

    8. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 1

      the energy density of hydrocarbon fuels is so much higher than that of batteries.

      An EV's fuel is electricity and electricity's energy density is so much better than hydrocarbons it's silly.

      Batteries are analogous to the fuel tank, and yes, they suck by comparison.
      10 kilograms of fuel tank can hold a lot more fuel-energy than 10 kilograms of batteries.

      For a fair comparison though, you need to look at the whole system; engine+fuel tank+fuel.
      ICE still wins, but not by nearly as much.

    9. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you just make this up?

      GM never had any patent on NiMH batteries (they sourced them from Ovonic Battery Co., who did have a patent), and nothing was sold to Texaco.

      Not to mention that NiMH technology is not the leader in high capacity batteries.

    10. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Locutus · · Score: 1

      frak'n AC.... GM owned the majority stake in the patent and they were also part owners of the Ovonics business. And you don't see any NiMH batteries in high capacity batteries because the NiMH patent owner does not allow it. Look up the Rav4 EV and read the section on the batteries they used. Panasonic was not allowed to continue making those high capacity batteries after being sued along with Toyota.

      Did you even look for answers to your lack of understanding?

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    11. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      Except the EV-1 was already technically obsolete because the car was essentially a big battery pack with wheels on it--not very economically attractive! If you look at the Nissan Leaf (I've test driven one owned by my cousin), note that with modern technology, you can actually seat four people plus a good amount of cargo in a vehicle about the size of the EV-1.

    12. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, the EV1 was very much a first-generation vehicle. If they continued developing the technology we'd now be up to the EV5 or something like that by now, with a decade of improvements to build upon. Instead they threw the EV1 away and had to do everything over again for the Volt.

    13. Re:HAHA, this is so hilarious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wait, so somehow loosing a shit ton of money 10 years ago would have been great,
      but losing money now isn't? Where is your logic in that? Or are you one of the clueless
      nimrods who think "Who Killed the Electric Car" i a factual documentary?

  26. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Is that why my 13 yo ford has 267k miles and I'm still driving it 140 miles a day?

  27. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Funny

    What does US have?

    Hollywood and Predator drones, so watch your fuckin' mouth.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  28. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by anon+mouse-cow-aard · · Score: 1

    Crown Vic? St-Catherines, Ontario... Thats in Québec, right? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Thomas_Assembly uh... Ford has never had any plant in Québec. Hyundai did: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromont,_Quebec#Hyundai_plant (RIP: 1994), GM did ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sainte-Th%C3%A9r%C3%A8se_Assembly ), (RIP 2002) but Ford/Linocln? never heard of it. With the Canadian Dollar trading at par with the US, that has meant a 30% increase in labour costs up here, and plants a closing left and right, and moving to the US (Caterpillar: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-02-23/caterpillar-union-workers-ratify-severance-package-as-ontario-plant-shuts.html ) oh, and fwiw, for every dollar each American put into saving GM, a Canadian put in 2$. (http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/story/2010/04/21/wdr-detroit-gm-government-loans-100421.html) oh, and the St-Catherines plant closed last year.

  29. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by dosware · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My 2002 generic Chevy Impala is going strong with 220K miles and orig transmission. My '92 BMW 850 (V12) bit the dust at 100K. Shit car for the price.

  30. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Perhaps you should drag your self two decades ahead. That hasn't been anywhere near to the truth for over two decades now. Sorry, but your post is just biased ignorance. The WELL DOCUMENTED FACT IS, the difference between all the major brands, until you get into the $50k or more, is so small, it generally doesn't matter which brand you buy. The biggest differences are in models, not brands. Period.

  31. make them look pretty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the only reason the Tesla got any attention at all was because it looked like a sporty Lotus!,
    had it looked like the current crop of retarded looking square boxes and it wouldn't of batted an eyelid.

    Make it look pretty and most wont really care about drivetrain or price too much for that matter. (See Appleâ for details)

    try customizing a Prius/ClarityFCX/Volt eg. rims/lowering/shaved/paint
    its physical proof that you cant polish poo,

    car designers should hang their heads in shame,
    1950s they went nuts with pretty design for the masses,
    since then the trend has been create non-personable uninspiring rectangular boxes and style be dammed

    you think in 50 years many people will be wanting to restore a Prius to Concours, see it on the stand at Baratt Jackson and marvell at its square lines and impeccable design choices ?

    make it look desirable, make it hackable and it will be sought after.

    1. Re:make them look pretty by cynyr · · Score: 3, Informative

      the only reason the Tesla got any attention at all was because it looked like a sporty Lotus!,
      had it looked like the current crop of retarded looking square boxes and it wouldn't of batted an eyelid.

      That is because the roadster is just a Lotus Elise with batteries and electric motors.

      --
      All of the above was encrypted with a Quad ROT-13 method. Unauthorized decryption is in violation of the DMCA.
    2. Re:make them look pretty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the roadster is just a Lotus Elise with batteries and electric motors.

      And for that they got $100s of millions in VC money. For something tons of competant shops could do for far less. A good chunk of this is to pay off banksters, patent trolls, etc. I'm sure. There are more hotrodders in California than you can shake a stick at. It's the patent trolls that keep them from sticking something other than a Chevy big-block in a light body, and creating a thriving competitive atmosphere of small alternative car companies. No, not regulations. Streeting a custom car is actually not that difficult, and you don't have to meet high safety standards for small runs. Really though, there isn't much demand for an "Orange County Chopper" type of car either.

  32. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Golden_Rider · · Score: 4, Informative

    Aren't Fords made in the US ?
    The ford focus is quite a nice and fairly popular car.

    As far as I know, the mk1 Focus was developed/built in Europe in 1998, and then Ford US built it in 2000, too, with some changes. The mk2 Focus was developed independently in Europe/US (US model was very different from Europe model and only a restyled mk1). The mk3 Focus was a joint development between Ford US and Europe, and is built both in US and Europe. So the Focus is not really a good example of a good car developed solely in the US.

  33. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    The coolest car you can buy new in America is a GT40 kit. Oddly, that's the coolest car you can buy new anywhere.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  34. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by kelemvor4 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just bought an American made car last week, a Honda Odyssey. It tells you on the window sticker these days where stuff was made. Assembled in Lincoln, Alabama USA. Engine constructed in USA, Transmission constructed in USA. 70% of all parts for it come from the USA, 15% from Japan, and the rest from "other".

    That's good enough for me to call it American.

  35. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by jaymemaurice · · Score: 1

    To be fair, I think BMW only mfgrs X3 and X6's in the USA... nothing "cool" as far as BMW product.

    --
    120 characters ought to be enough for anyone
  36. But does it work? [Re:No surprise] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 4, Funny

    I can buy TWO Ford Focus 40mpg cars for the same price as a Volt.

    Wow, I haven't heard anybody else suggest that simple technique for getting 80 mpg.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:But does it work? [Re:No surprise] by j2.718ff · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can buy TWO Ford Focus 40mpg cars for the same price as a Volt.

      Wow, I haven't heard anybody else suggest that simple technique for getting 80 mpg.

      Remember to connect them in series. If you connect them in parallel, you'll just get the 40mpg, but you can drive twice as fast.

    2. Re:But does it work? [Re:No surprise] by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Wow, I haven't heard anybody else suggest that simple technique for getting 80 mpg."

      At how many Foci does one begin to actually produce gasoline? This could be more practical than fusion.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  37. Missed the real irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    the Volt has come under criticism from Republicans in Congress because of reports of its batteries catching on fire during testing.

    If only there was a group of people whose job it was to regulate things like this...

    1. Re:Missed the real irony by SirBitBucket · · Score: 1

      And regulation is a magic wand that fixes technical problems and design flaws?

  38. Chevy Volt Meets High Resistance... by crow_t_robot · · Score: 2

    ...low current ensues.

  39. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yeah, but the Fords sold in Europe are actually good because... wait for it... they're NOT designed and built in america.

    Domestic made Fords are crap, as they've always been, unfortunately. Only GM is on a higher level of crappiness compared to Ford.

  40. Have they even rolled it out completely yet? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    I recall the initial launch of the Volt had it only available for sale in a short list of select states.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Have they even rolled it out completely yet? by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Nissan did the same thing with the Leaf. I suspect it has something to do with the poor performance of battery packs in cold weather.

    2. Re:Have they even rolled it out completely yet? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, one of the "launch" states for the Volt was Michigan, though politics probably played into that decision.

  41. When an electric car should be an easy sell by rudy_wayne · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ironically, the shutdown comes as gas prices are soaring, exactly the time when an electric car should be an easy sell.

    Until a huge breakthrough is made in battery technology, electric cars are doomed to fail, no matter how high the price of gasoline.

    Electric cars are too expensive -- it's cheaper to just pay the high gasoline prices.
    Electric cars have an extremely limited range and take too to charge -- people will pay for gasoline as a "convenience fee" to be able to go farther, faster.

    And even if those two problems are somehow fixed, the elephant in the room, that everyone is desperately trying to ignore, is the enormous cost of replacing the batteries. A conventional gasoline engine, which proper maintenance can last a very long time. And if you do have problems, you can replace/rebuild/replace parts as needed. Worst case -- you can go to a local junk yard and buy a used engine for a few hundred dollars.

    With batteries, there is no repair or rebuild or get a used one from a junk yard. Once the batteries reach the end of their life they have to be replaced at a very high cost. As a result, the re-sale value of an electric car is going to be pretty close to zero -- who would want to buy a used electric car knowing that they are guaranteed to get hit with a bill for several thousand dollars in the near future.

    1. Re:When an electric car should be an easy sell by neurojab · · Score: 1

      Until a huge breakthrough is made in battery technology, electric cars are doomed to fail, no matter how high the price of gasoline.
      Not so sure about that. If electric commuting is 10X cheaper than gas, and you can get by with an electric's range, it would be stupid economically to use gasoline.

      Electric cars are too expensive -- it's cheaper to just pay the high gasoline prices.
      The Volt is expensive, but it is not a pure electric. It's a very expensive series hybrid. The Leaf is still a bit expensive, but not outrageous.

      With batteries, there is no repair or rebuild or get a used one from a junk yard
      Incorrect. There are many companies that can recondition a Prius battery, and there will be companies that do the same for Leaf batteries once there is a market demand.

      I agree that electric cars aren't for everyone (not even the majority) but there certainly is a market niche in which they are practical and economical and will likely be moreso in the future as gas prices have nowhere to go but up. We have 100s of models of gasoline vehicles to fit every possible buyer's desire, isn't it a good thing to have choices in how your vehicle will be powered?

    2. Re:When an electric car should be an easy sell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      typical maintenance on a typical vehicle is probably .15 cents a mile.

      if maintence costs are 0.05 cents/mi (electric vehicles are also less subject to breakdown because of fewer and simpler parts) and batteries dont need to be replaced before 100,000 mi at a cost to yourself (warranty) the question becomes, is the battery less than 10,000 dollars to replace?

      The lowest car ownership costs are 5,000$/year and only go up from there. regenerative breaking takes a huge load off of brake pad/calipers, electric drive takes a huge strain off of the transmission (depending on how the electric/gas hybrid is set up).

      In the end, you are paying more (as much as double), for something that supposedly wont break down as much, and requires less maintenance, and less running costs, with increased costs to be observed 100,000 mi or more down the road.

      it all depends how you want to spend your money. I know people who have needed fixes costing 2-3k every couple years, on top of maintenace (air filters, oil changes, brake fluid changes, transmission fluid) the list goes on and on.

    3. Re:When an electric car should be an easy sell by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

      Lithium Iron Phosphate batteries have almost the same energy density as traditional Li-Ion, but in addition thy can recharge in minutes, they tolerate temperatures between -40 C and 60C , and unlike traditional Li-ion cells they last about as long as your typical vehicle.

      Tesla's Model S can reach a range above 400km with Li-ion, so LiFeP should manage almost the same.

      The catch is the cost. They are presently too expensive to use in an EV car. Rising Oil prices and improved manufacturing tech will likely alter that balance in the coming years however.

      You are correct that batteries need to improve, but you are mistaken to think it needs a magic breakthrough. If the more high tech battery chemistries come down even a little in price, and oil prices rise more, we will hit a breaking point fairly soon. I say it will happen before 2020.

  42. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by cynyr · · Score: 1

    You forgot Kia's plant in Georgia, USA.

    --
    All of the above was encrypted with a Quad ROT-13 method. Unauthorized decryption is in violation of the DMCA.
  43. Where are the EEs? by Beorytis · · Score: 2

    Chevy Volt meets high resistance... Makes reductions in Chevy Ampere.

    1. Re:Where are the EEs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The market power of the vehicle is also declining. ;)

  44. Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try lowering the price.

  45. I looked at the Volt. They wanted over MSRP. by beltsbear · · Score: 1

    The dealer I went to had a $4000 markup over MSRP on it. I would have been interested at invoice (around $2000 off of MSRP). Despite the Volts flaws I wanted the all electric range that it provided. The bad dealer experience soured me enough to GM to give them less consideration when I bought my new vehicle. I am sure the dealers looked at the Volt as way to make a quick buck when they saw the Prius selling over list price but the Volt just is not good enough. The expected MPG was near Prius levels but in end it was 15% less. The expected price after the federal credit was $30k, but in the end it was closer to $35k. The range was expected at 40 miles but ended up being less then 35.

  46. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by rec9140 · · Score: 2

    No, get it right

    Endependantie Republique du Quebec!

    At least in their minds...

    --
    1311393600 - Back to Black
  47. Translation: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Barry needs to give GM more money...OR ELSE. There aren't enough sane (?) people to buy those government subsidized golf carts to justify mass producing them. Barack Obama is a millionaire, so he can afford to have some expensive hobbies just as long as he pays for them instead of my children. As it is, since GM has returned to profitability, they need to give back more of the money that the federal government lent them.

  48. Just cool the planet for better performance by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    I'm waiting for the Secretary of Energy to say that by using more electric cars, we'll cool the planet which will make the flow of electricity more efficient which will in turn make running the car more cost-effective which will encourage more people to buy more electric cars, etc. etc.

  49. CNG/Biogas instead by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    You can convert your gas car to CNG, though this may be expensive depending on the regulations and install a home filling compressor which can fill the car over night from the domestic NG supply.

    The if you want to be green you persuade your local sewage treatment plant to produce biogas for domestic consumers and you use that.

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:CNG/Biogas instead by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Say nine grand for the conversion if you have it done, and five grand for the compressor if you have it installed, maybe more. And you don't want to do it to a total shitbox car, because what a waste. Does not compute, economically. IMO CNG is a fit only for: 1) vehicles which are good but that you got for free, total cost outlay is small. 2) vehicles which need to operate inside. 3) rock crawlers

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  50. rare bird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see one or two Nissan Leafs everyday in San Diego.

    But I've only seen like two Volts in the last six months.

  51. SAAB by orbitalia · · Score: 2

    After how GM completely mishandled SAAB, and continue to mishandle SAAB in my hometown, I have no sympathy for them (but of course sympathy for the workers).

    1. Re:SAAB by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      After SAAB completely failed to cut costs, and proved that it had no reason to exist any more, I have no sympathy for them (but of course sympathy for the workers.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  52. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kia is Hyundai.

  53. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by cvtan · · Score: 1

    I'm curious what happened to kill the 850. I assume it became too expensive to fix whatever broke? What was it exactly?

    --
    Sorry, but gray text on gray background is making my eyes bleed.
  54. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 3

    There are always flukes. I once saw an Escort with 410k on it. As for your BMW... Duh, dude. A V12, seriously? No engine that tuned for performance will EVER last long. How many Ferraris do you know of that make it to 100k?

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  55. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Pascal+Sartoretti · · Score: 2

    I just bought an American made car last week, a Honda Odyssey. It tells you on the window sticker these days where stuff was made. Assembled in Lincoln, Alabama USA. Engine constructed in USA, Transmission constructed in USA. 70% of all parts for it come from the USA, 15% from Japan, and the rest from "other". That's good enough for me to call it American.

    Following your reasoning, an iPhone could be considered as a Chinese (or Brazilian) phone...

  56. Bogus accounting by frisket · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it's still true that GM was taking a loss on every Volt sold, perhaps this is a blessing in disguise.

    This is because the beancounters have set too short a time for the RoI. Large-scale long-term investments like tooling up a car need a long-term RoI. A realistic term would be 15-20 years, given that the immediate product (the Volt) is likely going to have to go through numerous mutations before it settles on a money-making model. Expecting to make back the setup cost in a year or two means that the beancounters or VCs have lost all grasp on reality, if they even had it to start with.

    1. Re:Bogus accounting by quetwo · · Score: 1

      Welcome to shareholder-led businesses. They expect profits in quarters, not years or decades. The furthest they can see is 1 year -- any investment longer than that they cash out or punish CEOs.

    2. Re:Bogus accounting by msobkow · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand how much the tooling changes ever 2-3 years on an automotive line nowadays if you think a 10-15 year ROI is feasible.

      Very few car names are on the market more than 5-10 years at the outside any more, and the cycle seems to be getting faster and shorter all the time. Even when the name doesn't change, the drive train often sees substantial upgrades and replacements during the life of a brand nowadays.

      Nobody in the auto industry can afford to budget based on 10-year-plus ROIs any more. It's a guaranteed road to bankruptcy.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    3. Re:Bogus accounting by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Very few car names are on the market more than 5-10 years at the outside any more, and the cycle seems to be getting faster and shorter all the time. Even when the name doesn't change, the drive train often sees substantial upgrades and replacements during the life of a brand nowadays.

      Most of the time there are NOT substantial upgrades or replacements. Most of the time they are pretty insubstantial, minor tweaks that require no major changes to the line. Another differential is offered, or some minor internal parts changes or tuning changes result in higher power output and NO changes are required on the assembly line in many of those cases. And even when you change to, say, an entirely different transmission, that requires little more than a new holding fixture, because the bell housing pattern will still need to be the same. A new powertrain combination is rarely introduced in the middle of a model, and if it is it's usually either for a new market (and often produced on a new line) or a line they simply couldn't have ready in time for the launch, and so it's still on a new line.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  57. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by slasher999 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My 2003 Monte Carlo has 220,000 miles on it. I did choose to replace the motor and trans (both used) at 200,000 miles though instead of rebuilding the trans when the pressure control solenoid gave out and repair would have cost as much as the replacement motor and trans together, so those only have around 72K on them. Runs like a dream and by the condition of the interior and exterior you would never know this car had anywhere near 100K miles much less 220,000. Any car from the "big three" built within the past 20 years that is worth buying these days can go 300,000 miles with basic maintenance. Cars were garbage in the 80's and I think a lot of the mentality around longevity in the US these days is still based on experiences with those cars.

  58. Ohms Law? by SloWave · · Score: 2

    This cannot be 'current' news.
    > Chevy Volt Meets High Resistance, GM Suspends Sales

    1. Re:Ohms Law? by PPH · · Score: 1

      Watt's up with these stupid puns?

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    2. Re:Ohms Law? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just poured hot siemens down my pants.

  59. electric care stupid idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    gasoline packs a lot of energy per pund and per cubic whatever. batteries do not. plus though alkl fuels have production transmission and storeage loss electricity is the worst one of all...for first it must be generated by another energy source. and the sun is in space. space based beamed solar - which does not exist, not yet - and high charge quick charging small and low weight batteries - which do not exist, and probably never will - MIGHT may an e;ectric car worth researcxh and development. Otherwise it's just welfare for the ego's of greenies. Yes I hate greenies BUT EVEN MORE I HATE WASTE OF MONEY ON PEOPLE'S FEELINGS!

  60. Prius Looks Green by acomj · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There are a lot of hybrids that look like normal cars (toyota camray, ford escape....).

    I like hatchbacks, but the prius shape now screams I like the environment. It makes a statement which probably shouldn't be discounted as a reason people buy them.

      Plus that shape is areodynamic, thus the honda insight looking almost the same

  61. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by darkHanzz · · Score: 1

    I once drove a crown vic from '89 for six months. It leaked engine coolant, needed more oil than fuel, left front wheel was a bit loose, windows would get stuck if totally dialled down, heater wouldn't work in cold, heater would automatically come on when driving uphill in summers, gear kick-back didn't always work, the 'coast' buttons sometimes caused acceleration, door locks would not unlock, handbrake was broken. trunk would occasionally pop open while driving.

    But otherwise, it was a perfectly fine car, which just ran 250k miles.

  62. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Siridar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Last time I went to a auto show, they had the then-new Ferrari 575.

    I waved the sales guy over from beyond the velvet rope (the unwashed crowds not being allowed to mix with the "real" customers) and asked him "how much is a 100,000 kilometer service on one of those things?"

    the reply?

    "none of our vehicles /ever/ do that many kilometers."

    Delivered with just the right amount of "how dare you even THINK about driving your Ferrari that much? For shame, sir. FOR SHAME." sneering.

  63. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by mrsam · · Score: 2

    ...That's good enough for me to call it American.

    Congratulations. I, myself, bought a Honda Pilot four years ago. The window sticker also had Alabama as the car's "port of entry", or whatever the term was called; and also showed, as I recall, that only about 15% of its parts came from Japan, and the rest was built in the US.

    It's now four years later, and my Pilot stills runs like new. I'm not kidding, or overexagerating. I can barely hear the engine on cruise control, and the transmission still shifts gears like it rolled off the dealer's lot yesterday. This is the best car I ever had.

    America sure builds damn good cars these days.

  64. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just bought an American made car last week, a Honda Odyssey. It tells you on the window sticker these days where stuff was made. Assembled in Lincoln, Alabama USA. Engine constructed in USA, Transmission constructed in USA. 70% of all parts for it come from the USA, 15% from Japan, and the rest from "other".
    That's good enough for me to call it American.

    Following your reasoning, an iPhone could be considered as a Chinese (or Brazilian) phone...

    What does it mean to say an iPhone is a "> Phone", for any value of >? It has chips designed in India. Those chips are manufactured Texas by a Korean firm. They are shipped to China where glass made in Kentucky is glued on the front. The software is written in Cupertino.

  65. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    I had several mid-1990s American cars, and they were without exception, junk. Replacing the engine (or a serious overhaul) sounds right in line with what I have come to expect from American cars. The Volvo (a 1992 960) I bought for $900 needed only routine attention (oil change, air filter, battery, tires) and I drove it from 186k to 188k without the slightest hiccup. I would not trust an American-made car with 186k on it, because it's either at or near it's designed end-of-life.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  66. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 0

    How many engines have you gone through to get to that point?

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  67. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And profits to Japan. It's a Japanese car built by Americans.

  68. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reminds me of the time some old lady chastised me for taking jobs away from American autoworkers.

    "Look ma'am, my Honda was built in here in the USA. Where was your Ford built again, Mexico?"

  69. It' UGLY by SirBitBucket · · Score: 1

    Simple as that. I would never consider driving a car that looked hideous.

  70. Ghost of the Ev1 by Vladius · · Score: 1

    There is a documentary out there about the EV1 the last attempt at an electric car. Its sad the way it ended. The vehicles were all leased and one day GM collected all of them and destroyed all but one that was put in a museum with it's engine de-activated. There were a lot of people, many celebrities that loved this car. Many were angry after it's passing. The question is what is wrong with the Volt? The Volt is leaps ahead of the EV1 in every way. I personally think it's the lack of charging stations. If there were as many charging stations as gas stations it would be a different story.

    1. Re:Ghost of the Ev1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um

      WTF does the Volt have to do w/ charging stations? It's a f'in HYBRID! It's really NOT leaps ahead of the EV1.. It's better than the EV1's that shipped with lead acid batteries, but not later EV1s that shipped w/ NiMH.

      People aren't buying the Volt because:

      1. It's a hybrid when push comes to shove, and the Volt's target audience really want a Tesla, not a Prius.
      2. They can get TDI powered cars with equal or greater average milage at a lower cost.
      2b. Dealers are marking up the Volt way too high over MSRP... They're greedy, stupid, and killing sales.

      Patent trolls in the battery industry have stagnated development of batteries for automotive use that are both efficient and affordable. Rather than throw cash at subsides and rebates, it'd be better for the government to buy up the patents and make them free for any company that wants to compete in the race to build better EV batteries.

      Sadly..

    2. Re:Ghost of the Ev1 by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      You are referring to Who Killed the Electric Car. No idea if it's available on netflix.

      Upthread, someone else mentioned the EV1. And also mentioned that EV1 owners (leasers) moved on to Prius and other vehicles, refusing to return to GM because GM are a bunch of duplicitous assholes.

      One problem with plugins is that they are only useful if you own a house or somewhere you can plug in the damned things. Many apartment and condo dwellers are in more urban environments. With the shorter commutes, they would be ideal plugin owners, if only they could plug in.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    3. Re:Ghost of the Ev1 by VoltOwner · · Score: 1

      There is nothing wrong with the Volt - I drive one every single day. The problem, is Big Oil doesn't like the fact that most people, if they drove a Volt, would fill pu the 9.3g tank like once or twice/year! That wouldn't be good for Big Oil's profits. Right now, because of that, and because of the bailout and making a big deal out of the tax credits, there's a huge fight on capitol hill, and the Volt is the punching bag. Everyone bitches about the tax credits on the Volt, but what about solar panel tax credits? Anyone complaining? There's hundreds and hundreds of tax credits on the books. What about the millions of people who take a thousand or two every year in educational tax credits? Who's complaining about those? When gas goes up to where it is in the EU and UK (UK is like $8-9/g) and the Volt was killed, you will all be wondering what happened. Meanwhile, I'll STILL be driving my Volt, for 1.5cents per mile on electricity. It DOES NOT compare to a Prius, Focus EV, or Leaf, as it is WAY WAY better appointed - twin 7" screens, one being touchscreen, BT, MP3, OnStar, fully integrated efficiency computer, 36-44mi range (YMMV) on battery, twin motors, 1.4L engine. Best of all, it rides like a car - 0-60 in 8.8sec on battery, and will run straight up to 100mph on only battery. I was a naysayer, then I drove one. When I drove one, I did the math, and I drove one home!

  71. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the crown vic as always been decent, just had to watch out for the ball joints and tie rod ends. a few pumps of grease every few thousand miles deals with that tho. my 1990 estate model is still going strong with a bit of regular maintenance. now what i wanna know, is why there isnt a car with a 3 cylinder diesel generator powering an electric motor? you could tune that diesel to run for days on a few gallons of fuel (some of the light plants i have worked with would run for 48 hours straight on 10 gallons of off road #2 fuel oil). just have the gen set power the drive motor, you wouldnt need a 150+ hp engine to power the vehicle, just a 46 hp diesel, and a couple motors on the drive wheels.

  72. Two words by cortex · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Tesla Motors

    Telsa is planning on an ~$30,000 model in the next few years. If they achieve this price point and maintain the quality of their current models, I think that they will have an all electric car that many people will want

    1. Re:Two words by SirBitBucket · · Score: 1

      Tesla is the wheels I'm looking for. Move along...

    2. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Many people" being about as many as bought the Chevy Volt.

      It's still too expensive and with Tesla you get the added bonus of buying from a new company that doesn't have "too big to fail" insurance.

    3. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Range anxiety.

  73. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by hawguy · · Score: 2

    This guy has a nice analysis of why it costs over $6 per mile to drive his Lamborghini:

    http://supercarrentalsinc.com/lamborghini-gallardo-buyers-guide-part-v-ownership-cost-estimate/

    Of course, if you drive more, you'll bring the cost per mile down.

  74. Sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's ridiculous to see all the Volt bashing here. The Volt is the ultimate nerd car, and you guys seem to be buying into the Fox news "it explodes and also stops working in the Lincoln Tunnel" bullshit. You'd think Microsoft built it. And yes, I am a Volt fanboy, but I don't think that changes the facts.

    Facts:

    - The Volt costs $32500 after tax rebates, which is quite reasonable for a car that costs so little to operate and drives so well. You can lease it for $350/month. It's definitely a toss up in efficiency between the Volt and the (admittedly cheaper) Prius, but if you drive less than 75 miles a day the Volt wins hands down. The Volt is only about $2000 more than the new Plug In Prius with rebates factored in, which only gets 6 miles of full electric range.
    - It's pretty easy to get 40 MPG on the highway in the Volt. Since the battery takes care of short trips, you almost never run the generator during city driving, where it gets about 35 MPG.
    - The battery will probably never need replacement, just like most Prius batteries never need replacement. GM is babying the shit out of these batteries, only using about 12 kWh of it's 16 kWh battery pack. GM estimates that after 100k miles the battery will still be able to give you 12 kWh of power.
    - No Volt has caught fire in a real world situation, and no Volt will, especially with the side-impact reinforcement upgrade GM is making.

    Granted, if all you do is drive on long road trips, a Prius makes more sense. But for ANY OTHER SITUATION, a Volt is a great choice, and an incredible driving experience. I challenge anyone running their mouth off about a Volt to go to a Chevy dealer and take a test drive. All I know is if they end up having a fire sale (heh) I'm picking up another before they go to the crusher like the EV1s.

    1. Re:Sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's ridiculous to see all the Volt bashing here. The Volt is the ultimate nerd car, and you guys seem to be buying into the Fox news "it explodes and also stops working in the Lincoln Tunnel" bullshit. You'd think Microsoft built it. And yes, I am a Volt fanboy, but I don't think that changes the facts.

      Facts:

      - The Volt costs $32500 after tax rebates, which is quite reasonable for a car that costs so little to operate and drives so well. You can lease it for $350/month. It's definitely a toss up in efficiency between the Volt and the (admittedly cheaper) Prius, but if you drive less than 75 miles a day the Volt wins hands down. The Volt is only about $2000 more than the new Plug In Prius with rebates factored in, which only gets 6 miles of full electric range. - It's pretty easy to get 40 MPG on the highway in the Volt. Since the battery takes care of short trips, you almost never run the generator during city driving, where it gets about 35 MPG. - The battery will probably never need replacement, just like most Prius batteries never need replacement. GM is babying the shit out of these batteries, only using about 12 kWh of it's 16 kWh battery pack. GM estimates that after 100k miles the battery will still be able to give you 12 kWh of power. - No Volt has caught fire in a real world situation, and no Volt will, especially with the side-impact reinforcement upgrade GM is making.

      Granted, if all you do is drive on long road trips, a Prius makes more sense. But for ANY OTHER SITUATION, a Volt is a great choice, and an incredible driving experience. I challenge anyone running their mouth off about a Volt to go to a Chevy dealer and take a test drive. All I know is if they end up having a fire sale (heh) I'm picking up another before they go to the crusher like the EV1s.

      Here, here.

      Everyone bashing it, has never even physically seen one, much less driven one.

      Ignorance begets ignorance, and they're just repeating the same crap they hear on FoxNews or Rush LIMPbaugh.

    2. Re:Sad by Sporkinum · · Score: 1

      What the problem is, is it's a $40,000 Chevy. A mid sized 4 door sedan from Chevy shouldn't cost $40,000. I can't see a situation where a car would be worth that kind money. For me, it makes more sense to buy a used car. I use about $40 a week, or $2000 a year for gas. Since my car cost me $5900, I would have to drive it for at least 15 years to get close to the cost of the Volt. The electricity isn't free, and the trips are not all short. In that same 15 years you may spend $5000 in energy vs my $30,000. I'd still be ahead money and comfort wise. BTW, my car was $56,000 new. I love buying used!

      --
      "He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
    3. Re:Sad by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      Assuming I drive it for 15y, and use the same amount of power 7x365x15 my actual cost is $260/yr x 15y = $3900 Total, as opposed to 240/mo x 12mos x 15y = $43,200 in fuel over 15y. And after the tax credit, Volt actually costs $32495, assuming you didn't negotiate a single penny off the MSRP. If I actually get for-real, and calculate against real-number and not exaggerating to 365 days/yr use, it's closer to $150-180/yr x 15y = $2200-2700. Don't forget your 3-4 oil changes/year, because my Volt will only need 1 per year.

      Shame how people are trying to smear the car, and have NO IDEA what they're talking about.

    4. Re:Sad by Sporkinum · · Score: 1

      One small thing, I do $40 a week in gas, or $31,200 over 15 years.
      I am assuming you are not going on any road trips that require you to use the petrol engine. Seriously though, what does your electricity cost?

      I change oil about twice a year at $70 a change (7 quarts syn). Battery about once every 7 years at $150. I would guess you will need at least one set of batteries during that time at what, $15000?

      I am not trying to smear the car, just bring up the point that the numbers don't work for everyone.

      --
      "He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
    5. Re:Sad by VoltOwner · · Score: 1
      If you do 32-38mi daily commute, and don't already have something extremely fuel-efficient, then a Volt could work. ie, if you're driving a Prius already, it'd make zero sense. Same, if you're already driving a 35mpg Corolla or whatever. I do 40mi round-trip, and can make it to work and back on one charge, burning zero gas, which costs me about 75-90 cents. That same drive used to cost me right about $8/day

      Nope. Battery has 8Y/100K mile warranty, and full MSRP on a replacement is $2997, discounted, the battery is $2410. check http://www.gmpartsdepartment.com/parts/2012/CHEVROLET/VOLT/?siteid=214533&vehicleid=1501836&section=HYBRID%20COMPONENTS&group=HYBRID%20COMPONENTS&subgroup=BATTERY&component=BATTERY for replacement.

      Labor would be about 8hrs, @ $75/hr = $600 labor + $2410 battery + let's add $250 for ancillaries, add tax (6%) call it $3500 in-and-out, out-the-door.

      And my electricity costs either $.07305, or $0.0653, depending on time of year. I'm at 7.3cents/kWhr right now. Takes me 3.6-4.8kWhr to get to work, depending on how I drive the Volt. was 4.1kWhr today, to go 16.7mi (2 accidents, stop-and-go traffic, 75min to get 16mi). In my case, Florida Power and Light rates are available at http://www.fpl.com/rates/index.shtml, right side column. "Residential full schedule" outlines the charges, residential summary is where you see what peak and off-peak is, and when summer/winter rates take effect. I think Summer is Apr-Oct.

      I think even "Volt Evangelists" will tell you no one car is for everyone - if you do 11mi round-trip daily, it's a waste of money, unless you just want one, or like the "green upside" of driving a Volt. You'd be better served by a Cruze Eco or something else in that class/category.

  75. Sharing can solve range problem by Sloppy · · Score: 1

    Cars with limited ranges are practical, IF (yes, this is a huge if) you are willing to own multiple cars. That means more expense up front (buy two cars instead of one), plus greater time-based expenses (e.g. insurance, registration -- these aren't the largest expenses but should nevertheless be taken into account). If you get over those hurdles, though, I can see how a non-hybrid plug-in could be reasonably good tech for daily commutes (assuming your commute isn't insanely long-range). Then your longer-range car is for when you need to go further (at reduced efficiency).

    I'm not sure the hurdles are easily get-overable, though. The insurance one simply can't be solved, IMHO; I don't know any insurance company who insures by the mile rather than the month/half-year.

    The solution is to own things in groups: families. Two adults who work near each other could often share the commuter car, and yet there are also somewhat routine situations where they each need to have their own car for a day, so it's not crazy for the family to own two. Suddenly the math works out. Limited range vehicles may become viable there.

    If I woke up tomorrow morning and my old Prizm had magically turned into a 30-mile-range plug-in car at no expense to me (that's the big catch: $40k for a car? fuck no!), I could easily make the best of the situation, and that plug-in would probably become our most-often-driven vehicle.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  76. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

    I just bought an American made car last week, a Honda Odyssey. It tells you on the window sticker these days where stuff was made. Assembled in Lincoln, Alabama USA. Engine constructed in USA, Transmission constructed in USA. 70% of all parts for it come from the USA, 15% from Japan, and the rest from "other". That's good enough for me to call it American.

    Following your reasoning, an iPhone could be considered as a Chinese (or Brazilian) phone...

    I definitely agree with that, it is Chinese.

  77. Re:Muscle Car by cjmnews · · Score: 1

    I did the cost comparison between muscle car and the Volt, and if you got a Volt, with the $7500 rebate of 2011, and drove it on battery only (except when it forces you to use gas) you would have to drive it 16 years to recoup the cost difference of the Volt over the Camaro (V6 RS, Automatic).

    A $45K car at the Chevy level of comfort? No thanks. Though I do have to say the Volt drove REALLY nice. Very impressive, and it does not have the Prius hesitation at stop signs. The Volt is a well thought out vehicle, having the gas backup is awesome. Better than the Leaf and it's once the charge is used you are stranded model.

    I picked up a Buick Verano instead. Cheaper than the Volt or the Camaro, really comfortable and very quiet.

    --
    You can lose something that is loose, so tighten the loose item so you don't lose it.
  78. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And it actually is a Chinese phone. Did you have any doubts?

  79. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Seraphim1982 · · Score: 1

    Kia is Hyundai.

    No they aren't.

  80. Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by silverhalide · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The volt is a completely new class of car. It's a trailblazer. The first year is always a challenge.

    You can't compare a Volt to a Prius or Leaf any more than you can compare a Corvette to a dump truck. Yes, they both have wheels, electric battery packs, and doors, but they are entirely different classes of vehicles.

    The Prius is still largely a gasoline-only vehicle. Yes, the plug-in version is out this year, but it only gets you 8-11 miles, vs. the Volt's 30-40 miles. .
    The Leaf is electric-only. For the vast majority of Americans, it's stuck as a second car because you can't practically road-trip in it with the current American infrastructure.

    The Volt seeks to address these shortfalls.

    It is the first production extended range electric vehicle. You cannot compare it to a Prius or Leaf, which are two different classes of vehicles altogether. The Prius's battery pack and electric range are only a fraction of the Volt's. The Leaf is just an electric car that requires charging stations. The Volt is actually engineered for the current infrastructure reality of the US - you can get gas everywhere, and you can only charge your car in so many locations, so it's a "crossover" vehicle that can let a broader class of folks adopt to a MOSTLY electric style of living.

    GM knew full well going into the project that it was risky and it caters to a VERY specific audience of "Green Early Adopters" - folks that are willing to pay a premium for cutting their petroleum footprint.

    If you don't like the Volt, you are obviously outside the target demographic. The Volt serves a lot of purposes outside of selling a EREV (Extended Range Electric Vehicle) - it also helps get actual production units to start building the battery production capabilities and infrastructure needed to sustain an electric vehicle fleet. Yes, the Prius has laid some inroads here, and the Volt is another push by another manufacturer.

    If you study history at all, the Insight and the Prius were in very similar positions when they came out. Both were sold at low-to-no margins and had relatively crappy first-year sales.

    The First Generation Honda Insight (the first mass-produced hybrid) only sold 17,000 units over several years.
    The First Generation Prius was initially sold at low-to-no margins by

    There is unanimous consensus among the engineering an scientific community that we need to reduce our petroleum usage. There is also a general consensus that an electric vehicle fleet is the most practical way of achieving this goal (and this includes fuel cells which are nothing more than expensive batteries).

    Let the technology bake. The battery cost is rapidly falling. Get a few model years out. You may be pleasantly surprised. If it's outside of your budget, don't buy it. It's not for you anyway. You will still benefit from the technological advances of the vehicle. You can't afford a space shuttle but you still benefit from the fringe developments of that program. These types of projects are critical to the development of our electric vehicle infrastructure. You can't convert the American fleet to electric overnight anyway, the grid would have some major problems anyway with a million vehicles charging on it suddenly; they need a few years to get that upgraded. The Volt is the first step of many.

    1. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Virtucon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While I agree with most of your points I have to say that the Volt has missed it on quite a few fronts:

      1) When you go to a Chevy dealer and you want to see one, good luck. They don't have any details, information or even cars for you to test drive. Some dealers in my area are now getting "Volt Specialists" who will work on answer questions but at the sales outlet I expect that I should be able to look, see and feel one.
      2) There's been a lot of fraud regarding the Volt and the Gov't Tax incentives. Instead of buying a "new" volt, some people originally were purchasing one that had been cross sold to other dealers. Why would I want to deal with a dishonest dealer? No pun intended.
      3) It's overpriced for what you get. A plug in Prius can be had for less and the Leaf is kicking the Volt's butt in sales.
      4) I have two teenage sons now getting ready to drive (twins) and I'm looking for something economical and safe for them to drive. Electric, Hybrid or high mileage is something I would like to look at. Will I buy two? I don't know but if I don't fit a demographic where I'd at least like to know more and drive one to see, then I don't know what the target demographic is?
      5) I can go to a Nissan dealer, touch a Leaf, drive a Leaf, get all of the information and I might add see all of the technical innovations that Volt doesn't have, for less money and I can still get my tax incentive because the dealer hasn't done a swap for the vehicle, negating any benefit I would receive.
      6) I can go to a VW dealer and buy any of the blue diesel models that are ready, available and priced less than the Volt, Leaf and in some cases Prius and get better mileage overall. That's another alternative. So, have they all missed the target? No, but the Volt sure has.

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    2. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by PPH · · Score: 1

      Its new class of car. GM needs to test the market. But trust them. They'll stand behind it for the long term.

      Yeah, right. Anyone other then GM and I'd believe that. Their track record sucks

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      Even if GM drops it, there is a phenomenally enormous and mostly hidden-to-the-public eco-system of lower-tier suppliers that are building up to support projects like the volt, and they will continue to support other companies in EREV and eventually EV projects. Only good will come from this project, despite what all the idiots in washington say.

    4. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      Oh, and there you go again spouting technical ignorance. Your ignorance is part of the uphill battle that the Volt is fighting for everyone. The Volt is NOT an electric-only car like the EV1. Yes, they share a lot of similar elements, but it is COMPLETELY different from an application and infrastructure perspective. Saying the Volt is a re-hashed EV1 is a direct insult to the brilliant engineers working on the Volt project.

      Yes, GM has organizational challenges and they should not have been bailed out by the Feds. But don't confuse the failures of the upper-management politics with the very real engineering that is happening on the Volt project. The Volt project very well will define the future of GM.

    5. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by silverhalide · · Score: 1

      1 and 2) It will be a tragedy if GM's dealer model ends up hurting the Volt long-term. The reality is that it's a very limited release vehicle and you get the slew of problems associated with that.

      It's important to remember that The Volt's initial release release was limited to a handful of cities. This is likely because bringing up dealer service centers to speed with a GM's first "heavy" electric vehicle is likely slow and expensive.

      However, while you agree with my points, you proceed to ignore them:
      3) Like I said in the parent post, you can not compare the Volt to a Prius. They are different classes of cars. If the Prius meets your needs, buy it. It is a better value for a gas-only hybrid.
      4) The Volt is not an entry-level starter vehicle for teenagers. It doesn't claim to be. Buying kids new cars is irresponsible, a waste of money and is bad way to teach people about vehicle ownership. They're statistically gonna wreck them anyway.
      5) The Volt is not an electric-only car. Buy the Leaf if it fits your needs.
      6) The Volt is not a diesel car. Buy a VW diesel if it fits your needs.

    6. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Virtucon · · Score: 1

      WTF? Now you're espousing to give people lessons in parenting? Kids and irresponsibility don't necessarily go hand in hand. I've
      seen a lot of irresponsible adults, like those at GM who decide to make a pile of crap like the Volt. I'm sorry, the sales numbers speak for themselves and others are already coming up with newer technology beyond hybrids.

      SO, you're saying the Volt isn't this and the Volt isn't that, then the Volt has no place in the market, again, that's why they're shunting production, again, because they can't sell these turds. By your definition, I would have expected to build some sort of inverted hovercraft with rectal controls so I can steer it with my sphincter. That would be real practical too.

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    7. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by RigrmRtis · · Score: 0

      While I agree with most of your points I have to say that the Volt has missed it on quite a few fronts:

      1) When you go to a Chevy dealer and you want to see one, good luck. They don't have any details, information or even cars for you to test drive. Some dealers in my area are now getting "Volt Specialists" who will work on answer questions but at the sales outlet I expect that I should be able to look, see and feel one. 2) There's been a lot of fraud regarding the Volt and the Gov't Tax incentives. Instead of buying a "new" volt, some people originally were purchasing one that had been cross sold to other dealers. Why would I want to deal with a dishonest dealer? No pun intended. 3) It's overpriced for what you get. A plug in Prius can be had for less and the Leaf is kicking the Volt's butt in sales. 4) I have two teenage sons now getting ready to drive (twins) and I'm looking for something economical and safe for them to drive. Electric, Hybrid or high mileage is something I would like to look at. Will I buy two? I don't know but if I don't fit a demographic where I'd at least like to know more and drive one to see, then I don't know what the target demographic is? 5) I can go to a Nissan dealer, touch a Leaf, drive a Leaf, get all of the information and I might add see all of the technical innovations that Volt doesn't have, for less money and I can still get my tax incentive because the dealer hasn't done a swap for the vehicle, negating any benefit I would receive. 6) I can go to a VW dealer and buy any of the blue diesel models that are ready, available and priced less than the Volt, Leaf and in some cases Prius and get better mileage overall. That's another alternative. So, have they all missed the target? No, but the Volt sure has.

      1) Almost any authorized Volt dealership will actually have a Volt for you to test out. Not every salesman is an expert on the vehicle. That's true for any vehicle make/model. They're not engineers. They're trying to make a sale.
      2) There is some amount of fraud when ever money is involved. I haven't experienced Volt-related fraud or really heard much about it. I don't doubt it happens. But it's obviously not common practice.
      3) It's not overpriced for what you get. What else compares? Nothing. The Plugin Prius is just a poor man's Volt. The Fisker Karma is 3x the cost. Everything else is either pure electric or still a concept vehicle/pre-production. If you're looking for a range extended electric vehicle, the Volt is really the only game in town.
      4) If you're interested, nothing is stopping you from checking it out. Nothing electric is going to be very cheap right now, though. It's still new technology. Early adopters always pay a premium. This is nothing new. I understand that a lot of people are interested in it and are upset that they can't get it right now because they aren't willing/aren't able to pay the early adopter premium. But prices will come down. You'll just have to be patient.
      5) You can go to a Chevy dealer, touch a Volt, drive a Volt and get all of the information. You can also see all of the technical innovations that the Leaf doesn't have. For a bit of a price bump given the premium trim options and one-of-a-kind drive train.
      6) If that's what you're looking for, buy it. Freedom of choice is wonderful. The free market at work.
      The Volt's hit it right on the money. But there's a lot of misinformation out there due to the haters.

    8. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All of your points seem to be arguing that a Volt is not available. Personally I don't know what you are talking about. The Chevy dealer near me has 5 Volts and I live in Alabama not exactly a hot spot for EVs. I saw one a couple of weeks ago and they all had under 30 miles. If you don't like the Volt get a Prius or a Leaf with tax incentives they are all relatively close in price but with different features obviously.

    9. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but at least you can buy the Volt, unlike the lease only EV1.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    10. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The volt is a completely new class of car. It's a trailblazer.

      No it's not. this is a Trailblazer.

    11. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once upon a time when GM wanted to introduce new technology it started with Cadillac, where they could charge a premium price, and minimize their losses until either the costs came down through economies of scale or the feature turned out to not be popular. Features like electric starters and automatic transmissions showed up on the more expensive brands first, before working their way down the Chevrolet. Clearly GM could not do that this time, but I expect the production costs will come down over time, just like fuel prices will continue to trend upward.

      So much of that doesn't matter, too many here would never look at the car regardless of how good it might be because your friend's brother had a 1981 J2000 and it sucked.

    12. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by spage · · Score: 1

      I can go to a VW dealer and buy any of the blue diesel models that are ready, available and priced less than the Volt, Leaf and in some cases Prius and get better mileage overall.

      VW's BlueMotion line of extra-efficient diesels are mostly microhybrids (engine stops at a standstill, brake regen, motor gets the car moving again). They are not available in the USA, just as BMW EfficientDynamics micro-hybrid diesels, the Audi stop-start cars, M-B's BlueTEC E300, the Smart MHD, etc. aren't available. Apparently stop-start does not improve EPA mpg numbers, and auto manufacturers are fearful to badmouth their other engines with "Why the hell does the engine continue to run at a standstill!?" marketing. Nor does the USA get the many small European hatchbacks without high-tech features that still get exceptional mpg from a small low-power high-torque diesel.

      The fine VW 2.0 TDI that is available in USA VW and Audi models gets 34 EPA combined mpg (35 mpg in the new Passat), pretty good but worse than most hybrids and worse than the Volt's 37 mpg when its battery is depleted. It does better on the highway (42 mpg vs. Volt's 40 mpg) but still crushed by the Prius (48 mpg).

      --
      =S
    13. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Virtucon · · Score: 1

      Well, I'll quote something with a bit more authority http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2010-volkswagen-polo-bluemotion-diesel-quick-spin. Their numbers are much better than you're giving them credit for and even if I look at the EPA window stickers, you're not giving them due credit. Also I've test driven one and I don't recall the engine shutting off during any portion of the trip.

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    14. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last month the Volt outsold the Leaf by more than 2 to 1 (some ~1500 volts sold last month...http://open.salon.com/blog/earthtechling/2012/03/02/february_plug-in_car_sales_rise_leaf_drops_volt_soars) .... if your counting, you should notice that last month GM sold 25% of the previous years total.... [not a bad ramp up really]

      Full disclosure... I own a Volt, save ~$250/month on gas (over before I owned a volt) and love the car for many reasons....

      I get a good laugh out of the attitudes and misinformation out there regarding the car (not to mention the bad math) I wonder what people said when the first horseless carriages started hitting the streets...

    15. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by spage · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what your point is. That's the 2010 Polo BlueMotion, with the tiny engine I mentioned, it's not available in the USA so there is no "EPA window sticker", and my numbers come from the DoE's fine http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/findacar.htm site. C&D's review mentions "regenerative braking recuperates wasted energy when coasting or decelerating" and the Daily Telegraph's 2010 review of the same(?) Polo 1.2 BlueMotion said "The start/stop system works pretty well."

      If you're in USA or Canada I don't see how you've ever driven a Polo, or a BlueMotion model.

      --
      =S
    16. Re:Everyone's missing the point of the Volt. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Like I said in the parent post, you can not compare the Volt to a Prius.

      Like I said in another post, which I don't expect you to have read anyway, that's a stupid fucking thing to say.

      They are different classes of cars.

      Car classes aren't defined by powertrain, car powertrains are defined by class. Understanding the auto market, you fail it.

      If the Prius meets your needs, buy it. It is a better value for a gas-only hybrid.

      You won't know if the Prius or Volt better meets your needs until you perform a comparison. Your own goddamn comment compares them!

      You keep saying things you do not understand. "Buy X if X meets your needs"... but know what, psychically if X meets my needs?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  81. Re:I wuv my Xoom! by gtbritishskull · · Score: 1

    He was replying to this comment... To use a reverse car analogy, it's Motorola Xoom to iPad2. His response seemed legitimate.

  82. I think the Volt is really a public beta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I believe the GM Volt is really a public beta test of electric vehicle technology. They could have black boxes in the vehicles, and interview the owners to find out what real world conditions it was exposed to. Vehicles in accidents can be purchased, and stripped down to determine exact wear. It cost $500 million to develop the GM Volt, and they wisely anticipated production of 10,000 in the first year.

    Considering the decision was made in early 2007, to start the long journey to get a vehicle with 10 years of real world experience by the year 2022, I think GM was smart. If fuel cells take off, GM will be ready. If nations around the world require electric cars, GM will be ready. If oil goes to $300/barrel, GM will be ready.

    Nissan spent over $1.5 billion to become the leader in electric cars. I think they are the dumb ones.

    1. Re:I think the Volt is really a public beta by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

      What you say makes sense. Maybe the Volt should have been marketed as a "beta test" car, and instead of projecting sales at 10,000, they should have declared "In the first year, we will only be able to accommodate ten thousand customer trials. Today you can put down a deposit to make sure you make the list." That would have had many advantages, not the least of which being that they could put off the official rollout for when the Volt is actually debugged.

  83. Re:I looked at the Volt. They wanted over MSRP. by silverhalide · · Score: 2

    If you're going to be running on gas often enough that the Volt compares to the Prius in miles-per-gallon, the Volt isn't for you.

  84. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    Sounds like exactly what I'd expect from them.

    It's a pity Mercedes has gone the route of performance over reliability and quality lately. They have fallen quite a way from the days when their iron-block diesels were considered THE car to own for longevity (I happen to own one).

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  85. I'd consider one .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd consider one ..

    If it had a larger battery pack and a diesel rather than a gas motor...

    It's not an EV, it's a hybrid... And I really have no interest in a gas-powered hybrid..

    If I had the cash for a Tesla, I'd rather get a Tesla..

  86. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by magarity · · Score: 1

    Following your reasoning, an iPhone could be considered as a Chinese (or Brazilian) phone...

    Seriously, which part of an iPhone did you think wasn't made in China?

  87. Resistance is useless!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... if less than one ohm

    Dealership memo to "sales associates": "How many Volts have you delivered to reluctant customers today?"

  88. I want one by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I undestand the lack of demand, to be honest... unless it's purely about price.

    With the Prius selling like hotcakes, why wouldn't the Volt sell? It's a superior product, made in USA, and only a bit more expensive...

    I'm fully intending to buy one as my next car in fact. I'm due to buy in a couple of years, so I sure hope things pick up for the Volt.

    --

    - Spryguy
    There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    1. Re:I want one by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      With the Prius selling like hotcakes, why wouldn't the Volt sell? It's a superior product, made in USA, and only a bit more expensive...

      Are you a GM employee, or were you paid to shill by a third party? There's nothing but nothing superior about it. Meanwhile, Toyota's going to be building Prii in the USA.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:I want one by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      I'm not a GM employee. I honestly think it's superior in a great many ways... it'll drive significantly longer on electric-only as just a start, and most Prii aren't plug-in (the new one that is isn't available in my area yet, but the Volt is).

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    3. Re:I want one by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I don't have a particular dog in the fight, although I am slightly biased towards Toyota. I drive a Ford I would recommend only to mechanics and a classic Mercedes so I'm probably the last guy anyone should listen to anyway. But the Volt delivers on few if any of the original promises and is disappointing in so many ways it's hard to know where to start, whereas the Prius has proven to be a surprisingly good car so far, surprising me anyway. If I had to bet, and I'm clearly willing to, I'd bet that the Volt will be a let-down at best when looked at in retrospect.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:I want one by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

      "But the Volt delivers on few if any of the original promises and is disappointing in so many ways it's hard to know where to start"

      You say this, but I see no evidence. I hear this, but I haven't seen any convincing arugment that this is so. So please, find a way to start and explain HOW, because to me, it seems to be exactly what it always claimed to be: A gasoline extended range electric vehicle (completely unlike the "hybrid" cars that went before, notably the honda). It's a plug in, and can go quite a while on electric-only before the gas engine kicks in, and you can fill up at gas stations for long trips.

      Everyone I've heard from that actually owns one, likes it. The only trashing I hear is from people who don't own one, which carries a lot less weight with me (especially when they tend to bash American cars in general).

      --

      - Spryguy
      There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
    5. Re:I want one by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I bash American cars except for the Focus and the Fusion which is ironic considering the amount of time I spend bashing Fords. Which is unfortunate because I own one, and rather like it when I'm not under it.

      The Volt does not go very far before it runs on gas and it runs on premium gas for no good reason. All the other reasons I don't like it are purely subjective, except for that whole secret delayed battery fire thing.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  89. It's not about absolute sales numbers by EdwinFreed · · Score: 1

    Rather, it's about achieving the sales numbers you forecast. GM projected that they would sell 10,000 Volts in 2011. At 7,671 actual sales, they were off by almost 25%. That's a fairly big miss, and the sort of thing that forces you to make some adjustments.

    Contrast this to the Nissan Leaf, with projected sales of 10,000 and actual sales of 9,674.

  90. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry buddy I worked at a GM dealership for a few years and I have to say that almost every vehicle they make is junk. I have many memories of people walking out with their brand new Cadillac only to return 2 weeks later with a problem. Gm still had one major flaw that keeps me from ever buying one, the interior falls apart. I have seen $100,000 dollar vehicles less than 2 years old in which the switches were broken and the paint was wearing off buttons. The engines and tranny are sound but everything around them falls apart. GM brakes are absolutely garbage. My dad and brother had the misfortune to buy year 2000+ GMs thinking they got a good deal. They have had to change or turn their brakes once every 2 years and they put Half the K's on that I do. I change my brakes on my Mazda once every 6-7 years and my Nissan only because I get gravel in the pads.

  91. hope and change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    your tax dollars at work for the labor unions and an elitist collectivist President

  92. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by pscottdv · · Score: 2

    How many engines have you gone through to get to that point?

    I can't say for AC, but I've got 225k on my 1996 Ford F150 on its original engine -> 4.9L straight six. Most reliable gasoline engine ever built, IMHO. Of course, Ford stopped building it after 1996...

    --

    this signature has been removed due to a DMCA takedown notice

  93. Re:Obama's Free Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm so sick of the solar gear subsidy bashing..

    Solar equipment manufacturers lost money because the federal government (still under Bush) cut funding to states. States then DEFRAUDED homeowners that had invested in solar gear with the promise of state rebates. With reduced federal funding, states cut everywhere, and where REPUBLICANS had control, they decided to FUCK OVER the people they had promised rebates to, rather than their cronies..

    Guess what? The people that got fucked over told everyone that would listen about it. You think anyone they talked to, anyone that read any of their tweets or blog posts rushed out to make a large investment in solar gear?

    Demand then went down when the manufacturing companies were expanding with expectations of growth, and it bit them in the ass. This is not a failure of technology. It is just a case of factions in our state and federal governments acting like 4 year olds.

  94. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

    That tuned for performance? That car was an overrated 295HP at the crank and weighed 4300lbs. Those cars were a dog, and the performance numbers are extremely underwhelming for a V12.

    A 1992 Corvette made an underrated 300HP at the crank out of a V8, and there are THOUSANDS of them on the road with far more than 100k miles on the original engine. The same engine went into the 94-97 Camaro. If you lump those in, it's a non-starter. Not to mention the thousands of Camaro's on the original engine that through modifications are making double those numbers and still running strong.

  95. Shilled Wikipedia page by owlnation · · Score: 2

    I'd never heard of this car before. So I checked out its wikipedia entry... and noted that absolutely none of any of the controversy about it is listed there. There is a great deal of information about the car -- marketing information, that is. I can find out how many awards it has won (like that really matters), I can find out how good it is at so many things.

    What I can't find, is any objective truth there. Admittedly, no surprise, since I've never seen any wikipedia car entry that isn't so-obviously written by a fan, or the marketing dept of the manufacturer. The Volt's page was clearly written by someone with connections to GM. Just like so many other wikipedia pages. It's a complete waste of time using wikipedia for anything that has a fanbase, commercial interests, or political implications.

    1. Re:Shilled Wikipedia page by n7ytd · · Score: 1

      What I can't find, is any objective truth there. Admittedly, no surprise, since I've never seen any wikipedia car entry that isn't so-obviously written by a fan, or the marketing dept of the manufacturer. The Volt's page was clearly written by someone with connections to GM. Just like so many other wikipedia pages. It's a complete waste of time using wikipedia for anything that has a fanbase, commercial interests, or political implications.

      So go fix it. That's the beauty of Wikipedia.

  96. My confidence restored by codepunk · · Score: 1

    My confidence in the ability of the average american to perform simple math on return on investment is restored.

    --


    Got Code?
  97. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by spire3661 · · Score: 0

    The design, a non-insignificant part of any manufacture process.

    --
    Good-bye
  98. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

    You drove a car 2k miles without a problem and want to use that as a valid sample set? Biased opinion is biased.

  99. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

    Ford shutdown the Crown Victoria last year.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  100. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    Thousands still on the road... out of the millions sold. And I have never met anyone with firsthand experience with a Corvette with over 100k on it.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  101. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by iwaybandit · · Score: 1
    Jeep, are you serious? Try living with one for a month.
    • Don't get lost. If you need to read a map, the only interior light source is near the fuse block by the driver's feet.
    • My '02 has a soft top and half-doors, everything flaps in the breeze when I'm heading down the road at speeds over 45 mph.
    • On US-50 outside of Pueblo, I ran into a headwind, it could barely maintain 50 mph, in 4th gear, at full throttle.
    • I have to use low range to go up my driveway, partly due to the lack of torque and partly because of the open rear differential. (My 20 yr. old Honda had little problem with the same driveway.)
    • Try putting a picnic cooler in a Jeep sometime, it won't fit under the tension bar for the rear window. You'll have to unzip it. Did you know that dust jams zippers? Here, in the desert, there's no shortage of dust.
    • For a vehicle that may actually go places where the terrain isn't level, why isn't there a way to keep the tailgate open?
    • Don't let the tailgate slam either. The mass of the spare tire will actually cause it to cave-in.
    • BTW, I hope your elbow is starting to feel better, after you smacked it against the mounting peg for the half-window.

    There are after-market solutions for most of the problems that I've listed, they simply require you to "Just Empty Every Pocket". If you'll buy my 22 MPG Jeep, I'll go buy that 45 MPG Range Rover that I've recently read about.

  102. Just costs too much by Animats · · Score: 2

    The problem is the $40K price. We're still in a major recession.

  103. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    This has not been my experience. When I drove domestics, I had nothing but problems, and now that I've owned as many European cars (admittedly, brands known for reliability) as I have American, I would never buy American again.

    Also based on experience is price of repairs (higher for new cars than it is for older ones) and general feel of cheapness in construction in ALL newer cars is why I drive an '84 Mercedes.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  104. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    Didn't the Crown Vic of that era also have that engine, or was that a V8? Because I know there's plenty of those with a propensity for cracking head gaskets (just like both Fords I owned did).

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  105. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Pascal+Sartoretti · · Score: 0

    And it actually is a Chinese phone. Did you have any doubts?

    Let me say it again : iPhones are currently built in China and Brazil, and there were rumours of a possible additional plant in Turkey. It clearly means that the country in which iPhones (or any other similar devices) are built is not so meaningful anymore; what matters is that their design and software come from California.

    Back to the GP and his Honda Odyssey : if it was designed in Japan, it is for me a Japanese car, even if most of it was assembled in the USA.

  106. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

    You haven't asked many people who own corvette's how many miles they have on their cars then. I personally know three, and they've all heavily modded them to boot. Original block with nitrous and making over 500whp. The LS family of engines is by far the most reliable production V8 on the planet.

    As for "millions", there were 20k vette's produced in 1992. Not millions. There were roughly 40k Camaro's built per year with the LT1, also not anywhere near millions. And there are ten's of thousands of those still on the road.

  107. If you like foreign oil, here's your chance. by VennData · · Score: 0

    Foreign oil is a reliable, dependable source of energy for years to come. Don't worry about a few short-term issues like the price of the car, or electric-charging station networks. And look at the romantic, efficient cities - teeming with cosmopolitan artists, designers and technologists - they've built with those profits. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qom As a Slashdotter, you can be sure your money - capitalism dictates it - to the best investment choice for those hard-nosed businessmullahs who get our dough. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_program_of_Iran ...and promoting the needs of their youth... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qatif_rape_case I agree with the GOP, the long-term solution to this great nation's energy will not change, ever. Why... There's a lifetime's supply of it... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abiogenic_petroleum_origin We will always use oil and the longer we use, the better off our children will be, Oil was good enough for us. I don't want my oil costs going up a penny. Don't change it.

  108. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    Let me expand on why I hold that opinion.

    Shop around, buy low-milage used 1994 Ford (52k) for $2500. Put $500 into it immediately to fix various small problems with it (thermostat, couple of other issues). Drive it gently less than 10,000 miles, blow engine. Replace engine, drive further 20,000 miles, blow engine again. Experience #1.

    After Ford blows up, buy 1992 Volvo with 186k (3.5x milage as the Ford) for $950. Put in battery, air filter, oil change, and fresh gas. Drive it for 2000 miles without the slightest problem, at which point I bought my current vehicle (1984 Mercedes) and no longer need the Volvo. Experience #2.

    I paid significantly less for the Volvo than I did for it's predecessor, and it ran needing NO MAJOR SERVICE (and continues to run, though it is no longer registered because insuring two cars is ruinously expensive) for the entire time I owned it, with 3.5x as many miles on it.

    I really used to believe that American cars were quality, but owning them for years, and now the stark contrast with European engineering has been just staggering.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  109. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by macs4all · · Score: 1

    As a former Ford owner, they are assembled in the US of Canadian and Mexican parts, and all of the engineering is done by Volvo's engineers now (which is a good thing, Ford never was good at making things that didn't fall apart).

    Well, it used to be true that Ford's engineering was done by Volvo's engineers (which, as a happy Volvo owner, I agree would be a good thing), sadly, Volvo is now a Chinese car company...

  110. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My 1998 Chevrolet Lumina has 120,000+ miles on it with the original engine, and overall it still makes for a reliable car with minimal maintenance. Yes, there have been battery replacements, leaks fixed (consequence of having missed a dip while driving at night and having the chassis whacked at the bottom), belt replacement, etc., over the years, but that's what happens during 14 years of driving. The interiors tell an altogether different story though, and is probably the first thing that people notice. Chevy used a great deal of plastic in this car, and other models built around that time, and needless to say, plastic does not age well. I have had to find replacement parts for a few of those things like the clips that hold the sun visor, and have had to fix the plastic panel underneath the dashboard from coming off loose on a couple of occasions. Overall, that may make it seem like a pain to own for some people, but I intend to keep driving it as long as the motor is fine, since that is the only component I really care about. :)

  111. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by saleenS281 · · Score: 2

    If you bought a 1994 with 52k miles and it blew up, you did something wrong or the previous owner did. Do you know how many crown victoria's there are on the road that went from police service to taxi service? Do you know why taxi services all pick up used crown vic's? Because they're RELIABLE. Parts are CHEAP. It's extremely uncommon to find a crown vic taxi on the road with under 200k miles. And if they required engine rebuilds at 50k, you can bet your ass both police forces and taxi companies would have nothing to do with them.

    Your experience is abnormal. Your opinion is biased.

  112. On the subject of resistance jokes... by jensend · · Score: 1

    At my university, one of the science buildings has a large Foucault pendulum surrounded by a ceramic base. They kept having problems with people messing around with the pendulum (somebody tried to use it as a swing and got injured, and some other idiots managed to steal the pendulum and plop it in a nearby pond). So they put signs on the ceramic base saying

    CAUTION: >10,000 OHMS
    DO NOT TOUCH.

    They have had considerably fewer problems since, and people with at least half a clue get a good chuckle.

  113. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by macs4all · · Score: 2

    GM brakes are absolutely garbage. My dad and brother had the misfortune to buy year 2000+ GMs thinking they got a good deal. They have had to change or turn their brakes once every 2 years and they put Half the K's on that I do. I change my brakes on my Mazda once every 6-7 years and my Nissan only because I get gravel in the pads.

    I guess this proves the point that selling cars does not necessarily mean you understand cars.

    Disk brakes are designed to be easy to maintain at the expense of requiring routine maintenance (pads) at relatively frequent intervals.

    GM uses the same brake calipers and rotors and pads as everyone else. They don't make their brake parts, any more than anyone else does. US makers tend to use TRW, in Europe it's Bosch and a few others, in Japan it's probably Nippondenso. All the engineers do is open up those product catalogs, call up the vendor's salesperson, and come up with which one of their (for the most part, standard) brake systems they will "design" in.

    The only way the automotive engineer can screw up, really, is listening too much to the bean-counters (or being an idiot themselves) and choose a brake system inappropriate for the weight or intended use of the vehicle. What you are not taking into account are factors such as vehicle weight, number of miles, type of driving (city driving being harder on brakes than highway driving, for (what should be) obvious reasons), type of roads (dust and dirt wear down brakes, too!) style of driving (hard braking, riding the pedal, etc.). Oh, and this doesn't even get into the differences in various pad/shoe materials (fibre, semi-metallic, metallic) and the quality of the replacement parts (did your Dad always buy the cheapest pads/shoes he could find?). All of these factors, and even others I've forgotten to mention all can dramatically affect the lifetime of brakes.

  114. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's pretty sad when you have to replace the motor on a car with only 220k on it. Such things scream "AMERICAN!" louder than any visible defects or shoddy workmanship.

  115. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by icebike · · Score: 2

    Kia is Hyundai.

    No they aren't.

    You are both PARTLY correct.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kia_Motors

    49.2% of Kia is held by a holding company named Hyundai Kia Automotive Group, a group of affiliated companies interconnected by complex shareholding arrangements, with Hyundai Motor Company regarded as the de facto representative of the Group.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyundai_Kia_Automotive_Group

    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  116. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you mistyped. Surely you didn't have to change the oil, air filter, battery, and tires to drive a vehicle 2000 miles.

    The experience I have had with any American made car is to look at the little advertised extended warranty features. Many will have a listing up to 120k or so. At that point expect to start replacing minor things and the vehicle will survive another 120k.

    The best advice I can give with any vehicle from any manufacturer is to take it easy accelerating. The pedal is analog, not digital. I have never had any engine or transmission problems while driving 980 thousand miles through several vehicles. I can't wait to hit a million.

  117. Ugly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd buy a Volt if it wasn't fuck-ugly. The problem is it went from elegant concept to kludge somewhere after the marketing idiots got a hold of it.

  118. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by macs4all · · Score: 1

    the crown vic as always been decent, just had to watch out for the ball joints and tie rod ends. a few pumps of grease every few thousand miles deals with that tho. my 1990 estate model is still going strong with a bit of regular maintenance. now what i wanna know, is why there isnt a car with a 3 cylinder diesel generator powering an electric motor? you could tune that diesel to run for days on a few gallons of fuel (some of the light plants i have worked with would run for 48 hours straight on 10 gallons of off road #2 fuel oil). just have the gen set power the drive motor, you wouldnt need a 150+ hp engine to power the vehicle, just a 46 hp diesel, and a couple motors on the drive wheels.

    I, too, have worked with small Diesel-powered gen-sets when designing a controller for some highway signage (before it all started using all that Commie Solar stuff! ;-) ). So, I know that those little Benoullii (sp?) Diesel engines are pretty impressive as far as fuel economy goes. HOWEVER...

    You do realize, of course, that the second law of thermodynamics and Ohm's Law have not been revoked, right?

    The real problem is that people still want "performance", and so, most of the time, 75% (guessing) of that 150bhp engine's power is literally going up in smoke (well, not so much "smoke", but...). Ever wonder why "hybrid" vehicles don't get better gas mileage? It's because the only time they are "saving" any energy is when they are doing regenerative braking. And unless you are talking about a purely urban application (taxicabs and city-buses being a perfect example of the potential for lots of regen. braking), the efficiency of a gen-set system (like the so-called "hybrids" use) is a bad joke on the consumer, and the environment (what happens to all those huge and inefficient batteries that don't get recycled?). Oh, and don't forget that batteries get hot when charging, and alternators get hot when charging. What happens to that energy? Not that ICE don't have more than their fair share of wasted heat-energy, too...

    But, while we're on the subject of "efficiency" and "waste heat": If you really wanted to have an insane efficiency increase, you would take the 80% of wasted heat energy produced by any internal or external combustion engine, and use it to power a supplemental Sterling engine. A vehicle like that would likely (conservatively) double the overall fuel economy of something like a car (which typically has a very modest energy requirement, once it's moving). But the engineering involved in having two primary engines in a production vehicle would be fairly intense to make cheap/simple enough. Yes, I know that "vehicles" such as "monster trucks" and some dragsters have multiple power plants; but those don't cost $20k...

  119. Demand vs cost and efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Having been able to confer with many knowledgeable educated people in the energy field has really confused the issue. There are many different perspectives taken on the electric car and alternative fuels. Remember that GM once had an electric which they decided to scrap, sending about 9 or 10 new models to be destroyed. No reason was given and no auto maker pursued the manufacture or design of a alternative fuel or electric car for many years. Yet there are engine designs that can get more mileage than we will ever imagine but they are not being used. Automakers wait for the government to have them raise mileage standards before making changes. If increased mileage were not possible cars would still be gas guzzlers. It's all a big game and the speculators and oil companies seem to be running the show.
      Now we have companies desperately trying to catch up on years of neglect that could have already had us advanced to a point where the technology was advanced and cost was no longer an issue. Automakers are trying to make an affordable electric car that works. i don't expect to see everyone running out to mortgage their home to buy a Chevy volt. Cars have continuously risen in cost and are now a capital expense item that cuts deeply into a families disposable income. Most engineers, inventors and other people I converse with have not looked favorably upon the Chevy Volt due to cost and efficiency. They feel that the technology needs more development,cost needs to be reduced and of course the batteries life is a concern as is the mileage on a charge.

      If American greed were not part of the formula engines getting amazing gas mileage would have been in use years ago but the patents and plans are probably locked away in a filing cabinet to keep crude oil profits flowing.

  120. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by PKFC · · Score: 1

    http://jalopnik.com/5559767/i-sold-everything-to-buy-a-lamborghini-and-drive-across-the-country

    Interesting story I read quite awhile ago.. 91000 miles on a lambo :P

  121. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

    First car was a 1990 Chevy Lumina that I sold in 2003, with 195,000 miles on it. Who replaces an engine, really? It had its transmission replaced, one time (automatic tranny, will happen). Sold it to a cousin, who drove it for a few years, and sold it with about 250,000 miles on it -- and a few years after that, I saw it driving through town (distinctive paint on the hood from where idiot cousin refused to wash it after people egged it while he owned it).

    Current car has 180,000 miles, it's a 1999 Pontiac Grand Am. I've replaced even less on this one. Alternator, one time. Battery twice. Shocks, struts, blower motor.. that's it.

    What world do YOU live in, where engines ever get replaced? Maybe, if you think it's normal to go through more than the original engine to reach that mileage, maybe your choice in cars isn't as good as you thought.

    --
    ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
  122. 8 series by mister_playboy · · Score: 1

    For those engines, BMW simply used two copies of all the equipment used by their contempory 2.5L inline-6s. This means you have two seperate systems which need to be kept in perfect sync to run the engine... a tuning nightmare.

    Beautiful cars, but not easy to own.

    --
    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law ::: Love is the law, love under will
  123. Crown Vic by mister_playboy · · Score: 1

    The most noticeable aspect of these cars is how space inefficient they are. They car is huge, yet the front seat doesn't actually have that much room.

    This is a direct result of the fact they are running on the same basic 1970's platform.

    Also, the Crown Vic is no longer sold to consumers in the US, only fleet buyers.

    --
    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law ::: Love is the law, love under will
  124. Hyundai Kia by mister_playboy · · Score: 1

    They have the same corporate parent... and are about as well differentiated as Buick and Oldsmobile were.. not at all.

    --
    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law ::: Love is the law, love under will
  125. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by hal2814 · · Score: 1

    I thought all TJ's had overhead lighting? My 2003 has the updated speaker bar (now 2 distinct speaker pods). There are two overhead lights built into it. Works just fine for map-reading and that sort of thing. There are also factory solutions to most of what you don't like. For example, it sounds like you may have been happier with a hard top or at the very least the full steel doors. Coleman makes a cooler short enough to fit under that tension bar (and that stupid bar is one thing I REALLY hate about soft tops). I'm also curious if you have the 4 cyl or 6. I've owned both and the 4 cyl just really isn't suited to highway travel. The 6 is great as long as you don't get the CAFE-friendly 3.07 rear end. 3.73 is ideal for stock wheels and tires.

    I'm not saying Jeeps are for everyone, but it sounds like you may have gotten a worst-case-scenario for your needs vs. what your Jeep offers. Mine has been great for the 5 years I've owned it and doesn't suffer from many of the problems you mention despite it being completely stock. At any rate, I hate to hear you had a bad experience with a vehicle I love so dearly. I hope you find something that better suits your needs.

  126. Opportunity cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exon-Mobile pays a 2.2% dividend. That's a paltry $440/yr assuming they maintain it and don't BP themselves and go bankrupt.

    Nevermind that though. You can plow the $20k into any other investment you like with a better return and potentially less risk. If you have income from other sources you can even let the $20k compound at rates of 4% on something relatively low risk like utility stocks. Yes, you'll be subject to ups-and-downs of the market. You can hedge it with options though, blah, blah.

    Bottom line, $20k depreciating on an expensive vehicle vs. the opportunity to invest in something that will outperform the price of gas and perhaps even blow it away. Gold, silver, a diversified portfolio. The choice is yours. You don't have to just spend the $20k on gas as it gets more and more expensive.

  127. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by cyn1c77 · · Score: 2

    This guy has a nice analysis of why it costs over $6 per mile to drive his Lamborghini:

    http://supercarrentalsinc.com/lamborghini-gallardo-buyers-guide-part-v-ownership-cost-estimate/

    Of course, if you drive more, you'll bring the cost per mile down.

    Buying a high-performance sports car for everyday driving is like using an F-22 Raptor instead of a Jumbo jet for commuting. Or, like marrying a supermodel instead of a normal woman.

    Of course it isn't going to be cost effective or reliable! But you have significantly more performance at your command.

    You aren't spending your money properly if you don't use (or at least appreciate) the extra performance and complain then about the cost.

  128. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope you enjoy driving your Corvette or Camaro into a wall/ditch/barrier when it loses control due to its horrid design.

  129. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by flappinbooger · · Score: 1

    Last time I went to a auto show, they had the then-new Ferrari 575.

    I waved the sales guy over from beyond the velvet rope (the unwashed crowds not being allowed to mix with the "real" customers) and asked him "how much is a 100,000 kilometer service on one of those things?"

    the reply?

    "none of our vehicles /ever/ do that many kilometers."

    Delivered with just the right amount of "how dare you even THINK about driving your Ferrari that much? For shame, sir. FOR SHAME." sneering.

    When it comes to supercars, people buy Ferarris to look at and only drive them now and then. People buy Porsches to drive and only look at them now and then.
    That said, I know of a guy who had a Ferrari 308 or similar and he drove it all the time.

    --
    Flappinbooger isn't my real name
  130. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by kyrio · · Score: 1

    Your own article says that the "loan" part was already repaid, five years earlier than expected, and the rest is shares. Canada owns shares of the company, or did at the time of that two year old article. I'm not sure what the point in mentioning it was, other than to make yourself sound like an idiot for mentioning something negatively and having your own source say the opposite of what you were implying.

  131. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by kyrio · · Score: 1

    >Jeep
    >cool

    Pick one.

  132. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please stop using apostrophes to pluralize. It's just fucking painful to read. Stop it.

  133. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by kyrio · · Score: 1

    Well made Ford vehicles, that are sold in Europe, are made and designed in Europe.

  134. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by anon+mouse-cow-aard · · Score: 1

    The US government loans were repaid as well. Americans decry jobs going to foreigners when their government "saves" the company. they fail to realize that foreign governments do similar things, in this case putting Canadian citizens on the hook for, per capita, twice as much as Americans.

  135. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by tixxit · · Score: 1

    Part of buying a car is also gauging the replacement costs for parts. Not necessarily new, but from a junkyard too. You could buy a very reliable sports car, but if replacing the motor costs 5x that of a more popular car, than you'll need it to be at least 5x as reliable to break even. The same goes for most other parts. If you don't mind working on your own car, sometimes a slightly less reliable car may be better, if the parts are substantially cheaper.

  136. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by iwaybandit · · Score: 1
    It's the 4 cyl. It handled I-285 in Atlanta quite nicely and does well in Denver, but way up here (9,000') it's pretty pathetic.

    You're right, a hard top and real doors would address some of the problems. Then again, so would a small pick-up truck. Lesson learned.

  137. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by hb253 · · Score: 1

    The BMW 8-series was pretty to look at but deeply flawed and unreliable. That plus the high price killed it.

    --
    Self awareness - try it!
  138. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by hb253 · · Score: 1

    It's the old anec-data syndrome.

    I had a 1998 Audi A6. Well put together, nice materials, etc. But things broke - a lot. Cam tower seals, transmission, ABS, cup holders, door locks, headlight wiring, cooling fan, etc etc. And every time something broke, major bucks to fix.

    We now have a 2005 Dodge Caravan and a 2007 Camry Hybrid. Both have been 100% reliable. Go figure.

    Would I buy an Audi again? Not a chance.

    --
    Self awareness - try it!
  139. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by danomac · · Score: 1

    You're still comparing driving a car 2000 miles vs a car that drove 30,000.

    It'd be a better comparison if you drove both cars 30k miles.

  140. My Dad just bought a new car.... by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1

    He seriously looked at a Volt. 90% of the time he's not driving more than about 15 miles from his house to go the store, get something to eat, or go to the doctor's. He does drive down to the farm 4 - 5 times a year (400 mile round trip) as well as 2 driving trips/vacations. It's the trips and farms that puts the miles on the car though.

    He ended up buying a Buick LaCrosse with e-assist. Why? First off he's not an early adopter. Secondly he thought the Buick had a better overall ride. Lastly, the Buick was $14,000 cheaper. He chose the Buick over another Impala because of the E-essist. The way he drives he's getting 28MPG in town and 40MPG out on the road.

    Something we both feel is that GM is the one on the right track. The thing is, this isn't going to help the Volt. Where it's going to help is when the technology gets implemented in such away where you can buy Extended Range Electric versions of the Malibu, Impala, Terrain, and on down the line.

    As someone mentions, the basic design concept allows most to benefit from having the all electric capability, but without the limits. If you need to go further than 35 miles you still have the gas option which the current infrastructure supports.

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    1. Re:My Dad just bought a new car.... by VoltOwner · · Score: 1

      Your dad made the right choice. A Volt is best for someone who commutes either round-trip at the high-end of it's range, or each way at the high-end and can recharge at work. 15mi/day would not be a smart choice for something like the Volt. Hope he enjoys the new car!

  141. I see what you did there... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    Chevy Volt Meets High Resistance, GM Suspends Sales 401 ...
    from the get-it-resistance-ha-ha dept.

    I hope Timothy is currently strapped into a live electric chair for that one.

  142. Its a silly comparison by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    Your calculations include the cost of the lease/payment.

    But when you buy, after 3-4 years, you're paid off, you own the vehicle and your costs are gas, maintenance and repairs.

    *the sweet spot for any car is years 4-10* they cost very little to own and drive during this time and they're extremely reliable.

    Comparing lease costs to car payment costs is something dealers do to convince rubes to lease instead of buy.

    When you do an actual comparison, the ROI on the volt is so low that its not worth discussing.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Its a silly comparison by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      The reason leasing is a more attractive offer for EVs is the battery. Maybe you're worried about the battery capacity and performance degrading too quickly, or maybe you're wondering if a newer, better, longer-range battery will be available in a few years. Maybe you're fine yourself with the battery technology, but worried about how uncertainty in the general public will impact the car's resale value.

      Solution? Lease, then you have about three years to see how things play out, paying only a modest overall premium if you decide to buy. Think of it as insurance for the ability to ditch the car and save the residual value.

      And again, I think it's stupid to talk about personal vehicles in terms of investment. Investments are supposed to give a return on your money. Buying a vehicle is more like buying a stockpile of a commodity.
      =Smidge=

    2. Re:Its a silly comparison by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, you're right (especially with a GM vehicle).

      But my point was the comparison is silly because:

      a) If the Volt wasn't an EV, it would be less than half the price

      b) If the Volt wasn't an EV, you'd be thinking in terms of a 10-15 year ownership, not 4 years

      And thus the entire comparison is silly. The harder you try to show the Volt is a better "investment" (which as you point out is nonsense), the more you see that not only is it a poor investment, the payoff for the main feature (EV) is two decades out, assuming the Volt even last 15 years.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    3. Re:Its a silly comparison by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      I'm not trying to show that the Volt is a better investment, though. I'm countering the argument that an EV (or in this case a hybrid) is not "affordable." You have to go way up this comment branch to find where that all started, though.

      "Affordable" is relative, and the out-of-pocket cost of a ~$40K hybrid can be, under reasonable circumstances, equivalent to the out-of-pocket cost of a comparable vehicle at half the cost. That's the one and only point I set out to argue originally.
      =Smidge=

  143. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by waives · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Car engines regularly achieve 50% or more of Carnot efficiency. You are not going to be doubling that.

  144. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

    Who in their right mind wants a Subaru? That's the last car anyone should buy. They make Chrysler cars look good.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
  145. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 2

    I see those Crown Vics with 200k+ and I raise you the Greek taxi fleets of old Diesel Mercedes, a number of which are still in service with well over a million miles.

    My definition of "reliable" and yours clearly differ by a very large margin. Fords are cheap. When they break, they just buy another one for the fleet. And police departments use them because they're what Ford offers with the "enforcer" engines. It's not the same ones you get in stock CV's.

    I admit I had abnormally bad luck. But the engineering quality difference isn't any less for it.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  146. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    10,000 on one engine (of my driving) and 20,000 on the replacement. If you're going to be pedantic, at least get that part right.

    Just because *I* didn't drive it 30k while I owned it doesn't mean that those miles and wear aren't there... the Ford had 52k when I got it, and the Volvo 186k. And yet the Volvo didn't need work done when I got it and the Ford did. That fact in and of itself says a lot.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  147. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by gmhowell · · Score: 1

    WTF does GM make that costs six figures? I call shenanigans.

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  148. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    No, I did not mistype. I bought it as-is, and all of those things were long past proper end-of-life. I tapped the air filter and large chunks of gunk fell out. The tires were bald, and one of them had a slow leak. The battery was so old (from 2003, I believe) that I had to jump it to drive it home from where I bought it. At less than $20, an oil change was a no-brainer since it was jet black when I checked it.

    You assume I buy new. I always buy used to avoid the several thousand dollars a year that comprehensive insurance (mandated if you buy a car on a loan) would cost me. I suppose if you buy new and treat a vehicle as disposable after say, 250,000 miles, American cars are a good fit. That's how my father does it.

    I'm no speed demon, nor have I ever been. I learned to drive in a Ford Escort, and that paltry 88hp was never too sluggish for me. I have an old diesel Mercedes now (which I absolutely love to death) and it's got a glacial 0-20 time (don't even ask about 0-60) and I don't try to rush it. I plan on getting 500k to a million miles out of that car, because I personally know at least three people that've done it.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  149. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    You just made my point for me, sir. Not only having to do it, but considering it normal and acceptable!

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  150. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by digitect · · Score: 1

    Any car from the "big three" built within the past 20 years that is worth buying these days can go 300,000 miles with basic maintenance. Cars were garbage in the 80's and I think a lot of the mentality around longevity in the US these days is still based on experiences with those cars.

    Exactly why my father bought a 1979 Accord and never looked back. If you think American cars last a long time, try a Honda/Toyota and read what Consumer Reports has to say. (BTW, I'm betting on Korean being the next decade's value carmakers.)

    --
    There is no need to use a SlashDot sig for SEO...
  151. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by toddestan · · Score: 1

    The Crown Vic didn't change much for something like 30 years. They are relatively simple, easy to fix, parts are everywhere, and since they have changed relatively little people know what to expect from them. So with all of that it's not too terribly hard to keep one on the road for a long time, even if it's not a terribly reliable car.

  152. Buy this instead. Dump your GM Stock! by Cat_Herder_GoatRoper · · Score: 1

    Not Obama's fault they built a junk car. Go buy one of these! http://wheego.net/more/

  153. Re:I looked at the Volt. They wanted over MSRP. by El_Oscuro · · Score: 1

    Most people don't realize just how important the dealer is for a car company. When I bought my Chevy S10 in 2000, I did the negotiation online. Back then, GM had a program where you selected a car from the inventory your local dealer had, and they emailed you a quote. My quote was the invoice price and included all of the rebates and discounts. No pressure at all. When I went to the dealer to buy the S10, they offered financing at a lower interest rate than what I already had so I accepted it. I took a test drive and signed the forms at the exact price that I had been offered online. The entire process including the test drive took 1/2 hour.

    Three years later I was having problems with brake pads. I took it to Midas and they said there was a problem with the calipers. I had 2 weeks left on my warranty. Midas said it was possible the dealer might still partially cover it, so I took it back. Not only did they cover it 100% with no questions, but the paid for a rental car too. Absolutely nothing but positive experiences with my local Chevy dealers

    About the same time, my father purchased a new Toyota Corolla, which developed engine oil sludge at 15,000 miles. The following quote from the article pretty much summed up his experience with the Toyota dealer:

    Charles in Arkansas said: "At 36,000 miles the engine gummed up and quit running. My wife had the oil changed at Wal-Mart and did not keep receipts for the oil changes. The North Little Rock dealer and the Toyota representative told us such problems were rare and that we had caused the problem but for $2,500 they could fix it. They inferred that my wife was a liar," he wrote.

    --
    "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
  154. No, it's a weak design by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    First, it's not the same setup as a prius. It has clutches to engage and things. I'm assuming (sorry) that those are hydraulic clutches since most of the trans is carry-over from the 2-mode which. Hydraulic clutches suck because the fluid need pressure and has some flow rate - i.e. the hydraulics require ENERGY. A prius/fusion/etc use the motion of the parts to splash oil around for lubrication, but have no significant hydraulic loads. This means a Volt expends energy in the transmission that is not used to propel the vehicle and is less efficient - It's only a 30-35mpg hybrid, which is not that great. In all-electric mode, they would have been better off as a plain series-hybrid with a little bigger motor and generator and no clutches or brakes. There would also be no question what type of car it is.

    This is contingent on my *assumption* of hydraulic clutches.

  155. Re:$15-20K in gas? by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    This is easy math. If a car gets 25mpg (average) and you drive it for 100K miles, that's 4000 gallons of gas. At $4 per gallon you'll be spending $16K on gas over that distance. If you drive the car for 150K miles that will be $24K in gas. If gas prices vary, you can do the math for that too. But you WILL spend $15-20K for gas over the life of a car. So the question becomes how much will the electricity save (about 75% in some places) and for the time you run a volt on gas, how much will the 30-35mpg save? I'd agree that it looks like a wash for many people, but if the volumes go up the price will come down and then it will be an easy choice. But then it seems demand is weak....

  156. Forgot how to make cars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Problem with U.S Automakers is they have forgotton how to make cars.

    What I mean by that is they have forgotten to make a car that I want to drive. Seriously I have the exciting choice of a Camaro, Mustang or a Dodge?
    And what enticing U.S. automobile is there?

    Here is the enticing lineup of Japanese cars I have to pick from
    Nissan Altima or Maxima
    Infinity G35 or M35
    Toyota Camary
    Honda Accord or Civic
    Subaru WRX or Legacy

    Oh and if I want to spend past 45k
    Audi or BMW

    So while U.S. automakers where complaining about the Japanese changing body styles every 3 years and this was back in the late 80's. Other car manufactures came in right under all thier Blah Blah chatter and stole the other segement. The Luxuary segement.
    The japanese make far more exciting cars and the sales figures prove it.
    The U.S. is 10 years behind and will never catch up.

    Most U.S. car body styles look like someone made a wooden mold and then Vacuformed plastic over it. Cadallac decided to go with a facet desgin and think thats futuristic?
    They can still make trucks but soon that will disapear.

    The U.S. auto industry is what is wrong with American manufacuring, and as the Auto industry goes so does the rest of the country.

  157. Numbers by VoltOwner · · Score: 1

    I've seen some numbers thrown around,and they are incorrect. The Volt National Lease deal (USBank - Ally sucks) is as follows: $349/mo, 36mos, 12Kmi/year, $2500 out-of-pocket (due at signing). USBank tosses the $7500 tax credit on the back-end to the residual, and kicks in a $2375 cap reduction, along with your $1520 cap reduction (from your $2500 due at signing). This is on a base model $39995 MSRP. Mine, is a 2012, $369/mo, $3400 out-of-pocket, loaded with every available option. Of course, I negotiated the price of my car, and got it for abotu $3K under MSRP, which resulted in a $370pmt, and not a $459pmt ($45,908 MSRP). As to comparing the Prius to a Volt, I can tell you, Volt shoppers are NOT cross-shopping with a freaking Prius, even a plug-in. I can drive to work, and back home (40mi) on a single charge, which costs me about $0.90. I was paying $45/wk in gas in a 2003 Susuzki Aerio SX doing the same commute. My Volt averages about 1.6cents/mi on electricity, and the Suzuki was about 16cents/mi. You cannot take the posted averages, and calculate your forecasted expenses, because internal combustion engines are dynamic, and I guarantee you, that NOONE on this planet drives the way they do on the test-loop for EPA mpg estimates.Well, maybe grandma. And although the Plug-In Prius at $33k (someone forgot the destination of like $80) can go like 11mi (13mi realistic) on battery, it cannot go above 62mph on battery-only. As for tax credits, it's only worth $2500 on the prius, making it's cost $30500, against the Volt's $39995 - $7500 = $32,495. For 2 grand, dang straight I'm driving a Volt - no WAY I'd be caught dead in those ugly things, moping along at 62mph hoping to keep the engine off... As to Focus and Leaf, as mentioned, when their battery dies, you're on the side of the road, period. Call a flatbed. It's great as a "CityCar," but I;'d be worried... And those that CONTINUE to compare the Volt against the Prius, Focus EV, and Leaf, it is a stupid assumption. You might as well compare the Cadillac CTS against a Camry, or an Acura TL against a Malibu. Different segments, WAY better appointments and standard options on the Volt, and the two are like apples and oranges. As to the Tesla, no way I'm getting a car from them. EVs are an unknown variable as it is, but toss in an unknown company? Who's electronics can't even prevent battery-bricking, and then charge you $40K for a replacement? No thanks - Chevy thought of that, already. Volt has a 16kWhr pack, but you only really use about 12.6kWhr - the rest is buffer, emergency, and to increase longevity. It also has a gas engine, and when I have run on fuel, which has been for 6mi out of 177mi on most recent trip-meter, it was getting 46mpg on cruise @ 71mph in a 70 zone. I'd be MORE than happy to answer questions, as I am by NO MEANS a rich person (own a 3/2, wife has a Subaru Forester, work 9x5) and I made the choice to get a Volt. As to those criticizing the tax credits, why don't you instead complain to GE, oil companies, trump, hell even Apple, who take billions upon billions of ta breaks - matter of fact, last time I checked, hasn't it been a few years since GE even PAID taxes? And you're complaining about say 8K cars x $7500 = $60M max? Being that no everyone will qualify, as it is a tax CREDIT not a tax REBATE, meaning it is above the line, not below. You don't automatically get $7500 just because you got a Volt.

  158. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by cffrost · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of the time some old lady chastised me for taking jobs away from American autoworkers.

    "Look ma'am, my Honda was built in here in the USA. Where was your Ford built again, Mexico?"

    We're Japan's Mexico.

    --
    Thank you, Edward Snowden.

    "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
  159. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

    That's absolutely ridiculous, and you're showing a glaring lack of knowledge. The 4.6 in the police interceptor package includes a different air intake. That's it. The engine is otherwise identical to those found in hundreds of thousands of ford pickups, mustangs, explorers, crown vics, etc. etc. etc. Police departments don't buy them "because they are cheap". They buy them because they're reliable. The exact same reason taxi companies buy retired cop cars.

    Now you're comparing a diesel engine to a gas engine. Which again shows a complete lack of automotive knowledge. There are FAR more dodge ram pickups with cummins engines in them over a million miles than greek taxi's. And they do *REAL* work. Try comparing apples to apples.

  160. i don't want one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm not going $40k into debt just so i can make myself feel better about being a human in this day and age.

    Electric cars will turn out to be one of the most damaging manufacturing processes from beginning to end, including components, that we have ever seen in the automotive industry.

    Rare earth minerals required to build electric cars and their components will become even more rare and expensive as time goes on.

    Strip mining of the earth for these minerals seems to be quite damaging to the planet.

    Anyone remember when environmentalists made people cry over using a renewable resource like wood and paper? Their goal was to use plastic bags made from oil instead of paper bags. Now we're stuck with countless tons of bags that will never decompose.

    This is simply one example out of many that our desires to be "environmentally conscious" that turn out to be more damaging to the environment than intended. Electric cars are another.

  161. Who Killed the Electric Car II by SteveW928 · · Score: 1

    the sequel... ;)

  162. Channel stuffing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By punting existing inventory on to subsidiaries (dealerships) GM counts them as revenue, even though its not actually sold to the public. This has gone on for so long they are drowning in them and have to stop productioin and lay off 1300 people.

    Just another bailed out industry playing Enron games for the shareholders benefit and screwing the customer/taxpayer

  163. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by wjsteele · · Score: 1

    Um, no, Kia is most definetly owned by Hyundai. In the late 90's, Kia filed bankruptcy and Hyundai bought a majority stake in them at that time. (That's exactly the reason their quality has improved so much... they share engineering with Hyundai's coutnerparts.)

    Bill

    --
    It's my Sig and you can't have it. Mine! All Mine!
  164. Incorrect title. by wjsteele · · Score: 1

    GM didn't suspend sales of the car... they only suspended manufacturing, which I might add is quite common for a company that has a larger than desired inventory. Sales are continuing.

    Bill

    --
    It's my Sig and you can't have it. Mine! All Mine!
  165. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by guitardood · · Score: 1

    Well made Ford vehicles, that are sold in Europe, are made and designed in Europe.

    He said retardedly.

    --
    -- L8R, guitardood
  166. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by Aighearach · · Score: 2

    1) Hybrids do get better gas mileage.

    2) The second law of thermodynamics does not claim that all engines are equally efficient. It only says that when you use an inefficient engine, the energy goes somewhere; up in smoke, converted to vibrations/sound, extra heat that didn't move the piston with any extra force, etc, etc. You seem to understand this in the context of waste heat, but in the context of a hybrid car you get all wacky.

  167. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by macs4all · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Car engines regularly achieve 50% or more of Carnot efficiency. You are not going to be doubling that.

    Really? This source I found in 30 seconds says pretty much less than 35%. In fact, another source said that internal combustion engines cannot achieve above 30% Carnot Efficiency.

    So, where's your citation?

    And where's your data showing that, regardless of the actual hard numbers, it wouldn't make a difference?

    Do you realize what a difference even 1 mpg would make to the amount of oil required DAILY in the U.S.? I can't find the figure right now, but I remember that it was truly staggering.

  168. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by macs4all · · Score: 1

    1) Hybrids do get better gas mileage.

    2) The second law of thermodynamics does not claim that all engines are equally efficient. It only says that when you use an inefficient engine, the energy goes somewhere; up in smoke, converted to vibrations/sound, extra heat that didn't move the piston with any extra force, etc, etc. You seem to understand this in the context of waste heat, but in the context of a hybrid car you get all wacky.

    I didn't mean to imply that Hybrids don't get a LITTLE more gas mileage; but it sure seems to be a piddling difference over simply exploding a fuel/air mixture in cylinders, and having that move the car, rather than all these arcane (and efficiency-ROBBING) energy conversions, like in a "hybrid".

    I wasn't saying that the 2nd Law said anything about "equal efficiency"; where'd you get THAT one?!? I just said that he 2nd Law applies to EVERY "heat" system, both limiting the theoretical efficiency, and showing that, (factoring-out all the energy conversions/requirements that have to happen before the fuel is actually IN the tank) if you convert heat (combustion) to mechanical (turn alternator) to electrical (alternator output) to chemical (batteries) to electrical (battery output) to mechanical (electric motor output) you will have a fundamentally less efficient system than the internal combustion engine's more direct route of heat -> mechanical method. And don't try to substitute the gas tank for the batteries, because that is external to this cycle, and besides, "hybrid" vehicles go to the gas pump, too (and pretty damned often). Oh, and this is ALL on top of the same 30% Carnot Efficiency (theoretical maximum!) of the internal combustion engine, whether it is powering a gen-set, or a crankshaft.

    BTW, the above long-strange-trip from gen-set to wheel stated above doesn't even consider the alternator and "wheel motors" "I-Squared-R" losses, which are pretty damned significant, especially as an electric motor heats up, that occur in BOTH the Alternator AND the electric motors used for the motive force, NOR does it discuss the Ohmic losses in all the wiring from the alternator to the batteries, from the batteries to the motor drive circutry (oh, yeah, we need one of those, too, unless you want to drive full-speed everywhere!), in the H-Bridge PWM motor drive circuitry itself (what do you think the heat sinks are for?) (I designed DC motor speed controls in a former life), and then back down the output wires to the motors.

    PLEASE don't think I'm trying to make a case for the likes of the Crown Victoria (!!!). In fact, I very MUCH look forward to the day when I can drive a TRUE "fuel-cell" vehicle on the road (hope I live that long!), but even THAT will still have to have some sort of efficiency-robbing energy storage (super flywheel, pneumatic accumulators, or (ewww!) chemical batteries, etc), to deal with short-term energy requirements, and so will still have to do efficiency-robbing "form of energy" conversions into and out of that storage system (and will still have all the Ohmic and IIR losses of today's "hybrids"), but at least we'll be consuming the most abundant element in the Universe (Hydrogen) more or less directly, instead of waiting a few million years for it to be trapped in oil first, and will be contributing to the Krebs hydrologic cycle (from water-vapor exhaust), instead of whatever-the-fuck we've been "contributing" to with internal combustion engine exhaust...

  169. Not surprised by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    The Volt is a hyper-complicated car, I wouldn't buy one for that reason alone, it's a lifetime of expensive breakdowns waiting to happen. They shouldn't have put so much effort into trying to appease the range anxiety crowd. Couple that with the better new EVs that those who don't have "range anxiety" see as a much better deal, and the poor thing never stood a chance.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  170. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Car engines regularly achieve 50% or more of Carnot efficiency. You are not going to be doubling that.

    Bullshit. The most efficient ICE in the world is only 50% efficient and it's a diesel in a container ship that's the size of a house. Too bad you have no idea what the fuck you're talking about.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  171. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Because I've driven them and worked on them I know that

    * They handle like a brick on top of a tennis ball. I now own a 1982 Mercedes 300SD, which is a USA-only turbodiesel built on the W126 S-Class platform. It has an antique semi-trailing arm independent rear that makes it go through the turns better than Ford's idea of a sports car. Live axles are for incompetent douchebag engineers like they have at Ford.
    * The 302 which is the typical engine is stupid (truly pathetic stock output for the mass of the motor, poor fuel economy on high-output versions) and it was stupid how they installed it. Same motor as the Rustang, but the intake manifold is installed backwards so it's in your way. This only applies to a year range but it's offensive.
    * Everything in the car is offensive, annoying, and/or expensive. The A/C system is on the wrong side of the car as usual and so there's vast and expensive hoses running around the engine bay and making it difficult to work on when it should be simple. Stupid spring-snap connectors are used throughout even though they are LESS reliable than using fuel injection style hose clamps like on an import.
    * Interior space is ridiculously poor for the exterior size
    * Weighs way too much and yet still incredibly floppy

    I've owned an Aero Bird, which I thought handled pretty well, and I have an F250 with a 7.3, which is a pretty amazing truck once you fix the things Ford did completely insensibly, like not using headlight relays, causing many dash fires. I'm fairly well-impressed by the Focus and the Monaro. But let's face it, most Fords are crap bought by people who will buy anything with a blue oval on.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  172. Chevy Volt Meets High Resistance, GM Suspends Sale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, I just don't have any love for GM! They bought out Saturn and KILLED it, then they take a technology that could and should be a great leap forward and proceed to KILL it too! I think this company has no wish to succeed. They stick with OLD IDEAS and OLD TECHNIQUES in management, no wonder they can't get their market share back.

  173. Its All Bull$*it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you've seen the documentary: Who Killed The Electric
    http://www.whokilledtheelectriccar.com/

    You'd think it was a bunch of smoke and mirrors, too.
    Yes, they should be selling the crap out of these cars, but not because there isn't huge demand.

  174. Curious about the battery.. by Blakwing · · Score: 0

    And how it figures into the mileage and payback equations. I don't know of a single rechargeable battery type that delivers 100% of it's performance for 2 years much less 5. Where's the predicted cost for the falloff in efficiency? And one other niggle. You have to lease a car like this for it to even make it compete financially. And only works short term. After 4-5 years I own my Focus, Cruz or other car outright. As long as I do maintenance on it it should deliver years of service beyond the 4-5 year payment window. How do these 2 fact skew the payback/affordability curve? And bear in mind we still haven't address the big "what if" out there. What IF the technology does mature sooner, rather than later. What IF they can make the affordable without subsidies and comparable to a gas car in true cost. What happens to the electric grid in all the urban places where there are likely to be large concentrations of these kinds of cars, all plugged in, all charging on a grid that is already stressed?

  175. The day people start talking about ALL by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    the differences between ICE's, hybrids, and all-electrics is the day a mass-produced electric car will have a chance in the US.

    That day is not today.

    Huge battery-packs for a truly mass-produced electric car are hardly even possible with the current supply-chain. And even if it were, how much more are the batteries (and the other complex high-tech) going to increase in cost of manufacture vs. increase in sales volume; we aren't talking about inexpensive materials, and whenever energy prices jump, so do production costs.

    The Volt was never really mass-produced. I seriously doubt it ever COULD have been mass-produced. It certainly never could have been mass-produced for a price that the average Joe could afford, with or without subsidization.

    There's the real world and the fantasy-ideal, in the real world that is America the Volt was never a great option for anyone but a tiny fraction of the population. Live in a cold area ? Forget it, the Volt is a losing proposition. Live in a rural or in most suburban areas, and have to drive a near average distance to work ? It's a losing proposition.

    The Volt was always a feel-good PR move, it was never really an ICE or hybrid replacement for the average consumer.

    It's funny reading the comments here, how many people even test drove and seriously considered the Volt ? How many people here actually own one of these dogs ?

    And no, I'm not some conservative nutbag, I WANT an electric car. I'm just not going to spend a down-payment on a freakin' HOUSE on a car that isn't even mass-produced sufficiently to guarantee service and parts for the thing for it's (short) estimated lifespan. And neither are the rest of the American public.

  176. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    How many engines have you gone through to get to that point?

    Probably as many as my 1999 Ford Ranger with 197K miles on it: 1. That little 2.5 liter 4 cylinder just keeps running - as does the manual 5 speed transmission behind it (original clutch). Heck, I didn't even replace the battery until last year (11 years old). Nothing mechanical has busted on it yet.

    I've also been in 4 accidents (been sideswiped once, rear ended twice, and had a small head-on collision) - none of them my fault. Total was $4500 of body damage from all 4 accidents. Other cars were a Honda Accord (head-on, it was totaled), a Dodge Neon (side-swipe, it had $5500 in damage), a Toyota Corolla (rear-end number 1, it was totaled), and a Chevy S1500 truck (rear-end number 2, he got a $600 new bumper).

    But then again, it's relatively new compared to my 1963 Mercury Comet Custom, with the original 260 cubic inch V8, and 315K miles on it. Had to rebuild the original Merc-O-Matic 2 speed automatic tranny in 2004, but other than that (and a Edelbrock Performer II intake and small 4 barrel carb switchover) it still runs great.

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  177. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Depends upon the V12! The Jag V12 was quite reliable, and there are plenty of marine and airplane V12 engines that last and last...

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  178. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by longbot · · Score: 1

    If they bought them because they were reliable, they wouldn't be transitioning over to other fleet cars, and other parts of the world wouldn't be avoiding them. Ford's one saving grace (if you discount loyalty to them because they used to be an American brand) is that they're cheap to own, and fairly cheap to fix.

    In a passenger car, if having a diesel vs. a gasoline engine can lead to a 5x the life expectancy, then why NOT have one? Having known plenty of people with dodge trucks (though over the years, only one who had a diesel) I have a hard time believing that the rest of the damn thing didn't fall apart around the engine long before it reached that kind of mileage.

    And respectfully, don't be such a dick. I hold a different opinion than you based on different experiences. I am not a mechanic, but I know more about what I drive and have driven than 90% of the people on the road. I disagree with you, but I will disagree respectfully.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it! --Longbottle
  179. Chevy Volt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Republicans will say ANYTHING to cause this President and America to fail.

  180. Too much money! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will let someone else spend that $40,000 to save the world. And no one ever says how much a new battery for these cars will cost you to replace - $10,000 or more. Talk about the cost to recycle that battery also!

  181. But it's a Chevy by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

    Problems :
    1) In a world where people who buy $40,000 cars, they buy smooth/professional looking Japanese or German cars. They made this thing look like some crap old man sports cars. Even if the thing came with a super model under the dashboard willing to make the driver happy however possible, no one who has any self respect and a credit limit able to handle $40,000 would be cost dead in this car. I don't have statistics on it, but I'd imagine that this car is being purchased mainly by companies who actually do received tax credits for carbon reduction. The technology of this car targets a middle cTheylass 28-35 year primarily stylish female demographic or a male in the similar age group who want something stylish and practical, and yet, the physical design is most similar to cars purchased by men from 40-50 years old trying to but something is a balance between a mustang and a practical car. In short... what the hell were they thinking? If they did nothing more to the 2013 model than to replace the nose of the car with something that didn't look like a poor mans muscle car, it would improve sales dramatically. Take a page from Toyota or Audi for a design idea on that.

    2) They bragged about a great new revolutionary design, but the people most likely to purchase a car like this need to have a feel for reliability and dependability. That's the type of person that buys hybrids and electric cars. Toyota pulled it off because they have a long standing reputation for just being reliable as hell. GM/Chevy has a reputation of cars up on bricks that need an engine rebuild. When Toyota released a new hybrid design, it caught on quick because when Toyota says they made a fancy new type of car... you know that if anything goes wrong, they'll fix it. Yeh... there was that thing which got blown out of proportion in the press with the gas peddle, but I'm not joking when I say that as a used Prius owner, Toyota actually tracked me down to tell me to come in to get parts replaced because they found a possible problem. They proactively deal with problems... even on 6 year old out of warranty cars with nearly 100,000 miles on them. Chevy... umm... yeh right. So, if a company like Chevy claims they made a whole new design, people go "I think I'll wait until it's not so revolutionary and they have the kinks worked out".

    3) Chevy bragged for years about how the brand new awesome design they're making would get insanely high gas mileage. Then as they got closer and closer to releasing it, the mileage dropped and dropped. Hell, just look at all the people claiming Microsoft/Intel will never make a Windows machine with better battery life. In the mean time, from Windows 7 to Windows 8 developer preview to Windows 8 consumer preview, my Series 7 Slate went from 3 hours on battery (Watching video) to 3.5 hours on battery to 4.8 hours on battery. Not sure how much better they'll do when it's released, but I'm expecting a comparable Ivy Bridge with LP-DDR3 on the same design otherwise will get 8 hours or more especially since the new graphics controller will offload even more processing and spend its time in sleep. But yet, people will say "Intel and Microsoft SUCK at battery life" and no matter what technology Intel and Microsoft add, people will always be like "ARM and Android or ARM and iOS will always be better" yet a comparable ARM and Android or iOS will consume just as much power. It won't matter. It's built into our minds that Intel processors with Windows are made to heat homes.
    Chevy should have never made the promises about efficiency they made. But of course they would never have been allowed to design the car if they didn't. So now, while the Volt sucks (though not as bad as people make it out to), GM has an initial design to build on. The Volt is their version 1 and probably not a bad attempt for a version 1, but it's years late and more than a few dollars short. If they get version 2 right, people might actually consider the value in buying one. But for now, $40,000 for what effectively i

  182. I Dare You To Use Irony Properly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Ironically, the shutdown comes as gas prices are soaring, exactly the time when an electric car should be an easy sell."

    This is not irony, because the soaring gas prices are not what is causing the difficulty to sell. Soaring gas prices normally would make electric vehicles an easy sell. It is ironic if, somehow, the very thing which would make the sale easy were instead to make it hard.

    Now the batteries in the car, that are catching on fire. *THOSE* are ironic as shit.

  183. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by waives · · Score: 1

    Hey dumbfuck, go back to wikipedia and look a few sentences up where they calculate the carnot efficiency of that automobile engine to be 73% Guess what? 35% is about 50% of 73% dipshit.

    And nice job completely changing the subject with your 1mpg non sequitur. I can tell you right now it's not going to affect oil usage by more than a few percent, so suck my dick.

  184. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by waives · · Score: 1

    Hey retard, there is a pretty big difference between efficiency and Carnot efficiency. Hint: if you are achieving over 50% Carnot efficiency, there is no possible way for you to double your absolute efficiency.

  185. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by macs4all · · Score: 1

    Hey dumbfuck, go back to wikipedia and look a few sentences up where they calculate the carnot efficiency of that automobile engine to be 73% Guess what? 35% is about 50% of 73% dipshit. And nice job completely changing the subject with your 1mpg non sequitur. I can tell you right now it's not going to affect oil usage by more than a few percent, so suck my dick.

    Wow, do you kiss your Mother with that mouth?

    Wikipedia does say 35%, not 73% The 73% figure is THEORETICAL; but, as Wikipedia goes on to say "Due to the other causes detailed below, practical engines have efficiencies far below the Carnot limit; for example the average automobile engine is less than 35% efficient.

    So, are you psychotic, or just illiterate?

    'Nuff said.

    And I don't think that non sequitur means what you think it does.

  186. Re:Japan and Europe is where the industry is by waives · · Score: 1

    Look you inbred moron, I'll explain this very simply to you one final time:

    Carnot efficiency is the maximum possible energy efficiency that any possible heat engine can achieve, when perfectly designed, engineered and operated without real-world constraints like friction and dirt.
    If you are achieving 35% energy efficiency, and Carnot is 73%, to double your efficiency you need to create the PERFECT engine and operate it in a cleanroom. THIS KIND OF IMPROVEMENT WILL NEVER HAPPEN. If you are lucky you might be able to squeeze another 10% out with your ridiculous waste heat capture scheme.

  187. Re:Muscle Car by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing as a muscle car with a V6. Try again.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"