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Electric Cars: Drivers Love 'Em, So Why Are Sales Still Low?

cartechboy writes "The electric car challenge is what insiders call "getting butts in seats" — and a lot of butts today still belong to humans who are not yet buying electric cars. The big question is: Why? Surveys show drivers are interested in electric cars--and that they love them once they drive them. EVs also cost less to maintain (though more to buy in the first place) and many experts say they're simply nicer to drive. So what's the problem? Disinterested dealers, uneven distribution, limited supplies, and media bias are some potential challenges. Or maybe it's just lousy marketing--casting electric cars as a moral imperative or a duty, like medicine you have to take."

810 comments

  1. 2 Words by Rhyas · · Score: 5, Informative

    Infrastructure

    Range

    1. Re:2 Words by Mashiki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You forgot cold weather.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:2 Words by JoeMerchant · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One Word: Price.

      They look nifty, but for the price, you can have an extra nifty gas burning car - why spend $30K on an econobox when you can get a "real $30K car" instead?

    3. Re:2 Words by Teancum · · Score: 2

      Cold weather mainly limits range. Electric heaters are not a problem for driving in cold weather and only in extreme environments like Antarctica (which also has almost no infrastructure as well) will it be a major problem.

      Otherwise driving an electric automobile might even be beneficial as you have the weight of the batteries distributed more evenly on the automobile than the bulk of the engine up in front of the car as well as how many electric automobiles have all wheel drive (aka power to all wheels and not just the rear). In other words, they have about the same problems as any other automobile has in that environment.

      Note also that even for gasoline engines you have reduced performance in cold weather... for many of the same reasons. You can also mirror the same issues for hot weather too in terms of getting air conditioning going, and I think it is much easier to run an air conditioner off of batter power than to deal with the insane thing of trying to put an AC radiator in front of the engine immediately next to the coolant radiator of that engine. For myself, I find air conditioners in automobiles to be an amazing piece of technology that simply shouldn't work but does anyway.

    4. Re:2 Words by robot256 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The $30k EVs--at least the ones that actually sell--are far from "econoboxes". They come with all the bells and whistles of similarly priced cars, and serve the same purpose if you get one that matches your lifestyle. Buy a Chevy Volt for and you won't have range anxiety, but you'll be among drivers who go an average of 900 miles between gasoline fill-ups. Buy a Nissan Leaf (like my own), and you may have to borrow a gas car or ride with a friend once in a while, but never have to worry about oil changes.

    5. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck...Price...you don't need a PhD to figure that out.

    6. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Note also that even for gasoline engines you have reduced performance in cold weather... for many of the same reasons.

      False.
      Gasoline engines are more powerful in cold weather because cold air is more dense than hot air. Cold/dense air means that more air makes it into the cylinder. As every gearhead knows, more air = more power.
      About the only time this wouldn't be the case is right upon startup, before the motor temps start climbing. Fluids will be cold and harder to move throughout the engine. After 30-45 seconds, this becomes a non-issue.

    7. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Interesting
      That is nice, where is my EV full-size SUV for a similar price to my gas full-size SUV?

      I drive a 2012 GMC Yukon XL Denali - very well equipped, I would be very interested in an electric version for a similar price. But it isn't an option, and the little cars being sold in EV trim are of no use to me.

    8. Re:2 Words by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      Looking at those adjectives, I assumed he'd be using other immeasurable descriptors. Why not "happier"? Makes you more "fun". Experts say it gets you laid "better".

    9. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, cost.

      Infrastructure? The plug in your house. Range? 99% of people don't go beyond 50 miles in a day 99% of the time.

      But the same car in an electric version costs many thousands of dollars more than the gas version. The almighty dollar remains almighty.

    10. Re:2 Words by hawguy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Note also that even for gasoline engines you have reduced performance in cold weather... for many of the same reasons.

      False.
      Gasoline engines are more powerful in cold weather because cold air is more dense than hot air. Cold/dense air means that more air makes it into the cylinder. As every gearhead knows, more air = more power.
      About the only time this wouldn't be the case is right upon startup, before the motor temps start climbing. Fluids will be cold and harder to move throughout the engine. After 30-45 seconds, this becomes a non-issue.

      Of course, more power doesn't necessarily translate to better fuel economy.

      That dense air also works against you on the road:

      http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=why-is-the-fuel-economy-o

      Finally, a vehicles aerodynamic drag is proportional to air density. On a 70-degree-F day, the density of the air is 16 percent lower than on a day with temperatures around 0 degrees F. Although this makes little difference in urban driving, it could account for a highway mileage per gallon reduction of 7 percent on the colder day (including a 1.5 percent allowance for improvement in fuel efficiency at the higher engine load).

    11. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shuddup you whiny faggot.
      And you obviously can't afford one of my cars.

      Evidently you are amongst one who doubts the powers of one Elon Musk *please kneel and bow your head*
      I have single handedly REVOLUTIONIZED EV range. In case you have been living under a rock, my Panasonic made battery gives my Tesla S an astounding 300 miles range!!!, obviating both the range and need for comprehensive infrastructures your tiny brain is so concerned about.
      In case you are wondering, none of the competition claim much more than 100 miles range.

      Regards Teancum, sorry I mean Elon Musk

    12. Re:2 Words by gl4ss · · Score: 2, Insightful

      running the heater fan could account for more...

      anyhow, in finland I never noticed that much of a difference in fuel range from +30c to -30c.

      besides, with colder weather areas comes sparser population density which is the real problem... the trips you're taking are longer.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    13. Re:2 Words by StarWreck · · Score: 1

      It can't be that far off, they've already got an EV that's similar size, luxury, features and price to a full size luxury car.

      --
      ... and in the DRM, bind them.
    14. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The world isn't run for people who drive stupid big trucks to make up for their tiny dick.

    15. Re:2 Words by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't go seeking SUV sized EV's, that's a difficult proposition. It may happen someday but it won't be priority or anywhere near as efficient.

    16. Re:2 Words by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      That is nice, where is my EV full-size SUV for a similar price to my gas full-size SUV?

      None of the EVs are actually price-competitive at purchase time without a big rebate. A gasser that fulfills the same function, probably with a little less acceleration but otherwise equivalent, is still cheaper. Your full-size SUV will cost significantly more or have very crap range.

      There was a hybrid Durango, but it cost $85k and Dodge terminated it for lack of interest. No shit, huh? I can't imagine who wouldn't want to pay Viper prices for a sluggish SUV.

      On the other hand, the Denali's name is a barely-transposed acronym. Get a smaller car.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if you have a PhD, you'll probably figure out the price thing pretty fast (since it will be obviously *way* out of your price range).
      -- a very-soon-to-be PhD

    18. Re:2 Words by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      They come with all the bells and whistles of similarly priced cars,

      Not at all. They are nice, but find one that can do 0-60MPH in less than five seconds, which you can get for a $30 gasoline car.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    19. Re:2 Words by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      How sad it must be for you to view the world in terms of dick sizes.

    20. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Insightful

      None of the EVs are actually price-competitive at purchase time without a big rebate.

      This is indeed the primary problem. I can afford an EV, I can afford to spend $20K more on an EV if I wanted to. But I didn't get to where I am by making emotional decisions with money. When it makes economic sense, I'll be first in line to buy an EV, I do believe they are the future. Burning dead dinos in our cars and trucks really has no long term future in it.

      On the other hand, the Denali's name is a barely-transposed acronym. Get a smaller car.

      Actually, I use every bit of it... I have 3 kids, and we're often driving around their friends as well, plus hauling stuff. I also use it for work, picking up and dropping off computer equipment.

      I know that some people buy a truck like that and drive it around empty, but in my case, I really do need the space, both for kids and for cargo.

    21. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      How sad it must be for you to view the world in terms of dick sizes.

      Not really my point, I only provide the example to point out that I'm the perfect customer for EVs in general, for Tesla's very nice EVs even, I can afford them.

      I'm just pointing out why I'm not a customer, and if I am not a customer, that should provide the answer for why they aren't selling.

    22. Re:2 Words by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Tesla Model S (or Model X) would fit the bill. But yeah, it's waaaay too expensive right now.

    23. Re:2 Words by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Lets compare..

      The Chevrolet and Nissan cars, straight from their sites. These are all "starting from..." prices. We could compare options all day. I've excluded the high end sports cars (Corvette and GT-R respectively)

      $12,170 Spark
      $14,170 Sonic
      $17,270 Cruze
      $22,140 Malibu
      $23,555 Camaro
      --- Average ---
      $26,860 Impala
      $34,185 Volt <--- EV
      $43,475 SS
       
      Chevrolet "average" is $24,228
       
      Nissan
      $11,990 Versa Sedan
      $13,990 Versa Note
      $15,990 Sentra
      $16,760 Cube
      $22,010 Altima Sedan
      --- Average ---
      $25,230 Altima Coupe
      $28,800 Leaf <--- EV
      $29,990 370Z Coupe
      $31,000 Maxima
      $35,110 Pathfinder Hybrid
      $41,470 370Z Roadster
       
      Nissan "average" is $24,758

      Really, a $1,190 difference between a Leaf and a 370Z? $19.83/mo difference with 60 month financing? A buyer would switch up the the 370Z if they want performance, or they'll happily save $3,570 by going down to the Altima Coupe.

      The same applies to Chevy, except stepping down to a gas car saves $7,325. Stepping up is a bit more expensive.

      The EVs are a great idea. They aren't priced to sell to most consumers. They're priced to sell to people who want to brag they have an EV, much like pricing on high end sports cars.

      I *want* an EV. If I had to buy a new car today, I wouldn't buy one. Besides the above average costs, I see longevity being a problem. The car I have now is over 10 years old. I have serious doubts in the longevity of the current EVs, and part replacement costs. As I understand it, the Volt battery pack is $8,000. Nissan Leafs batteries cost $15,000. Nissan has a payment plan deal, which still ends up costing you thousands.

      There are other pesky issues, like the cost of recharging.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    24. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the Tesla X is coming out next year. It seats 7 plus has enought room for luggage for all of them, and it has nearly the same range as the Tesla S

    25. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      If a full-size SUV EV makes no sense, then why does a small car EV make sense?

      Small cars these days get 30+ MPG, some get 40+ MPG on the highway.

      The EV part just doesn't save enough gas to pay for the higher price point.

      My truck gets 12 mpg, it wouldn't be hard to improve on that. :)

    26. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Informative
      They do? Which one? The Tesla Model S? What car do you think it compares to in terms of price, luxury, size, etc?

      For the 80K price, I could buy a pair of Cadillac XTS's!

    27. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The world isn't run for people who drive stupid big trucks to make up for their tiny dick.

      Neither is it run for people who attack strawman stereotypes to make up for their tiny brain.

    28. Re:2 Words by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      ...if you get it started, of course. But you should pick your model carefully when you're in, say, Finnland.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    29. Re:2 Words by mlts · · Score: 1

      Infrastructure is a concern. A house, there isn't an issue to install a proper charger. However, more people tend to live in apartments or multi-family housing, and the HOA or apartment management can be disinterested at best to install electric facilities (to them a cost center, even though it may attract new tenents or owners.) In a lot of places, getting an apartment complex to fix a clogged toilet is extremely tough, much less spending the cash to add the circuits added to support the amperage of chargers.

    30. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2
      Thanks for the heads up. Just took a look at the pictures. Nice looking SUV, looks like a Lexus RX 350 size SUV. My Mother would love one (that is what she drives now).

      Doesn't help me much, I need more space than that, I haul kids and stuff at the same time.

      Any idea on price? If they could build and sell that for under $50K, I'd be interested in one as a second SUV.

    31. Re:2 Words by rossdee · · Score: 1

      Gasoline engines are more powerful in cold weather because cold air is more dense than hot air. Cold/dense air means that more air makes it into the cylinder. As every gearhead knows, more air = more power."

      But when the road is covered in ice and snow, you don't need more power
      (unless you're the one driving the plow)

    32. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Any idea on what the Model X is going to cost? I just found pictures of it and it looks very nice.

    33. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about both.

      $30k for an electric car seating 4 with at least a 140 mile range would be acceptable, $25k would be better. The Leaf isn't quite there because I have days that I *have* to go 125 miles and don't have time to charge. It can't manage that distance (73 miles rated).

      The Tesla Model S would be awesome, but it's just too damn expensive.

      I don't buy a car that gets less than 50mpg and still spend over $300/mo on fuel. Even if I spent $80/mo more on electricity, I could afford to do a $500/mo. car payment ($25k for 5 years at 6%).

    34. Re:2 Words by bob_super · · Score: 2

      > 99% of people don't go beyond 50 miles in a day 99% of the time.

      But that tiny fraction of the American public will endlessly rant about their range issue (whether or not they would ever buy an EV whose spec fits their needs). And while local manufacturers will obsess about getting more range, the other car manufacturers will rake in the money when their cheaper solutions take over the rest of the world.

      I present as evidence the number pulled out of my ass that over 90% of non-American car commutes are under 40km a day (because gas has been expensive for years, public transport offsets that, and sprawl is more limited). And these cars are typically not SUVs, because parking spaces are also at a premium in non-US cities.

      So, keep obsessively trying to solve the problems of maybe 50% of 5% of the world. Sure, they have more money, but how's that been working for Detroit?

    35. Re:2 Words by mlts · · Score: 2

      In most cities, who really needs horsepower when at most you have a couple hundred feet between lights, or 5-10 feet away from the next bumper ahead. Crowded towns is where an EV or a hybrid shines. When stuck in traffic, you are using zero fuel other than what keeps the A/C going unlike an IC engine where it is still spinning at 800 or so RPM when stopped.

      IMHO, the Volt or a Plug in Prius [1] is a pretty decent all around vehicle for all but off-road use. They use no fuel if one plans a daily commute, but for longer trips, no worries... the gas engine will take care of keeping the battery topped off. To boot, with a decent PSW inverter, the vehicle acts as a very efficient generator in a pinch.

      Another EV that I've seen people swear by is Mitsubishi's i-MiEV. I have a cow-orker who has one, and it does the job for short range commutes quite well. There is something nice about highway speeds, and little to no engine noise.

      Of course, because I live in Texas and some roads I end up on are quite rough, it would be nice to have an EV pickup. Hopefully the mention by Elon Musk about making one comes true. It would mean being able to go on some roads that would eat most car axles for lunch and finish up with the oil pan as an after-dinner tipple. All for $0 in fuel costs. To boot, electric motors get their max torque at 0 RPM, which is even better for towing.

      Solar doesn't have the oomph to be completely self-sufficient with charging a pickup, but in west Texas where wind is heavy and constant, a solid wind farm might be able to keep a few EVs ready to go.

      [1]: Yet another vehicle not sold in Texas.

    36. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The $30k EVs--at least the ones that actually sell--are far from "econoboxes".

      And yet the econobox and the EV both get from point A to point B in the exact same amount of time. Since one of the biggest features of an electric vehicle is savings, it is designed for the price conscious buyer. The purchase price does not reflect this. The price conscious buyer does not care if he has armstrong (manual) windows and no radio, and definitely doesn't care if his seat has power, never mind a digital dash or anything else.

      EVs will fail as long as they continue to market to the buyer that wants to save money unless a low price EV is built. People without money aren't idiots, they can work out how much gas they'll need to buy to drive a gasser econobox over its life vs the substantial increase in price for an EV. They also understand that while gas goes up in price, they can "lock in" the gas price by simply putting that difference in gas futures.

      This is why Tesla is so successful. They know that they can't build a cheap EV yet, so instead they go after the buyer who is actually looking for a luxury vehicle at a luxury vehicle price.

      As for the alternative market for EVs--those that are looking to be good to the environment--they don't drive. They use a bicycle and public transportation.

    37. Re:2 Words by ultranova · · Score: 2

      But when the road is covered in ice and snow, you don't need more power

      Sure you do: you're compressing the snow. That means more rolling resistance.

      Ice might work in your favour, being hard, but then again you need studs to drive on it, which work by puncturing it, so that hardness might also work against you. Can't win :(.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    38. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What southern tier state do you live in where you can say cold weather is only a problem in Antarctica?

      Range is certainly the issue but price is equally the issue, and mostly because of range.
      If people have to buy a second car for longer trips, they aren't going to want take that long trip in a piece of crap tin can with no amenities.
      So that means two fairly expensive cars.
        Extend the range, make recharge station more frequent, shorten the charge time and the cost problem goes away. But mostly you have to double the range.

      No, 280 miles is not far enough, even when you can charge while eating lunch. Ten hour drives are more common than lots of people think.

      Right now, all you have is the commuter market. And forgetting to change one night means you go no where the next day, which makes even that market nervous.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    39. Re:2 Words by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

      Range

      I hear this trotted out constantly and it's nonsense. People say the same crap about the Tesla S, and it's got hundreds of miles of range. 80% of the US population lives in an urban or suburban area. A huge percentage of car trips are 2-3 miles!

      Really, Nissan should have aggressively pushed them to Zipcar and the like. Perfect setup; Zipcar can afford the charging infrastructure, most of their customers drive well within the range of a Leaf.

    40. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the added cost over a used conventional - I drive a 4Runner of all things and it would take 5-10 years worth of gasoline to equal the added cost of a new hybrid.

    41. Re:2 Words by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 5, Informative

      anyhow, in finland I never noticed that much of a difference in fuel range from +30c to -30c.

      Agreed. Most of the apparent range difference between summer and winter is attributable to differences in the wheel diameter. Usually studded winter tyres are less compliant with the road, thus having a greater effective diameter, even if their nominal diameter is about the same as summer tyres on the same car. The odometer on cars is just counting revolutions of the wheels, so a difference in effective diameter of a couple of percent gives a comparable effect in apparent fuel economy. The engine is working slightly less hard for the same apparent distance.

      On our cars (both diesels), the apparent economy difference between summer (10C to 30C) and winter (-30C to -10C) is less than 8%, about half of which is due to the compliance and diameter of the tyres. It's easy to check the accuracy of the odometer by passing through the roadside speed checks at a constant 80km/h according to the speedometer. The speed indicated by the roadside radar gives the error in the speedometer.

      I never noticed any particular difference when using the same tyres all year around (in Canada) on a car with a petrol motor. Then again, fuel in Canada was so cheap it was almost an irrelevancy and I didn't track economy much. Here, the price of fuel is more significant, being about US$8 per US gallon.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    42. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      Stripped models maybe or pre-owned , but not something with the luxury or performance of the model s.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    43. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      Tesla is planning a truck.
      Not sure how that is going to go over.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    44. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 3, Informative

      Charging and range is the problem.

      If you pocket the the $3500 and go for Altima over the Leaf, you can drive it across the state and across the nation, and the money you save will buy you 30,000 miles worth of gas.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    45. Re:2 Words by QuasiEvil · · Score: 1

      To me, it's all about the price, otherwise I'd own one by now.

      My three cars, together, barely cost me $30k. $17k for my Ridgeline, $16k for my S2000, and $3k for my del Sol that actually sucks up most of the miles. So, for $36k I have three cars, each appropriate for different things, and not one range-limited electric that's only really any good at being a commuter car. Since 700 miles in a day isn't uncommon for me due to work and hobbies, an electric can't be my only car.

      I did think about converting the last del Sol over to electric when the engine gave out at 310k, but it just wasn't worth the investment in time and materials. Electrification would have never paid for itself over another 15 year old car that I'll put 150-200k miles on and bought for $3k.

    46. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Not all of us are grown up kids who push pencils for a living.

    47. Re:2 Words by SternisheFan · · Score: 3, Informative
      If we don't have reasonably priced electric SUVs today, remember the electric car was purposely killed off in the U.S. back in the 1990's. There could have been a push then that would have led to a mostly electric vehicle society by now. Blame the people in power then (and still today) if you don't have cheap, sensible transportation.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_Killed_the_Electric_Car%3F

    48. Re: 2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      280 miles is the range of my SUV. I'd love to replace it with an electric car with a 280 mile range but we still have the charging problem. I can fill my 20 gallon tank in about 5,000 places in a 280 mile radius from my home and in about 5 minutes.

    49. Re:2 Words by Bartles · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have nothing against trucks or SUV's, but it sounds like what you really need is a minivan.

    50. Re:2 Words by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      A friend of mine asked me if I wanted a "free" car. He is leasing a Lead for $200 a month, about the same amount of money he was paying for gas.

    51. Re:2 Words by jools33 · · Score: 1

      Cold weather reduces battery life significantly, both overall battery life and usage from a single charge, so these cars maybe great in the Californian climate - but here where I live in Scandinavia - they don't make much sense, probably what we need is a bit more global warming first to make them more effective...

    52. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I have nothing against minivans, I used to own a Honda Odyssey, very nice vehicle.

      They are now behind the times when it comes to technology. Seriously, no touch screen display in the Odyssey, what are they thinking?

      Power sliding doors? Very nice. Third row seat, comfortable for adults, better than the third row in the Yukon.

      Storage behind the third row? Worse than in the Yukon, which is one of the biggest problems.

      Towing ability? Terrible... the Yukon can be fully loaded with people and stuff, plus a trailer can be put on the back and it doesn't care, it will pull it all. The Odyssey? Not so much.

      Off road? The Yukon has good ground clearance and good 4wd performance. The Odyssey? None at all. Yes, I've had my truck off road. Nothing serious, but more than you'd take an Odyssey to, and that includes mud.

      Yes, many people who own Yukon/Suburbans would be better served with a minivan. Or for that matter, the Traverse/Acadia which are great vehicles for families, better than the short version of the Yukon/Tahoe for most people.

      I fall into the "actually need it" category. Many people don't, but in my case, it works for me.

    53. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pardon me for asking, but why would you 'have to borrow a gas car or ride with a friend'? Would that be for those times when the car is in the shop?

    54. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      GM has done a lot of stupid things over the years, that is one of them. They could have run with it and kept working on it, but they were so fat and happy off SUV profits that they were blind to the future and gave Toyota a huge head start.

      At least GM is trying today with Volt, it isn't there yet either, but if they keep up with it, well, it is a start.

    55. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The only significant part replacement cost is the battery and since the warranty is 8-10 yrs, you don't have to worry about it for a while.
      Also, the price per kWh for EV batteries has been dropping for years and will continue to fall for years to come and, even now, you're pricing them MUCH too high.

      $625 per kWh?? That's at least 50% too high. Pesky cost of recharging? It's a mere fraction of the cost of petrol.

    56. Re: 2 Words by The+Wannabe+King · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, cold weather is good for long term battery life. The capacity loss in winter is only temporary. I don't know which Scandinavian country you are from, but here in Norway Leafs are very popular and the batteries keep very well.

    57. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      The Luxury version of the XTS is $48K, the Platinum top-of-the-line version is $58K. Both are a whole lot less expensive than a Model S and are very nice performance cars.

      With the V-Sport engine, the XTS will do 0-60 in 5.2 seconds and the quarter mile 13.6 seconds at 105 mph.

      The Model S is slightly faster on 0-60 time at 4.6 seconds, about the same on the quarter mile at 13.3 seconds at 104 mph.

      As for luxury, again very similar, a Platinum XTS is every bit as nice inside as the Model S, for a whole pile less money.

      Not saying the Model S is bad, just saying that it is expensive for what it is, and it doesn't carry with it the ownership experience of a luxury brand, which if you haven't experienced it, does add something to the table.

    58. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or a stationwagon.

      SUV's are for soccer moms that need a car that both protects themselves from their own bad driving and attempts to murder pedestrians at the same time.

    59. Re:2 Words by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      Except that it has backdoors you can't open in a parking lot.
      Yes, they do fold in a bit, but does anybody really think that is enough?

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    60. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      The statement was made that you could buy two XTSs for the price of a model s. Which is not true.
      And if you are willing to accept the notoriously anemic 6cylinder that GM shovels into that car.

      And, I have to take issue with your idea that the XTS is considered a luxury brand. Come on! Its basicly a dressed up Buick, from which much of the car sprang.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    61. Re:2 Words by guevera · · Score: 1

      "Seriously, no touch screen display in the Odyssey, what are they thinking?" This is why Osama hates us.

    62. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      400+ HP is anemic?

      The base model is close to $40K, buy them at invoice, you're about there. Close enough anyway. :)

    63. Re:2 Words by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      I've seen those speed check signs be significantly wrong. Car odometers always show a faster speed than you are actually going (unless you put big tires on) so that the manufacturer can't be sued because you were "accidentally" speeding. I've driven past those unmanned signs with the needed pegged on 60km/h (which means I was actually doing LESS than that) and the sign reported 64. I've also verified this with a GPS unit.

      The hand-held units are usually very well calibrated as their results are used in court, but the road-side "your speed is..." signs almost never are.

    64. Re:2 Words by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Not to mention you lose power from your tires slipping a bit on the ice (or slush if you live around here).

    65. Re:2 Words by linuxguy · · Score: 1

      > My three cars, together, barely cost me $30k

      The EVs cost more. No doubt. But lets not get carried away by comparing the prices on the cars you bought used. For a direct comparison, lets stick with MSRP.

    66. Re:2 Words by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 2

      Not to mention if you live anywhere where the rain doesn't fall DIRECTLY downwards, your back seats are going to get soaked!

    67. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's it for me: price. Not as much initial investment as continued costs. Electricity isn't free and neither are replacement parts. With an old fashion gas vehicle, not to be confused with modern gas vehicles. I know many workarounds for various parts failing that'll hold up long enough to get to somewhere that I can enact repairs and most important almost every part in a gas vehicle cost low enough that I feel comfortable with that much money in my pocket. If an electric car breaks down I'm looking at towing costs and really expensive parts and even expensive specialized tools to change and calibrate the new part.

    68. Re:2 Words by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      If all you do is highway driving cold air might work to your favor, in practice most drives see poorer gas mileage in winter months.

      Otherwise cold air makes engines idle faster which uses more fuel. This was worse before injection engines became the norm, but to avoid running lean and possibly damaging the engine and to meat emissions, the computer control will still add more gas. This is true when you don't need the power as well, rolling along thru town at 30mph and 1400 rpm.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    69. Re:2 Words by geoskd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You forgot cold weather.

      I own a Miev, and cold weather (Upstate NY) barely affects my range. The effect on the batteries is basically nil. The only real difference is the need to use the heater, which does affect range a bit. (Maybe takes 5% off the range for any given trip).

      The real problem is complete lack of quality marketing. Even the local Mitsubishi dealership complains that corporate does basically no advertising, and what little they do is centered around the "save the planet" thing. This is stupid. You're not going to get people to cough up an extra 10 - 15k in one lump sum in support of the environment. Their marketing should never even address environmental issues. The most effective marketing they could do would be a total cost of ownership comparison between themselves and a corolla, or civic. You might throw in a little bit about safety ratings, but not a peep about the environment.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    70. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And I prefer to drive an Abraham M1. Where's the electric version of that, huh?

    71. Re:2 Words by Solandri · · Score: 1

      That is nice, where is my EV full-size SUV for a similar price to my gas full-size SUV?

      The Tesla S weighs almost as much as a full-size SUV - 4650 to 4900 lbs depending on the battery size. That's what's holding back EV versions of SUV - batteries to give them a decent range would probably push the vehicle weight to 6000-7000 lbs.

    72. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's do some other numbers over a typical car's life - average fuel economy 23.8 mpg.

      Fuel cost for 150,000 miles @ $3/gallon - $18907.56.
      Fuel cost for a 50 mpg hybrid: $9000
      Battery replacement cost for hybrid - $3000
      Fuel cost for a Volt (within 40 mi EV range only) - $5250 @ $0.10/kWh
      Cost for a Volt replacement battery - $8000

      Fuel cost for a Leaf - $4350
      Battery replacment cost for a Leaf - (???? can't buy, only lease $100/mo for a used battery)

      Assuming 15,000 mi/year:
      Total fuel cost for an average car over 150k - $18907.56
      Total fuel cost for a 50 mpg hybrid - $12000
      Total fuel cost for a Volt if the battery lasts 150k - $13250
      Total fuel cost for a Leaf (5 years of leasing) - $10350

      Assuming 12,000 mi/year
      Total fuel cost for an average car over 150k - $18907.56
      Total fuel cost for a 50 mpg hybrid - $12000
      Total fuel cost for a Volt if the battery lasts 150k - $13250
      Total fuel cost for a Leaf (30 months of leasing) - $13350

      The Leaf barely wins if you drive a lot, but it also has a range limit as low as 51 miles (70% capacity) before the battery replacement program kicks in. Also, once enrolled in the replacement program, you no longer own your battery.

    73. Re:2 Words by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      If people have to buy a second car for longer trips, they aren't going to want take that long trip in a piece of crap tin can with no amenities.

      No-one in their right mind would buy a second car for that. They would either use their partner's, or rent one, or keep their old one around, or just not buy an EV if they make a lot of journeys like that.

      Your kind of thinking is what prevents more people from buying EVs. They get these bizarre ideas in their head like this, probably from talking heads on TV.

      --
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    74. Re:2 Words by Solandri · · Score: 1

      No, it's a real concern. The once-per-year drive to Grandma's house for Thanksgiving is a factor in their decision on which car to buy. The prospect of having to wait 45 min to recharge for every 2.5 hours driving on a long trip is extremely discouraging.

      I don't really see the problem - buy an EV and just rent a gasoline vehicle for that rare long trip. But I'm different from most people in that I think of a car purchase and ownership costs in terms of depreciation and operating costs per mile. So renting a gasoline car for a long trip doesn't "cost" me more than if I drove my regular car on that trip. But most people think of the car purchase as a one-time lump sum cost, and any miles they drive on it afterwards are "free." So by their thinking, renting a gasoline car for a long trip represents extra cost.

    75. Re:2 Words by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Leaf isn't suitable for everyone, but there are some big advantages that make it attractive. Fuel is extremely cheap, and basically free if you have solar panels on your house. It has some features that gas cars don't, like being able to turn the heating on in the morning 20 minutes before you drive to work so that it is nice and warm immediately and you don't lose any range. In Japan it can be used as a whole house UPS system as well, in the event of a power cut, but I don't know if they offer that anywhere else. Some places also offer priority parking for EVs.

      If it suits your lifestyle it's actually a very attractive automobile.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    76. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      Right now, all you have is the commuter market. And forgetting to change one night means you go no where the next day, which makes even that market nervous.

      You don't have to forget. Most of the US power grid is hanging on wooden poles along the roads, where drunks have an excellent chance to hit them. Power failures in winter are quite common; power failures in summer, which are caused by overload, are also known to happen. You do not want to be stranded at your home, with a car that does not move, and with no power, and with a serious need to go somewhere *right now*. An EV is a fair weather vehicle that is suitable only for a forgiving usage pattern. It could be a good second car... but not for the price of four new gas cars.

    77. Re:2 Words by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "There are other pesky issues, like the cost of recharging."

      you can get a full tank of electricity a lot lot cheaper than a full tank of gas

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    78. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In essence, SUVs and trucks are very power-hungry vehicles. They can be loaded with a ton of stuff, and they can tow huge trailers. Batteries that can deliver so much power would cost a million dollars, and they would occupy too much space - and they would take a significant part of the weight of the vehicle.

      There is yet another catch. Large batteries cannot be charged in a reasonable time using a reasonable charger. A truck can have a tank that holds 25-30 gallons of gasoline. That is equivalent to 26 MJ/L * (30*4) = 3 GJ, or 833 kWh of energy. A Tesla Supercharger delivers 120 kW. This means that to charge a truck with a Supercharger you need 7 hours. Charging at home, at 10% of that, would be a very sad story. Obviously, any vehicle that cannot be recharged in 8 hours at home is DOA in the market - and nobody is going to park their truck overnight at a supercharger :-)

      Another unwelcome fact is that trucks are workhorses of the industry. They do not have an easy life of commuter cars that mostly are parked. Trucks are moving, and they are towing, and they are carrying stuff. They burn through all this energy very quickly. An EV truck owner would need a personal nuclear power station in the basement if he wants to keep his truck charged; then he can hope to cover about 12mpg * 30 = 360 miles per day. This may be, actually, not enough - if you haul a trailer with cattle your effective mileage will be much lower. I have friends who own a ranch and transport cattle all the time. They wouldn't even consider an EV truck - unless it comes with at least a 10 GJ battery from a flying saucer and a personal 1 MW charger.

    79. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      Fuel is extremely cheap, and basically free if you have solar panels on your house.

      Nothing is free. Solar panels provide you with "free" electric power only if you do not count the cost of the solar setup. You have to pay up front everywhere, and then try to recoup your investment later. This is not a good strategy. Most people prefer the "pay as you go" plan. Once you spent $50K on the solar setup you are essentially tied to your house - this setup cannot be moved elsewhere if you must move, and you may not get compensated for it when you sell the house.

      I have the solar setup; it works. However it will not become financially profitable in the nearest decade. Chances are that it will fail somehow by then - and then it will never be profitable. I cannot recommend installing solar to anyone, unless you have too much money. Solar power just costs too much.

    80. Re: 2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Base model tesla s competes with the mid level 5-series BMW. I should know. I want a model s, but practicality, price to value, means I'm buying the 528

    81. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      $200 of gas per month is about 50 gallons (200L.) Gasoline is about 36 MJ/L, so he used up 7.2 GJ, or 2000 kWh. I cannot imagine that amount of electric power being free. How much does he pay for a kWh? Is he on an EV rate plan? A typical cost of energy in that tier from PG&E would be about 34 cents/kWh, so he would be paying about $680/mo for energy alone. I do know that EV rate is lower, but still this is not something he should be silent about. How much does he pay for charging?

    82. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      So by their thinking, renting a gasoline car for a long trip represents extra cost.

      They are correct. The extra cost that they need to pay for the rental car is payable right now. The wear of their own car is in the far future. Even if both numbers are the same (and they are not!) it is in their interest to delay this expense because there is a nonzero chance that the car will be sold (or damaged) before that date. p <= 1.0.

      A rental car does save the resource of your own car. However you pay for that saving immediately - and in triplicate. Rental cars are not magical vehicles, they are not produced by fairies. They wear out and they need replacement. You (who else?) pay for that. On top of that, you pay for the risks (insurance), and you pay for the profits of the business, and you pay for all the business expenses (personnel, idle cars, building, parking, etc.) Rentals are very, very expensive. I considered renting a small 4WD SUV for a trip in early march over some mountain passes, and it would have cost me $500 for five days. That's way too much. (I drove my Prius instead.)

      Renting is not convenient if you are working alone. You need to find someone to go with you to drive your own car back, and that has to be done twice. It's a hassle. Some rental places offer car delivery and pickup, but I haven't had a chance to test that service because of the costs.

    83. Re:2 Words by psavo · · Score: 1

      Most of the mileage change comes from different speeds used winter/summertime. I have absolutely the same mileage when I switch to studded tyres but still drive summertime limits (100km/h). When the wintertime speed limits (80km/h) come and I drive them, I get better mileage. Summetime range is ~900km/80l and wintertime is 1000km/80l on my volvo s80 (this is what computer says and I'm never actually close to emptying the tank, it usually only takes 55l at 700-800km mark)

      --
      fucktard is a tenderhearted description
    84. Re:2 Words by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Most of my car journeys are short. I commute just 8 miles each way now.

      Long distance car journeys are however regular. Journeys that I couldn't do (including the return trip) in an electric car every couple of weeks.

      I could rent a car for those, but then I have to drive an unknown car, go and collect it, return it, put all the stuff I keep in my car for long journeys into it, take it back out, learn its handling and cope with the fact that it wont perform as well as my current car.

      Or I could buy a car capable of those longer journeys and use it for my commute too. Works out cheaper that way.

    85. Re:2 Words by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      States someone that obviously does not live in a major California city.

    86. Re:2 Words by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Why is off-road in your list of requirements for a family of five's daily driver?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    87. Re:2 Words by fractoid · · Score: 1

      The heater doesn't affect fuel economy in an internal-combustion car, since (unless you're in a stupidly cold place and have a fuel-burning heater in your vehicle) it runs entirely off waste heat from the engine. The fan uses such a trivial amount of energy (~100 watts out of 10-15kW for cruising) that it's barely worth considering.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    88. Re:2 Words by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Price, Range, Infrastructure. Even when Tesla has built out their superchargers you will only have a few in many states. I mean well under 10. You have to hunt down the charging stations. Even with the superchargers you have to take 20 minutes to charge your car. Only the Tesla is capable of being anything but a city car.
      As far as owners loving them. That is about the single most useless data point on the planet. This is a self selecting group of enthusiast. Lamborghini owners love there Lamborghinis but the average user would hate them. They are not roomy, not comfortable, many have terrible visibility, and so on. The people that buy electric cars really want electric cars. They accept the limited range and charging issues and are willing to pay a premium. AKA they are enthusiast.
       

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    89. Re:2 Words by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      But why not offer an extended range option (with less trunk space or something)? The MiEV, an affordable electric (after tax subsidy...), has almost the range I currently need for daily commute. With an extra 40 miles, it would become an option for me.

      The Tesla S has more than enough range. Sadly, I do not have the kind of income where that vehicle would be possible.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    90. Re:2 Words by fractoid · · Score: 1

      It's only a peculiarity of your U.S. car market that makes a "real $30k car" an actual thing. In most countries $30k will get you a modest family sedan at best.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    91. Re:2 Words by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      'Buy a Nissan Leaf (like my own), and you may have to borrow a gas car or ride with a friend once in a while"
      Bingo. And that is the problem. Buy a brand new $30 and then have to rent a car or get a ride. That is a trade off most people are not willing to make.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    92. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Of course, more power doesn't necessarily translate to better fuel economy.

      No, it doesn't. But greater volumetric efficiency of an engine does. Colder air = more air in the cylinder = greater volumetric efficiency. You aren't creating "moar powah" with colder air, but rather reducing losses associated with sucking air into an engine. Cooler air always always always = better fuel economy. Now if you alter your driving habits to take advantage of your newfound extra couple of horsepower by accelerating harder, you will lose efficiency, but that's because you're altering your driving habits.

      The next benefit is, extra engine cooling. Doesn't sound like it'd matter much, but heat soak under a bonnet/decklid (decklid for MR/RR vehicles) is a primary source of lost efficiency in any vehicle. Reducing under-hood ambient temperatures is just as, if not more important than reducing intake air temperatures. When the metal (engine block, heads, exhaust headers, etc.) or really anything directly engine or transmission related begins to retain ambient heat, the ability to keep internal temperatures at prime operating temperatures is severely hampered. Too cold, and you're struggling to slosh liquids around. Too hot, and you're losing unnecessary amounts of volumetric efficiency. Most cars built after ~1980 have plenty of venting to the engine compartment. But since ~2006-ish, those vents have been closed off in favor of improved coefficients of drag. This is a particular problem in the latest iteration of the Hyundai Sonata, for example. The 2.0 Turbo produces 274 horsepower, 269 ft-lbs of torque at the engine's crankshaft. When ambient temperatures are cool. When the exhaust manifold, firewall, engine block and turbocharger heat-soak after a long drive, you'd be lucky to be producing 60% of that power. As such, you are losing both performance and fuel economy. My 2011 Sonata Turbo proves this point every time I take a road trip. The first ~150 miles or so, I average a bit over 36 MPG. (I have a tendency to hypermile on the highways.) However, on the same tank of gas, at roughly the same elevation and outside temperature, after the 151'st mile, my MPG drops to a bit under 33 highway, all other variables eliminated. If I park at a rest stop and wait for my ambient temperatures to return to ~37C, then begin driving again, my MPG raises back to 36 and change. (Yes, I've installed temperature probes and other sensors linked to the GPIO pins of an RPi to measure this.)

      Personally, I notice about a 6% improvement in fuel economy in the winter versus the summer on the Sonata. On my project Fiero, which is no longer powered by its original Pontiac 151 4-cylinder, but instead a supercharged 2.0 liter 4-cylinder out of a Chevy Cobalt SS, I generally see a 22% improvement in fuel economy in the winter versus the summer. But that car's also been externally modified to not only bring cool air under the decklid from the outside, but has additional venting on the top of the decklid. Under-hood temperatures rarely, if ever, peak 33C in the winter, and rarely 40C in the summer.

      It's more about driving habits, tire inflation, the blend of gasoline used and time spent idling to warm up the vehicle before driving off. Tire inflation is the #1 killer here. Most people don't realize this, but in the winter, your tires become underinflated. When there's a change in temperatures, the air within contracts, doesn't take up as much volume, and your tires shrink. This has two detrimental effects on your fuel economy. 1) Smaller overall circumference of the tire, meaning your wheels have to spin faster to go the same speed, meaning the engine also has to rev higher for the same speeds. 2) Increased rolling resistance. As your tires deflate, the bottom end flattens out, giving more contact rubber with the road's surface. This marginally improves traction. (Most drag slicks are rarely inflated over 20 PSI, while most modern road cars are up over 35 PSI.) However, the increased contact patch also means a considerably increased amount of friction with the road's surface for the vehicle to overcome. Mythbusters (I know, poor scientific choice to refer to) have shown tire inflation to directly correlate to fuel economy in a huge way.

    93. Re:2 Words by gander666 · · Score: 1

      Or a stationwagon.

      SUV's are for soccer moms that need a car that both protects themselves from their own bad driving and attempts to murder pedestrians at the same time.

      Or murder me in my S2000 (I dodge three schools on my 7 mile commute with suicidal, kamikaze moms dropping kids off, running lights, blocking traffic, and pulling out blindly in to the flow of traffic.)

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    94. Re:2 Words by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      to be fair when talking about cars, most the time performance is equivalent to power, not economy.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    95. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, they sell starter accessories, thru the dealerships that do the same,since, the mid 80's thats no advantage. So far ev is losing to gas, almost like a NASCAR event. But then again, ev, hasn't tried the logical step. Gas/electric a small super-effecient engine, with a generator, to peak charge a super-capicitor/battery for extended range , or for heavy haulers. They are too focused on the midgets, trying to get the foreign market where long distance is to the commuter station, not across the state of Texas, and by gosh, some of the ev's cannot even cross the state of rhode island, without recharge.

    96. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its more than range. The issue is that when the electric car runs out of juice, you have to go plug it in for N hours (where 'N' is a fairly large number). Infrastructure isn't going to fix that because trying to do something like swap out the batteries for new, charged batteries at a "gas" station simply isn't practical for many reasons. That makes electric cars impractical as anything other than a commuting car - and then only if one's commute is under 35 miles each way (which is your original statement regarding range). Even as a commuting car, it has problems because when you get home, you can't use the car to even go run errands, pick up the kids from where ever they are, etc.

      Oh, and don't forget the effect of driving at night when one has to turn on the head lights. Or in hot weather trying to run the A/C.

      Here's a fun little article about range issues for electric cars: http://www.thechargingpoint.com/knowledge-hub/hot-topics/hot-topics-range.html

      Bottom line is that until electric cars have a greater range and a "refuel" time that is comparable to that of gasoline engines, they are of limited utility.

    97. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so delete the opportunity for all. Just so you can have your jollies. So how much more will your food cost? Since you killed all long range transportation. Why be connected to the next state, where they may grow kumquats, or rice or steaks? Think of all the things you can force out of the way, if you get a chance to limit...
      But, think of Detroit, why are they failing, Bankers, not be forced to do the right thing. Seems they lie and cheat with the best of the gamblers. Reminds me of environmentalists.. Some are good and some are bad. Detroit's problem is coming due after many years of getting lied too, by bankers, by brokers, they bought the lies of GS/MS and bought the derivatives, against the advice of their attorneys. So who got bailed out? Now GS/MS are behind the push toward a cleaner america, not a cleaner china, Mexico or India. Pushing more power there, not here, less power infrastructure, and wanting electric vehicles, that draw electrical,...Why do I see problems?

    98. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an electric car short range denialist. On electric power alone the Chevy volt tops out at 50 miles. Beyond that, its just another hybrid. Here is another fact. Most people can't afford the Tesla S and most people don't want to rent a zipcar.

      People don't buy electric cars because they are overpriced, are short range, and the people who buy them are invariably smug greens who continually lie about the shortcomings of their overly expensive, short ranged econobox.

    99. Re:2 Words by lightknight · · Score: 1

      You're right. And do not forget that the batteries degrade over time, which is an additional worry.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    100. Re:2 Words by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      I have nothing against minivans, I used to own a Honda Odyssey, very nice vehicle.

      They are now behind the times when it comes to technology. Seriously, no touch screen display in the Odyssey, what are they thinking?/quote?

      I'm guessing they were thinking "the driver needs to operate this while keeping his eyes on the road. Seriously, WTF would you want touch controls in a car?!

    101. Re:2 Words by nblender · · Score: 1

      While this is probably technically true; the difference is really only tangibly apparent at temps below about -30C. I've experimented a bit with Dynolicious and my early 90's turbo diesel.. Once I get my gearbox and diffs up to operating temp, driving to work at -45C is really quite fun.. (Welcome to the Canadian prairies)

    102. Re:2 Words by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      50k? Man you hot assraped.

      --
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      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    103. Re:2 Words by nblender · · Score: 1

      Actually, the biggest economy difference is in late september (here in Alberta, Canada) when they switch to winter-diesel... I track my mileage closely and I can tell you exactly which week they've switched to winter diesel and when they've switched back to summer diesel. My mileage goes from about 14.5l/100km down to 17.3l/100km and back again in the summer.

    104. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My 1995 Ford Aspire over a period of 10 years averaged 36 mpg in the winter months and 41 mpg in the summer months and noticeable trends in one direction of the other the middle seasons. Same average commute and driving style all year, it was only used as my go to work commuter car. It did not have AC so that was not a factor. Some of that may have been from the difference in winter and summer formulas of fuel? I have no idea. I have other cars that there was a difference but not enough that it was obvious.

    105. Re:2 Words by Type44Q · · Score: 2

      Usually studded winter tyres are less compliant with the road, thus having a greater effective diameter, even if their nominal diameter is about the same as summer tyres on the same car.

      Nonsense; any miniscule gains in fuel efficiency (due to negligibly taller gearing) are going to be greatly offset due to increased rolling resistance.

    106. Re:2 Words by SternisheFan · · Score: 1

      Agreed, but man, we could have been so much further along by now. :( You're right, and eventually we will get there. I got a 99 Ford Taurus on the cheap last year that serves me well enough. Maybe in 5/10 years I'll buy a second hand electric.

    107. Re:2 Words by beernutmark · · Score: 1

      There are several things you are missing from this. I have also shaved over $200 /mo off our gas expenses.
      1) He probably went from a much older, more gas guzzling car to electric. This is what I did when going to my focus electric.
      2) The electric car energy use isn't just a little less, it is a lot less.
      3) In a 2+ car household the new electric tends to get used for as many trips as possible. In our house whoever is driving the furthest that day takes the electric. This makes gas usage in the second car much lower also.
      My electric bill went up of course from charging the electric but not very much and we drive our focus 60+ miles 3 days a week and 20+ the rest.

    108. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      But then again, ev, hasn't tried the logical step. Gas/electric a small super-effecient engine, with a generator, to peak charge a super-capicitor/battery for extended range , or for heavy haulers.

      Yes, they have tried that - they're called "hybrids", like the Chevy Volt. I don't think you'll see supercaps in any substantial automotive applications anytime soon though - it's bad enough when a battery sustains damage and shorts out, but supercaps would be releasing all their energy *instantly* in the same situation. Heavy-duty applications like trucks have more concerns about durability and power. I think you'd find pulling a 10,000 pound trailer for any distance would sorely tax any battery's capabilities.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    109. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Not if your time is worth anything at all.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    110. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      No, it's for the times the EV is charging or the trip exceeds its range.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    111. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to sort of level the field a little, I randomly picked a reasonably nice economy car (VW Jetta) to compare to an electric car (Nissan Leaf) and a hybrid (Chevy Volt), and I tossed in the diesel Jetta also. You can get each with a 5 year warranty/service contract if you negotiate well, which means you won't be paying any big repair bills for the first 5 years. I also placed the purchase on a 5-year loan, which is around average loan life. Keep in mind that the average person buying a new car keeps it for about 6 years. So this could easily have been a 6-year loan life. I didn't bother with fees and taxes in my calculations.

      A basic VW Jetta costs $17k. At recent loan rates, that's a $360/mo payment.

      The basic Nissan Leaf is $21k. That's $446/mo.**

      A diesel VW Jetta for around $23k. $490/mo payments.

      Or you can buy the basic Volt for around $34k. You're paying $720/mo.

      EPA ratings for mileage: 24/28mpg for the standard Jetta, 30/42 for the diesel Jetta, 90+ for the Volt. The average commute in the US is 29 miles, which at the Jetta mileage rate is about $8/day in gas or $5 in diesel. So the monthly cost for fuel would be around $175 for the Jetta, and $105 for the Jetta diesel. Various sources rate the charging costs for the average commuter for the Leaf at $2/day, which equates to around $42/mo. (21 possible working days in a month). The Volt would cost around $2.25/day if the 90mpg rating is realistic, an oft-argued point. All these rough numbers yield monthly operating costs:

      1. Jetta: $360/mo + $175/mo fuel = 535 per month
      2. Leaf: $446/mo + $42/mo fuel = $488 per month
      3. diesel Jetta: $490/mo + $105/mo fuel = $595 per month
      4. Volt: $720/mo + $47/mo fuel = $767 per month

      ** The basic Nissan leaf has a Nissan-estimated range of 73 miles at full charge. It's only practical as a commuter car on shorter commutes. Those of us with 40 mile or longer commutes could not use it effectively, even though we'd benefit more from it than those with shorter commutes. Plus, you'd have to rent or own another vehicle for longer trips, or depend on public transportation.

    112. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Even with the superchargers you have to take 20 minutes to charge your car. Only the Tesla is capable of being anything but a city car.

      Not to mention the travel time and battery charge just to reach the station, which also needs to be factored into the effective mileage. My nearest Supercharger station is relatively close, but I'd still be spending an hour and a half and 80 miles of my capacity just getting there and back. The next closest one would leave me with about 25% of the charge when I got back.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    113. Re:2 Words by slashmydots · · Score: 1

      I live in Wisconsin and in the winter every vehicle I've ever driven goes a lot faster due to higher oxygen density. There, take your math and throw it out the window because that's real.

    114. Re:2 Words by beernutmark · · Score: 1

      Its more than range. The issue is that when the electric car runs out of juice, you have to go plug it in for N hours (where 'N' is a fairly large number).

      Only if you think numbers less than 4 are large. I can charge my focus electric from nearly zero range to full 60+ in less than 4 hours. My short commute is about 12 miles each way and when I am home it takes less than an hour to get back to full charge. Many days I drive much more than 60 miles. Just need a quick charge between runs.

      Even as a commuting car, it has problems because when you get home, you can't use the car to even go run errands, pick up the kids from where ever they are, etc.

      Even if you get home with only 5 miles of range less, unless your kids/grocery are 20+ miles away you can just hook up to your charger and get about 4 miles for every 10 min of charge. So, hook up the car, chill for a bit, and then go hit the store, pickup the kids, etc... without worry.

      Oh, and don't forget the effect of driving at night when one has to turn on the head lights.

      You are joking right? Should I turn down the stereo also? These electric draws don't even register on range.

      Bottom line is that until electric cars have a greater range and a "refuel" time that is comparable to that of gasoline engines, they are of limited utility.

      This simply isn't true. Yes they have a few drawbacks compared to gas cars but the positives blow those away in my calculations. Also, all those comparisons assume that you are a one car household. I don't know to many of those in my peer group. As long as you have one gas car in the fleet (or don't mind renting one occasionally) an electric car is great to own.

      I love mine

    115. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cold weather mainly limits range. Electric heaters are not a problem for driving in cold weather and only in extreme environments like Antarctica (which also has almost no infrastructure as well) will it be a major problem.

      Actually, at extreme temperatures, electric cars might be a better choice. You forget that it's not a simple as it seems, the places you refer to use electric heaters to thaw out the cars sufficiently to be able to start the gas powered engine.

      With such extra complications, it might not be such a bad idea to have a fully electric car; however, one would need to improve the range / spare capacity of an electric vehicle. I can easily imagine in extreme weather conditions wanting twice or triple the reserve capacity for the trip (gas or electric) as any possible breakdown is likely to require the spare capacity to give the driver an extra bit of assurance.

    116. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      People say the same crap about the Tesla S, and it's got hundreds of miles of range.

      I suppose technically that 265 miles qualifies as "hundreds of miles", but it's 150 miles less than anything else I own, and my vehicles take less than 10 minutes to gain another 400 miles of range, and didn't cost $70,000 *combined*.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    117. Re: 2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'I don't know which Scandinavian country you are from'

      Based on his opening sentence 'I own a Miev, and cold weather (Upstate NY) barely affects my range', he seems to be from the Scandinavian country of Upstate NY!

    118. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have nothing against minivans, I used to own a Honda Odyssey, very nice vehicle.

      ...

      Off road? The Yukon has good ground clearance and good 4wd performance. The Odyssey? None at all. Yes, I've had my truck off road. Nothing serious, but more than you'd take an Odyssey to, and that includes mud.

      ...

      I was with you up to here. There is no need beyond one's imagination to go off road. If you are going off road, you don't take a minivan, or even one of these so-called SUVs. The SUVs have been tweaked far too much for city driving to be a good off-road vehicle, and the good off-road verisons certainly don't have third rows with plenty of behind-the-seats storage.

    119. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Journeys that I couldn't do (including the return trip) in an electric car every couple of weeks.

      The idea is that you'd charge it, at least partially, at your destination. Thus your range is longer than it might first appear.

      Of course it's early days, so right now there may not be means of charging at your destination. But the charging infrastructure is improving, as are EV ranges. So whilst an EV may not fit your usage pattern right now, it may do in a few years time. If it doesn't, then bad luck. By all reports EVs are far more fun to drive than ICE cars.

    120. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Power failures in winter are quite common; power failures in summer, which are caused by overload, are also known to happen. You do not want to be stranded at your home, with a car that does not move, and with no power, and with a serious need to go somewhere *right now*.

      For the sake of balance:
      I don't know what it's like in your country, but here every once in a while, there are strikes or bad weather or other problems that mean that the fuel stations don't have any fuel. And it can last for days. EV vehicles would be unaffected.

    121. Re:2 Words by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

      Easily solved problem-- integrate supplemental electric power into your trailer so you have the power when you actually need it rather than lugging around all the extra weight all the time. Sure it drives up the trailer cost, and there are some logistics issues you would need to address for boat trailers.

    122. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tesla's Model X might fit the bill in the next year or two, but it sure isn't going to be cheap. Twice the cost of the Yukon, at least.

    123. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Of course what really matters is total cost of ownership. Fuel and servicing is significantly less for an EV. Depending on region, there may be tax and toll incentives for using EVs too.

      Not saying that that will make the EV cheaper. But it will reduce the apparent disparity which you see by just looking at the sticker price.

    124. Re:2 Words by Ryanrule · · Score: 1

      Fuckin stonecutters....

    125. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The EV part just doesn't save enough gas to pay for the higher price point.

      Depends how many miles you do. Don't underestimate the potential savings:

      "Kevin Sharpe, 51, made the 894-mile trip from John Oâ(TM)Groats to Landâ(TM)s End in an electric car, stopping six times to charge up the American-made Tesla Roadster.
      The 36-hour trip used £20 of electricity â" a family saloon would use £138 of fuel."
      http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/motorist-drives-from-john-ogroats-to-lands-135383

      Fuel at 1/7th the price is an interesting prospect.

    126. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electric heaters are not a problem for driving in cold weather and only in extreme environments like Antarctica (which also has almost no infrastructure as well) will it be a major problem.

      The boys at Argonne said otherwise when asked this question. Electric heat can significantly cut down the range in any winter environment, which is why they're researching things like putting heat pumps in electric cars to save power on heating as well as on air conditioning.

    127. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Well of course conventional doors need space to open too. Looking at the animation on the Tesla site, it doesn't look to me like the need any more space for the Model X doors. But that's an animation, we really need the specific measurements. And I guess there's going to have to be some more finalising of the design before we see those.

    128. Re:2 Words by Cederic · · Score: 1

      This'll make you laugh, but I can't charge a car at home, let alone my destination.

      I can't park anywhere near my house.

    129. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I'm just pointing out why I'm not a customer, and if I am not a customer, that should provide the answer for why they aren't selling.

      Despite the title of TFS, I see no evidence presented that they are "not selling". Tesla is making them as fast as it can, and there's a 3 months waiting list from ordering.

      Every technology has an adoption curve, starting with innovators, then early adopters, through early majority, late majority and laggards. EVs are past their innovator stage, into the early adopter phase, and sales are rising year on year as one might expect in that phase.

      On Slashdot we may be used to computer hardware and software adoption rates, which can measure in months. But it's unrealistic to expect a radical transportation technology to work that fast.

      EVs becoming most of the automobile market is inevitable. It just won't happen tomorrow.

    130. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Comparing new EVs with ancient used ICE cars. Not rational.

    131. Re:2 Words by pellik · · Score: 1

      Except, you know, it's like using a 5-10 year old laptop except you can't use it plugged in.

    132. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      When there are EV only vehicle bays built on roads, in some cases it may be possible to park closer to your home with an EV than with an ICE.

    133. Re:2 Words by pellik · · Score: 1

      It's probably not too bad if your dick size is either 12" or 10cm. But yeah, trying to view things by dick size with a non standard size would suck.

    134. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the dealership's defense, it is not like they can order the car that many want since they only made a few of the 2012 for the US market. Come Spring 2014 when the 2014 model makes it here maybe that will change...

    135. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Recharging at home, at your destination, or during a meal break costs no time.

    136. Re:2 Words by jythie · · Score: 1

      I guess it will depend on the details. If it has the necessary power for doing real work and has a good TCO, I could easily see contractors getting interested in them.

    137. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YMMV -- literally. You wrote that in your gasoline engine vehicle, you didn't "track economy much". Well, I do. Running the same tires year 'round, I see consistent variations in fuel consumption based on ambient temperature here in Chicago. From summer (30C to 35C) to winter (-10C to 0C), I see a difference of about 10% -- actually a smidgen more. The fact that I'm seeing a larger consumption difference over a smaller temperature difference suggests that either my vehicle is more susceptible to air temp changes, or at least one of us has less than 100% accurate data.

    138. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to point out that more than a few people have found they can lease an EV for $199 per month, which is about what they were spending on gas alone. EV's not yet perfect, but in some parts of the US and certain use-cases they are cheaper than ICE.

    139. Re:2 Words by janimal · · Score: 1

      This is ridiculous. You might need more power to maintain speed, but peak power is consumed while accellerating, which cannot be brisk on snow or ice. And peak power is what we're talking about here; not cruising power.

      You cannot use more peak power in the winter. Even on clear pavement, you get less traction with most tires, end of story.

    140. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most effective marketing they could do would be a total cost of ownership comparison between themselves and a corolla, or civic.

      Ok then, what is the total difference in cost of ownership between a given electric and a corolla?

    141. Re:2 Words by jythie · · Score: 1

      When someone comes out with a price competitive stationwagon EV, I am going to be hooked. But right now wagons are not considered a `sexy` market.

    142. Re:2 Words by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      The most effective marketing they could do would be a total cost of ownership comparison between themselves and a corolla, or civic

      Yep, the thing that got me interested was when a friend with a Tesla showed me that there's only one place to put in a fluid - for the windshield washer.

      "Oh, so that means...."

      If I could _assume_ that the thing would last 20 years, then it's a done deal. That assumption is currently the risk.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    143. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      As far as owners loving them. That is about the single most useless data point on the planet. This is a self selecting group of enthusiast.

      Neither TFS nor TFA says "owners" love them. They say "drivers" love them. And go on to explain that they are not talking about people that own the cars, but get a non EV owning driving in an EV for a test drive and they love them.

    144. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Experience of the Prius is that the batteries are good for about 15 years. That's about the average lifespan of an ICEV. An EV might need it's battery reconditioning by then but the ICEV will probably need it's engine reconditioning.

      Overall there's far less to go wrong on an EV, servicing costs are significantly lower.

    145. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Recharging at home I will give you of course, and possibly your destination if you're visiting family/friends, etc., but otherwise I haven't seen too many other places where I could just easily plug a car in for the day. Meal breaks aren't long enough to get any meaningful charge, and again, I haven't seen very many restaurants where one could plug their car in even if they were. Tesla owners have the benefit of the Supercharger network, but the distance between stations often exceeds the car's range, so again you're looking at hours to get the vehicle charged for many places people might want to go. Want to drive between Orlando and Pensacola? You never left Florida, yet it's not happening without at least one layover each way to charge the car, so you're going to have to budget pretty much an entire day's worth of time to accommodate that.

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      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    146. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Absolutely, there's a lack of charging points right now. But that's a growing pain, it's not a fundamental limitation.

    147. Re:2 Words by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      An EV truck owner would need a personal nuclear power station in the basement

      Keep talking, I'm interested....

      then he can hope to cover about 12mpg * 30 = 360 miles per day

      Just FYI, I was dream-looking at a 3500 4x diesel the other day and the newest model-year engines are almost up to 19MPG. That's not too much worse than my ailing 4-cylinder car nor my wife's newer one, especially given the disparity in GVW.

      It makes the competition that much tougher for electric vehicles. Personally, I'd love to see a diesel/electric engine like on a locomotive - that's the better separation of concerns in this vehicle class in my book, and how I'd attack the problem if I were Tesla (and also maybe a vehicle to replace the 4-cylinder Toyota trucks that every trademan drove in the '80s, before the Feds screwed up that market with CAFE redefinitions).

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
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    148. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Buy a brand new $30 and then have to rent a car or get a ride.

      What brand new automobile costs $30? Or are you suggesting a skateboard?

    149. Re: 2 Words by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I wasn't sure if that was in reference to electric vehicles that generate heat via electronic heater. But with a standard petrol engine, the heater core is just a fancy word for a radiator placed in the cabin.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    150. Re:2 Words by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Agreeing in principle, but just on a personal note, be on the lookout for unused-inventory special (Priceline, etc.). I needed to go on a trip to see family (alone, they left earlier for a long vacation while I had to work) and found the local Enterprise would give me a little sports car they had on their lot for $35 for the weekend, with unlimited mileage. That vehicle did 7MPG better than mine, so it was almost a wash on only the fuel cost. I left my car out behind their building for the weekend.

      Enterprise does not value me as a profitable customer, but for some reason they'd rather have their fleet rented and accumulating mileage than sitting idle. I assume it has something to do with their leasing terms with the manufacturers.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    151. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No true.
      One of the biggest contributors to in-efficiency is RPM. With the same load (drag, mechanical etc), rpm plays a large part. Essentially, lower rpm allows more complete combustion, One reason why big american V--8s get similar or better fuel economy than smaller, high winding European equivalents. Corvette is rated at 29-30 mpg while still having 465hp.... At 80mph the engine is turning something like 1700rpm...
      Ditto for my diesel. I get full lockup + 6the gear on my 8000 lbs truck at 60mph. Setting the cruise control in the 60-65 range I get 34 mpg on level roads.
      Oh one last data poing. B29 bombers in WWII, when originally tested, fell far short of their needed range (to bomb Japan). The cure, high boost, low rpm - pretty much doubled their range.

      Shift early, shift often.

    152. Re:2 Words by pellik · · Score: 1

      GM didn't quit on the Volt because they were stupid. They quit because of the logistics problems with EVs that still aren't solved. Tesla has a huge number of hurdles ahead of them that they have no idea how to deal with.

      EV makers are responsible for the disposal of the vehicles and batteries they sell. That's the reason Chevy only leased the Volt, and that's why they quit making them. It's very expensive to dispose of EVs (hazardous waste, even shipping the battery back to Chevy is prohibitively expensive), and it's very difficult to track every single vehicle to know where it is so that should something happen to it they are there to take it away. It's a huge hassle they weren't prepared to deal with.

    153. Re:2 Words by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      I do sincerely hope so. I want to see EVs succeed and for our dependence on fossil fuels to go down, for both environmental and political reasons. But we're not there yet, and it seems a lot of EV fans want to discount or ignore the very real problems that are contributing to low EV sales at the present time. It's a real chicken-and-egg situation, and I think if the manufacturers are serious about the technology, they're going to have to step up and make them more practical to own (expanding charging networks, in particular) before they can expect people to come beating down their doors.

      I really think the most practical solution is working towards quick-change battery systems/networks and the insurance issues that would arise, such that the time and convenience spent refueling an EV gets to be on par with that of an ICE vehicle, which would also work towards alleviating potential buyers' concerns about replacing a $10,000 battery pack when it dies.

      --
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    154. Re:2 Words by tigershark97 · · Score: 1

      False. Car odometers NEVER show a faster speed, or any speed for that matter

    155. Re:2 Words by KarmaRundi · · Score: 1

      If you live in the US, you get a $7500 tax credit off those prices. The cost of recharging depends on where you live. It costs me ~ $1.25 to drive 40 miles EV. Unless electricty is expensive where you live and you don't have solar panels (electricty is pretty expensive in Hawaii for example, but it's a good place to install solar too), then the cost of charging might be an issue. So subtract $7500 from those prices and then subract another $1000 - $2000 per year in fuel costs (depending on how much you drive and what you're comparing it to). Also subtract other maintenance like oil changes, brakes, transmission fluid, tranmission fluid, etc. And the price comes in line. Also on the pro side is that EVs are more plesant to drive. The ICE vehicles you compare them to would seem noisy and slow to me. The point of the OP though is that people who've tried EVs love them. I think part of the issue is that many people don't take the time to weigh all the factors and take into account the savings in fuel and maintenance over the life of the car.

    156. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot cost.

    157. Re:2 Words by pellik · · Score: 1

      No problem. Just throw an electric generator in the back to charge it while you drive.

    158. Re:2 Words by pellik · · Score: 1

      If you subtract the costs from legal obligation to dispose of the EV at the end of it's life the price is right in line. The big difference is the hidden tax from these things being unable to go to a landfill or be easily destoryed and the costs associated with disposal being a requirement on the manufacturer.

    159. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      No-one in their right mind would buy a second car for that. They would either use their partner's, or rent one, or keep their old one around, or just not buy an EV if they make a lot of journeys like that.

      Your kind of thinking is what prevents more people from buying EVs. They get these bizarre ideas in their head like this, probably from talking heads on TV.

      Well now perhaps you see the exactly what keeps people from buying EVs.

      By your own admission there is still a need for another vehicle. Using someone else's or keeping an old car around isn't really an answer is it.

      My "kind of thinking" is exactly what keeps people from buying EVs. It's based on facts. If i bought a Nissan Leaf, I'd have to have it delivered by truck because the nearest dealership is beyond the range of the vehicle.

      Yes the range is that pathetic. Yes, the price is still too high. You still have to keep another car. You can hand waive those facts away by attributing them to talking heads, and indirectly accusing me of being gullible.

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    160. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Tesla is selling because it is a low volume show off car for rich people who don't care, the volume EVs are not selling cause they have to sell to people who can't waste money.

      Yes, I agree that EV cars are the future, but the future is indeed not coming as fast as most would like to see.

    161. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      For the two weeks when these "bays" are put in. Then you will find these slots are all full as well.

      Why should public parking spots be ceded to for profit charging stations? Maybe we should grant a couple parking spaces in every block so Exxon can put in little self serve gas pumps?

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    162. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Yes, but he did that in an extended range $80k car driving in Australia where the gas is twice the price it is in America?

      He also had to stop and recharge which took far longer than filling up with gas.

    163. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Why off road? Because I enjoy it, because it is a stress reliever, because it is actually useful sometimes when n the countryside, I've been in mud before on purpose, and not on purpose, a minivan would be hopelessly stuck in mud that my truck can drive out of.

    164. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      If gas stations have no power, then how is it EVs will be unaffected? The power company is going to magically route power to your home bypassing every one else?

      Gas station can (and do) hook up a portable generator and be back in business.

      Unless you live on a remote Island that gets all fuel by ship, this is strictly a corner case.

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    165. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      Contractors are strictly a niche market for pickup trucks.

      By far the majority of them are owned by just regular people with enough need to occasionally haul stuff.

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    166. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      If gas stations have no power, then how is it EVs will be unaffected?

      I didn't describe instances when gas stations have no power. I described instances when gas stations have no gas.

    167. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Diesel engines are indeed interesting... I would very much like to see a diesel option in more SUVs. A diesel electric option? Cool idea. :)

    168. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Because the nav system in the odyssey has to be controlled by a large nob and some buttons, it is terrible.

      I drove the recent redesign, I did actually consider it for our second car, but it just is missing too much to be a serious contender for what I want.

    169. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Britain.

      Yes the more expensive gas (petrol) explains part of it. But EVs are marketed world wide. You can't just consider the United States as if it's the only market that matters. Other than perhaps the Persian Gulf states, almost every country has more expensive gas than the US.

    170. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Yes, fuel is indeed cheaper for an EV, but not by enough over a reasonable period of time. As it stands, the difference after tax credits is about $7,500 on average. That buys a lot of gas for a small car.

      As for servicing, what servicing? There is nothing to do to modern cars for the first 5 years but change the oil twice a year at most. My GM truck needs an oil change once a year, thanks to modern oil.

      Compare a three year lease on a gas car, plus the cost of 35k miles worth of gas, to the three year lease cost on an EV, plus the cost of 35k miles worth of electricity, then you'll know why EVs aren't selling.

    171. Re:2 Words by icebike · · Score: 1

      When I asked why Cadillac stuck with a six-speed transmission when every single car they're competing with has more gears, Caddy's answer was, "Just wait." When I asked if we'd see another engine beside the direct-injected 3.6-liter V-6 with 304 hp and 264 lb-ft of torque, I was told, "Just wait." Will there be some sort of hybrid version? "Just wait.".

      You don't get 400hp out of a 6, and you don't get anything but a 6 for less than 60 from Cadillac.

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      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    172. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Yes, but gas is expensive in England, not because of the market forces but because of taxes.

      If half the cars in England went EV, the government would lose half the gas tax revenue, they would just have to replace it by taxing the electricity.

      So it works, if few buy them, but if everyone does, it becomes a tax issue.

    173. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the reports that I have seen show a 50% reduction of mileage per charge in the state of Tennessee. Tennessee is not the coldest state of the Union.

      A confirmed electric car enthusiast wrote an article about his electric car for the Knoxville newspaper. He wrote that a trip from Knoxville to Chattanooga was 2 hours in his gas car and 4 hours or more in his electric car. He stopped twice to recharge in the roughly 100 mile trip at already established "infrastructure" charging stations.

      I worked 33 miles from home. No electric car (Volt, Leaf, etc.--but not the Tesla which wasn't out at the time) could make a round trip, to-work-and-back-home trip.

      Electric cars, even the Tesla, are for electric car enthusiasts. They are not mainstream. And with the TVA electricity being the highest in the region, it is a costly form of transportation.

    174. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop breeding, asshole.
      Your kids are eating up our crops, and will soon be spoiling our lands. Your huge SUV is polluting our air and draining oil reserves.
      You. Are. The. Problem.

    175. Re:2 Words by mschuyler · · Score: 1

      What, is this some sort of Jewish tank or something? never been in the Army, have you? Nice try, though.

      --
      How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    176. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Chevy Volt is a hybrid from all the reports critiquing the car that I have read. The gas engine will drive the wheels. It is also a POS from the reviews that I seen.

    177. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Sure you do, 410 hp to be exact... Just add the twin turbo and you're there.

      http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2014-cadillac-xts-vsport-test-review

      Granted, that kicked the price up to $65k or so, but it is a very nice car for 15k less than a Tesla, with a widely supported dealer network and a known cost of ownership.

      For the 80k of the Model S, you can buy a very nice BMW or Mercedes.

    178. Re: 2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yawn... I just take the train. I do about 50k miles per year for the equivalent of $4000.

    179. Re:2 Words by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Norway is probably the place in the world that has the most electric vehicles per capita.

      If it is really cold, you are already plugging your gas fueled car in overnight, without the electric heating it will not start in the morning. A plugged in electric vehicle can be set to preheat the cabin, and if you time the charging so that you put the last few percent in just before leaving, you will be starting with a warm battery.

      Best of all, in Sweden and Norway most electricity is hydroelectricity.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    180. Re:2 Words by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Electricity is heavily taxed in England. At least I hope it is, otherwise the prices here are completely outrageous.

      Methane on the other hand is rather cheap and probably not heavily taxed, but no one is driving CNG cars. Compressing it at home seems like an obvious way of avoiding fuel taxes...

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    181. Re:2 Words by nbsr · · Score: 1
      Good point, pure EVs are currently unsuitable for apartment dwellers, or people commuting 100km to work. But, no one is talking about a market dominance. If only 5% of people decided to buy an EV that would already be a major success. Infrastructure and technology would follow and several years down the line we would find there are more of us falling into the "can buy" category.

      The biggest problem at the moment is the price - ultimately it will have to go down because there is no reason why a mass produced EV has to be more expensive than an ICE. But for now, Tesla is doing it right, by targeting the premium market and selling a car that appeals to early adopters.

    182. Re:2 Words by amorsen · · Score: 1

      SUV's only protect them if they drive badly at low speed. Good luck if they have to swerve around something. Luckily cars are always fitted with basic safety systems like electronic stability control, so the car is unlikely to actually roll. Oh wait, it is the US we are talking about.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    183. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Yes, but if you tax a cheap item 100%, it still remains fairly cheap. If you tax an expensive item 100%, it really gets expensive and hurts the common man.

      Example...gas costs $5/gal (to use round numbers). Your car needs 1,000 gallons a year to drive, that is $5,000 a year.

      The government taxes it at 100%, that makes the gas cost $10,000, giving the government $5,000 of revenue.

      If you replace your car with an EV that uses $1,000 worth of electricity a year to drive the same miles, you have saved $4,000, but cost the government $4,000 in revenue since same 100% tax rate only generates $1,000 for the government.

      To make up for it, the government has to find $4,000 somewhere to take from you, maybe they tax electricity 500% to make up for it.

      So where you thought your $10,000 a year gas bill would go down to $2,000 for EV, it actually will only go down to $6,000, because the government still needs the revenue.

      Sadly, this sort of math is not something the average person does, but should when supporting this or that policy. They all have effects beyond just the stated goal.

      To compare the cost of an EV, you really need to strip out all government imposed costs, from both gas and electricity, to arrive at the true savings, because the government will get the same money from you either way.

      Also, keep in mind that when the government gives you a nice tax credit for buying an EV, they are just giving you back your own money, so you shouldn't count that either.

    184. Re:2 Words by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Diesel electric on train is done to get torque conversion. Good luck designing a gearbox that can get a 1km long freight train started. Train engines would be more efficient if you could get rid of the hybrid system.

      The primary advantage of a hybrid is that it gets the petrol engine running at close to maximum load at all times. Petrol engines are horribly inefficient at partial load. Diesel engines have much less of a problem with partial load, so you gain little from adding the hybrid system. They are also large, heavy and expensive, whereas what you generally want from a range extender engine is small and light and cheap.

      If anything, for some plug-in hybrids it might make more sense to have a small turbine as range extenders. Fuel efficiency might suffer a bit, but mass produced it should be smaller, lighter and cheaper than the petrol engine. Of course it is difficult for anything new to beat something which has been refined as much as petrol engines.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    185. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      If I bought a Nissan Leaf, I'd have to get it towed home from work every day.

      EVs don't work in the real world until you start operating on Tesla's level. Nissan better up their game since Tesla's next model (Model E) is scheduled to do 200 miles for $35k. Combined with the ongoing rollout of the Tesla-only Supercharge network, I just don't see anyone going elsewhere for an EV without some major changes to what's available.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    186. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just rent an SUV for those two times a year where you actually need pulling power.

    187. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuel is extremely cheap, and basically free if you have solar panels on your house.

      I've priced solar panels. It's kind of like an iOS app is "basically free" after you buy an iPhone off contract. There's a pretty steep entry fee.

    188. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On our cars (both diesels), the apparent economy difference between summer (10C to 30C) and winter (-30C to -10C) is less than 8%, about half of which is due to the compliance and diameter of the tyres.

      You people are not rational anymore or something? Inventing bullshit to justify observations? And then modding that comment "informative".....

      If you ever actually drive a manual transmission vehicle, and then never change tires, you would notice that there is significantly increased rolling resistance in the winter. The cause has to do with ALL THE LUBRICANTS IN THE CAR that are not heated (eg. axles, wheel bearings, differential, and even transmission, etc.), get a lot more gummy.

      That is why when you travel in winter at 50km/h, then disengage the engine using your manual clutch, the vehicle will decelerate much more quickly than in the summer. And yes, I'm obviously talking about same surface road, not some snow covered road.

      It has absolutely nothing to do with your minute tire diameter differences, because those have NO effect on real fuel economy, only on your imagined (or perceived) fuel economy.

    189. Re:2 Words by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      I own a Miev, and cold weather (Upstate NY) barely affects my range.

      Upstate New York doesn't get very cold, you're welcome to travel out to Alberta or Saskatoon where the average daytime temperature for the last week has been -25C(-13F) to -35C(-31F). And we haven't even got into winter yet, and in most places there's anywhere between 3" to 3' of snow on the ground. There was 3' of snow on the ground here, until the chinook came through. The average daytime temperature here in the winter is just around -20C, though it gets as cold as -45C without the windchill.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    190. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Here's the closest you'll find so far: http://www.teslamotors.com/modelx

      210 mile range for about the same you paid for the Yukon. Seats 7 adults, 0-60 in 4.4 seconds. Deliveries begin in 2014.

      Not sure why you need this urban assault vehicle, but I completely understand not wanting anything to do with the typical goofy looking EV micro-cars that are the Leaf, etc. Personally, I see a lot of reasonable stuff in between. If a full size sedan works for you, the Model S (http://www.teslamotors.com/models) seats 5 adults and 2 children very comfortably and sells for about the same as your Yukon.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    191. Re:2 Words by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Cold weather mainly limits range. Electric heaters are not a problem for driving in cold weather and only in extreme environments like Antarctica (which also has almost no infrastructure as well) will it be a major problem.

      I'm guessing you've never been outside of a major city in Canada. The nearest city from me is 2.4hrs in good weather, it's a 4hr trip in bad weather, or when the roads are covered with snow. It's been as cold as -25C(-13F), and we've already had 3' of snow on the ground. Southern BC is outside norm on this, even southern Ontario isn't that cold right now, with a warm -3C.

      The biggest detriment to fuel economy in cold climates is the blend of fuel that they use, which in most cases also includes methylhydrate to stop the fuel lines from freezing. And really, if you knew anything about A/C or cooling, you'd know that it's designed the same way as your refrigerator, with the condenser on the outside the bleed off heat, the condenser on the inside of the cabin to cool. There's nothing special about it, or even amazing.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    192. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't cost 80K. You're either purposely lying or are simply ignorant. Model S base price is $62,400 after the Federal tax credit that everyone in the US gets (and some states offer additional financial incentives that bring that down even further).

      As for what it compares to, that'd be Mercedes S-Class, BMW 7 series, and Audi A8. It compared quite favorably against them as its sales figures have shown (it's crushing its direct competitors). It's also Motor Trend's Car of the Year and Consumer Reports gave it 99/100; its highest rating ever for a car.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    193. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Price is going to be slightly higher than the Model S, which probably puts it around $65k after the Federal tax incentive. If you live in certain states (like CA) where there are separate tax incentives for buying an EV, that price will come down a bit more.

      The Model X seats 7 adults. Just how many kids do you have? Are you currently driving a school bus or something?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    194. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Price, very few people are millionaires.

    195. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      It'll cost slightly more than the Model S, so figure about $65k after the Federal tax incentive. If you live in a state that also does tax incentives for EVs, you'll see that come down a bit more.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    196. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      This is the problem when comparing specs to reality.

      Calling the Model S a 7 passenger vehicle and putting it anywhere remotely in the same dept as the Yukon is just being dishonest.

      The Yukon actually seats 7 people in reasonable comfort, either 6 adults or 4 adults and 3 children fit very nicely, plus room left over.

      It is longer, wider, taller, and more functional in almost all respects.

      Now... not everyone NEEDS all that, and for those who don't want it, fine, I'm not suggesting they buy a Yukon XL just because I did.

      How much does the Model S tow? How much storage space does it have when 7 people are in it? How long does it take to refill the battery? What is the off road ability?

      The web site you linked to is dishonest, it says "zero emissions. zero compromises."

      That is a lie. There are plenty of emissions both during production of the car and during production of the electricity it consumes. There are also compromises in both the cost of the car as well as in having to wait hours and hours for the battery to recharge.

      Maybe you're ok with that. No problem, more power to you. If it fits for you, go buy one. But don't knock me when I tell you it doesn't work for me.

      The comparison to the Model X is just as bad. It is basicly a taller version of the Model S, it doesn't tow, it doesn't go off-road, and it doesn't have the interior room of the Yukon XL.

      That doesn't make it a bad car, it just means that it gives up something to get something else.

    197. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Yes, the base model is $62K, but I doubt very many are being sold at that price.

      The base model of the Yukon XL is $48K (invoice is $44K and it is easy to buy them for invoice).

      So comparing base model to base model, since I can't buy a Tesla at "invoice price", it is $62K vs. $44K, or $18K more for the Tesla which does FAR less than a Yukon XL does.

      A Tesla, once equipped with the 85 kwh battery and some of the features ends up costing about $100K. (Tech package, parking sensors, sound system, etc.)

      The federal tax credit doesn't count, at least to anyone who pays taxes. That is just the government giving you your own money back, the whole idea of a tax credit to buy a car is absurd, they just have to collect it from you somewhere else.

      So, my fully equipped Yukon XL Denali cost me about $60K, vs. $100K for a very nicely equipped Tesla Model S.

      Yea, what were you saying again?

    198. Re:2 Words by lxs · · Score: 1

      Is that near Finland?

    199. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Sigh... I really wish people would stop letting the government take money out of their right pocket, only to get exciting about having it put back in their left pocket.

      Tax credits mean nothing to someone who pays taxes, the government is just giving you your own money back.

      The Model S doesn't cost $62K by the time you're done equipping it, it is closer to $100K, I priced one.

      If all I did was drive kids around, then a minivan would be fine. The Model X might seat 7, but it doesn't do it with as much room or as much comfort as a Yukon XL does. Comparing the two is simply not being honest about the situation.

    200. Re:2 Words by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      You do realize that most people that drive an ev own them don't you?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    201. Re:2 Words by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I dropped a k from that. 30k but i think you understand.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    202. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      I described instances when gas stations have no gas.

      Looks contrived to me. What would be the circumstances where power, that is heavily dependent on a long chain of wires that are open to elements, is present, but fuel tankers - that depend on nothing but weather - cannot make it.

    203. Re:2 Words by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1

      Not so.

      For commuting in the mornings, apparently it's good to have it plugged in and to have set the battery to do a quick charge before you want to go, that warms the pack up, and at the same time you can also preheat the cabin; that also helps because the climate control doesn't have to use the battery to do that and it clears the windscreen, so you gain both range and convenience.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    204. Re:2 Words by Anti-Social+Network · · Score: 1

      With a good charging station you could probably mitigate a lot of these issues with the simple addition of multiple easy-to-replace batteries. Pop a battery and drop it in the charger, grab a fresh one or three, and put them in. Batteries could charge continuously or even set on a timer to coincide with off-peak hours for best energy price. I don't think you'd end up spending much more time on it than you would filling a gas tank, with the added benefit of being able to set up anywhere you can run a power line.

      The one thing that is still a downside is that range of the vehicle still wouldn't be too good - you could potentially have to swap batteries once or twice a day, and until we have better battery tech there's no way around that. Well, that and the up-front cost of multiple batteries.

      --
      Goddammit just when I get my first +5 the Beta rolls out and kills everything
    205. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      No problem. Just throw an electric generator in the back to charge it while you drive.

      Do you have any idea how large and how heavy a 100-200 kW electric generator is? Have a look.

      But, truth be told, all trucks use this method, with improvements. First, they keep the engine in the front, under the hood. Second, they skip the hybrid part :-)

    206. Re:2 Words by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      There are three Superchargers in Florida two on the east coast and one on the west. One is near my home actually so places I can not drive to if I owned a Tesla? Tampa, St. Petersburg, Key West, Tallahassee, Pensacola. These are all round trips of course but since you can not be sure of a charger at your hotel and some like Tallahassee are not reachable even oneway. I sure could not drive to Texas to visit family. This all about the Tesla which has the longest range and fastest recharge of any of the EVs. If i could afford say a Tesla and maybe a Audi Q5 TDI, Mazda CX-5 diesel, or Jeep Grand Cherokee TDI I would love it. The Tesla would work for 90% of what I use my car for. Once you get into the Leaf then it drops a lot.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    207. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      Not really. I have a large solar array and a 10 kW inverter. The deal was fair when I ordered it. I don't know what prices are today, but I guess they are going down. Yet another reason to not bother with solar - the longer you wait, the cheaper it becomes.

    208. Re:2 Words by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I left out that Tesla has no plans for Superchargers on the Florida Turnpike and I-75 North in Florida including Orlando! You know where all the theme parks and a major university is.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    209. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to this article, using the heater in cold weather is more of a drain than 5%, so I want to see metrics on this to believe it.

      Electric car battery range and performance isn’t the only issue in cold weather: Electric cars don’t have alternators to generate electricity. That means that the heater is a direct drain on the batteries — almost as dramatic as the drive motor itself. According to Williams, the Leaf’s heater can draw 1.5 to 3 kilowatt-hours (kwh) of electricity in an hour of use, and that’s a big dent when the battery stores only 24 kwh.

    210. Re: 2 Words by IrquiM · · Score: 1

      And also Teslas. Just drove past the local shop, and there were 7 of them waiting for their new owner outside. I see more Teslas on my way home than I see Fords now. Norway is going electric!

      --
      This is blinging
    211. Re:2 Words by ultranova · · Score: 1

      But lets not get carried away by comparing the prices on the cars you bought used. For a direct comparison, lets stick with MSRP.

      But you can only buy cars that actually exist on the market, so until and unless EVs are available used, the choice is between a used cheap GV and an expensive new EV, so those are what the potential buyers will be comparing. And apart from the extra price immediately disqualifying many customers, there's also deprecation to consider: car value drops the fastest in the beginning, so it makes more economic sense to buy used, even if you could afford a new one.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    212. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOLZzz!!!! Who the fuck modded this up?
       
        The Leaf isn't suitable for everyone, but there are some big advantages that make it attractive. Fuel is extremely cheap, and basically free if you have solar panels on your house.
       
      And fuel in a petrol car is free if you have a well and a refinery on your back lot. Once you get past the premium price that most EVs go for and the cost of solar panels to back it up you can probably fuel your car for its entire lifetime and then some.
       
        It has some features that gas cars don't, like being able to turn the heating on in the morning 20 minutes before you drive to work so that it is nice and warm immediately and you don't lose any range.
       
      Can be done with a petrol car too.
       
        In Japan it can be used as a whole house UPS system as well, in the event of a power cut, but I don't know if they offer that anywhere else. Some places also offer priority parking for EVs.
       
      It's a good point. I will give you that but if this is a serious concern there are gasoline generators to be had for a song and a dance and it doesn't leave your car attached to your home in case of power outages.

    213. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      This is the problem when comparing specs to reality.

      Calling the Model S a 7 passenger vehicle and putting it anywhere remotely in the same dept as the Yukon is just being dishonest.

      The Yukon actually seats 7 people in reasonable comfort, either 6 adults or 4 adults and 3 children fit very nicely, plus room left over.

      Speaking of dishonest, I didn't simply say that the Model S seats 7. I specifically stated that it seats 5 adults plus two children. The Model X seats 7 full sized, living, breathing, adults with plenty of room for their stuff. Do you need me to look up the video from the unveiling for you so you can see for yourself? It's not that difficult to find. As for the Model S, if you have the two children seated in the rear-facing seats, you won't have much space for extra stuff. That said, it's a sedan with more space for people and things than anything else it's up against.

      How much does the Model S tow? How much storage space does it have when 7 people are in it? How long does it take to refill the battery? What is the off road ability?

      You likely shouldn't be towing with an EV, much like you shouldn't be with most gas cars or SUVs. Trucks are built for that; most other consumer gasoline vehicles are not. I can probably tow quote a bit with my heavy sport car's extremely powerful engine, but it'll pretty much destroy the car doing it. The same thing goes for off-roading, except that you now have to exclude most trucks as well. Sure, if we're talking about level ground, and cut grass, but much else and you're looking at a small subset of jeeps, trucks, and an even smaller group of SUVs actually designed to do it. Throwing a lift kit in there doesn't do anything for the fact that the engine was never designed or tuned to handle the conditions of real off-roading. EVs don't have to be all things to all people.

      As for storage space, the Model S will have little when you use the two rear-facing child seats. The Model X will have plenty even with 7 adults in it. As for the battery refill, at any Tesla Supercharge station (which are free and will always be free per Tesla), you get 50% battery charge in 20 minutes. For the smaller battery, that's about 110 miles. For the larger, that's about 150 miles. 40 minutes brings it to 80%. You can also opt for a battery quick-swap which takes 90 seconds and gets you a fully charged battery. That costs $60 - $80 and you can either pick up your own battery on the way back or pay the difference in value between your old one and the one you picked up (based on the battery conditions). I see that at current average gas prices, that Yukon XL costs about $110/tank and I'll bet it takes about 2.5 - 3 times longer to fill up than the 90-second battery swap.

      The web site you linked to is dishonest, it says "zero emissions. zero compromises."

      That is a lie. There are plenty of emissions both during production of the car and during production of the electricity it consumes. There are also compromises in both the cost of the car as well as in having to wait hours and hours for the battery to recharge.

      Actually, it's quite honest. The vehicle produces no emissions. It doesn't state that the production is done without emissions. Nothing is constructed without emissions. It also doesn't state that the source of the electricity is zero emissions. There's no way to know that; it depends entirely on where you are and to what it's connected. In any event, the vehicle produces zero emissions while it's driving. Should you choose to charge it at Tesla stations (for free), those run off solar power, so you're even charging it for zero emissions (in terms of the OPERATIONS of the charging station).

      There car costs money, and I'm not sure what your complaint is there. It's priced against Audi's A8, BMW's 7 series, etc. People interested in those kinds of vehicles aren't compromising anything buying a Model S. In fact, they're getting a vastly sa

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    214. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electricity from solar is not free - it is an operational cost converted into a capital cost.

    215. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Yukon XL Denali MSRP is $60,985. You didn't fully equip it.

      I did, however (on the website), and I came up with a $73,245 MSRP.

      And yes, the Federal (and state) tax credits do count. And no, they don't "just have to collect it from you somewhere else"; it's there to act as an incentive to purchasing EVs. They also don't get it from you on the gas taxes. And why should they? When you're spending $3,643/yr average on gas alone for that Yukon XL Denali, they don't really need to get anything out of the EV owners.

      By the way, with gas, maintenance, and repair costs, that Yukon XL Denali fully equipped (really fully equipped) actually runs about $98,151. $18k in gas, $4800 maintenance, $2k repairs. (source: Vincentric) Those same costs for the Model S? $3k in 'fuel', $3k in maintenance, $1k in repairs. End result? Fully equipped Yukon XL Denali after 5 years: $98,151. Model S: $107,000. Difference? $9k. Unless you buy it in any of the states that offer additional incentives (like GA, WV, IL, CO, CA, etc), in which case that difference is more like $4k. In other words, about 4% difference in price for fully-equipped TCO. However, Model S and Yukon XL Denali without options? TCO swings hard into the Model S's favor.

      All that said, the Model S isn't up against the Yukon; it's up against the Audi A8, Mercedes S-Class, etc. And it's beating them in sales.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    216. Re:2 Words by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      The Model S costs $62k base price for a car with lots of stuff already in it. If you deck the thing out going for top-end across the board, you can get it to $100k. Just like you can take a base Yukon at $47k and get it to $74k when you deck the thing out.

      And you have no idea how comfortable or roomy the inside of a Model X is because unless you work for Tesla or are one of a small number press people who've gotten to sit in one, you've never seen the thing. You might guess at how comfortable or roomy it is, but you don't actually know, do you?

      And I didn't compare them; YOU did.

      Quote you from the GGP:

      Any idea on price? If they could build and sell that for under $50K, I'd be interested in one as a second SUV.

      Quote me from the GP:

      Price is going to be slightly higher than the Model S, which probably puts it around $65k after the Federal tax incentive.

      Quote you from the P:

      The Model X might seat 7, but it doesn't do it with as much room or as much comfort as a Yukon XL does. Comparing the two is simply not being honest about the situation.

      Do you even read your own posts? You certainly don't read mine.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    217. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      Also don't forget the hassle of babysitting this truck. Lithium batteries give you about 500 full cycles; more (2,000 in case of Fluence) if they are lightly used - but then you lose capacity accordingly. So not only the up-front cost of batteries has to be counted, but also their replacement cost. The time of the worker who swaps batteries is also expensive. With a gas/diesel vehicle you just turn it off and walk away. This truck would be more like a horse that you need to unharness, feed, water, and clean after each use.

      Your proposal may work well if the truck is used on star-like delivery routes from a central point. However, as we know, this is not an efficient strategy for deliveries in general; returning to home base to swap batteries every few hours is just not practical. Many contractors, who use trucks, leave their home in the morning and they don't return until the day's work is done. Some of them drive quite far from the home base to service customers; returning for lunch is not an option.

      There are some auto parts delivery services that use star routing; most pizza joints use short non-star routes. But those services require quick turnaround; the driver simply has no time to fiddle with batteries, unless they are swapped automatically - like Better Place (that is now bankrupt.) Also short routes do not incur much of gas cost penalty, and most of those deliveries are done in efficient cars or in light trucks.

    218. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Speaking of dishonest, I didn't simply say that the Model S seats 7. I specifically stated that it seats 5 adults plus two children.

      Yes, you did, but frankly I don't think it does that. It seats 4 adults comfortably, 5 in a pinch, and if you insist, you can put 2 kids facing backwards in the trunk.

      Very few cars actually seat 3 adults in the second row comfortably. I can't think of any off the top of my head, but one probably exists.

      Just like I don't claim 3 adults can fit in the third row of the Yukon. Technically they can, but it would be terrible. I've done it, for very short (10 minute) trips, but frankly it was made for kids back there.

      Just curious, but have you ever sat in the second row captains chairs in a Yukon XL (or Suburban)? Even the Odyssey or Acadia can't compete, it is truly nice and comfortable. There is having seats, then there is having seats you want to sit in. Consider the difference between coach and first class on the airlines. Both are seats, but not all are equal.

      That said, it's a sedan with more space for people and things than anything else it's up against.

      Now THAT I'll agree with. The lack of an ICE leaves all sorts of room for more stuff, the fact that it has a trunk in the front and back does it give it more options, and indeed it isn't a "cheap" looking car by any viewpoint.

      You likely shouldn't be towing with an EV, much like you shouldn't be with most gas cars or SUVs.

      Why not? An EV with its torque would be perfect for towing, if given a proper solid frame. I'd love an EV version of my Yukon, put a powerful electric motor on it, give it a good battery pack, and it would be a powerful towing vehicle.

      Most SUVs these days aren't even trucks, the Traverse/Acadia aren't trucks, they are cars. The new Ford Explorer? It is a car, actually it is a Ford Taurus, same engine, same tranny, same frame, just a tall station wagon version of the Taurus. But that wouldn't sell, so they slap "Explorer" on it and it sells. Nothing wrong with that, it is better for most people than the older truck based Explorer, but it isn't a truck, it is a tall car.

      Further, if you're on the road, you have the option to either charge it for 20 minutes for 50% charge or swap the battery for 100% in 1.5 minutes. That's quicker than a gasoline car's tank is filled. Neither involves waiting hours for anything.

      When I can drive from Texas to Florida, swapping out the batteries as I go, without having to plan out my stops along the way because there are enough of them, then you'll have a point. Until then, it is a fantasy. Remind me again how many refueling stations Tesla has today between Texas and Florida? Not planned in the future, that may or may not happen, I mean today, right now? Because if I am to consider the Tesla today, then what they have today is what counts, way too many companies have promised and not delivered, and for this kind of money, call me when they have already delivered.

      If you need something that tows and goes offroad, you don't want to buy a Model S or a Model X. In fact, you probably don't want to buy a Yukon or most other consumer vehicles on the road today.

      Do you even know what a Yukon is? It is a SUV version of the GMC Sierra pickup truck, it has a truck body on frame and will tow almost 10,000 pounds, it has 4WD and is specifically designed to drive off road. The 6.2L V8 is a beast and while you feel it when you have a trailer (I've had 7,000lbs behind me), it also doesn't complain when you step on it either. Now, an electric motor sized for that truck will do it too, electric motors are great for torque, so I have no objections to having one, but right now it isn't an option. Charging and battery life are concerns of mine, those are more easily solved with Volt technology, give me a large electric motor, batteries, and a small 4 cy

    219. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Just like you can take a base Yukon at $47k and get it to $74k when you deck the thing out.

      You might be shocked, but I actually paid about $60K for my Denali, and it is fully decked out, including power folding running boards (that is a $1,100 option). The only option I didn't take was the upgrade to 22" wheels, that is another $3K and frankly does nothing for me. I bought it at the end of the model year and they do some screaming deals when trying to push out the last of them. It had 22 miles on it when I took delivery, so it wasn't a demo either. You just have to buy them right, know the car game and you can get deals. The inability to get a deal on a Tesla makes it even worse, quite frankly.

      What can I say, list prices mean little to car companies and only a fool pays anywhere close to list. I also got 0% financing for 60 months, they did offer another $2K back if I didn't take that, but 0% for 60 months is worth closer to $5K in interest savings, making it the better deal.

      The $100K price for the Tesla includes things that I'd expect in a car at that price point, or even at the $72K price point for the 85 kwh battery, such as the tech package or high end sound system.

    220. Re:2 Words by samwichse · · Score: 1

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWqGUoKvfJ4

      @2:10, the doors look like they need less clearance than a regular door.

    221. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aren't studs a thing of the past that are not allowed on the roads these days due to the damage to paved surfaces? As far as I understood, the difference between modern winter and summer tires is a difference in ductility.

    222. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what's the worry about oil changes? They are simple enough that anyone can do.

    223. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In most cities, who really needs horsepower when at most you have a couple hundred feet between lights, or 5-10 feet away from the next bumper ahead.

      Acceleration for highway onramps in metro areas are where the horsepower is needed.

    224. Re:2 Words by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Remember to subtract the costs of respiratory diseases, heart diseases, and general loss of welfare caused by car emissions. Fuel is taxed for a reason, it was not picked randomly.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    225. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For me it would be price and it would also help if they looked mostly like a regular car, why does every electric car need to be so damn fugly? It's like the designers go out of their way to design something that screams "hey look at me! I'm not using gas! Aren't I so special! Why aren't you looking at me?!"

    226. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      All true, but you are assuming that electricity is produced cleanly.

      That varies from place to place of course. Here in Texas, we get much of our power from coal fired power plants, and not the clean version. We also have nuclear and wind, but it is mostly coal.

      Swapping gas for coal isn't much of an improvement. I'd be more inclined to spend more on an EV truck if we got all our power from nuclear/solar/wind rather than coal/oil/gas.

    227. Re:2 Words by Christian+Smith · · Score: 1

      But when the road is covered in ice and snow, you don't need more power

      Sure you do: you're compressing the snow. That means more rolling resistance.

      Ice might work in your favour, being hard, but then again you need studs to drive on it, which work by puncturing it, so that hardness might also work against you. Can't win :(.

      Compressing the snow? Not much power needed for that.

      Power is needed for 1) Fast acceleration and 2) High top speed. Traction limits the first, whereas common sense limits the second.

    228. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      WTF has that to do with the fact this was about non-owners? RTFAs.

    229. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Looks contrived to me.

      How can it be contrived when it's something that actually happens from time to time?

      The latest example in my country was this one. As it happened there was never any real problem that caused it, only panic buying by people thinking that there might be a strike soon.
      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-17552395

      Others have happened because of actual strike action. Because of fires at refineries, and because of heavy snow fall. There are many examples. But I'm not going to make a list, you can Google it yourself if you're interested.

    230. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This and *BAD* cold weather performance

    231. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yep. No interest at all in pure electric vehicles as they're just entirely impractical, nor am I willing to pay any sort of premium for them. Infrastructure I'm pretty sure will never give the same capabilities as vehicles that have large fuel cap unless the little explosive charg... er Li Ion batts gain significant energy density and significantly reduced charge times or IOW c. 5m refill OTOH I don't think that we'll ever see modular batt packs to swap out when really out in the sticks whereas we're more likely to have barrels of diesel or gas or even tanks of H2 portable.

      Now give me a hybrid with the identical perf char of a v8 at the same pricepoint and I'd consider one. Any more and no way, as it's bad enough playing the sub-model option unlock game that every single f'ing mfg has nowadays, from pricing out full size Ford/GM/Dodge pickups(had this apparently hilarious idea that they might just be cheaper than a new ZJ, and boy was I wrong and since I don't really care for pickups back to ZJ, 4d wrangler suffered same fate too close MSRP(not what I'd really pay, but it tells me final deal bargained price will all be too close v. 5.7L v8 zj, 6.4L would be nice but again sub-model option unlock game with an INSANELY HIGH price point, also really kinda silly as you're not be going in any direction other than straight at any higher speeds in an SUV, well if you're sane)) & Jeeps(4d wrangler/ZJ).

    232. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      For the two weeks when these "bays" are put in. Then you will find these slots are all full as well.

      Which means they worked. They encouraged 2 new EVs. Time to create another 2 bays.

      Why should public parking spots be ceded to for profit charging stations?

      Now there I'm with you. I think public utilities should be run by the government. But it's not a fashionable view these days.

      As to why they should be done at all - it's an imperative that we change technology from ICEVs to EVs. Even if you don't care about AGW, petroleum is a finite resource.

    233. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      2358 gallons at an average $3.18 a gallon.
      That's 57783 miles at an average of 24.5 MPG.
      That's 4.28 years at an average of 13476 miles per annum.

      4.28 years before the EV becomes cheaper isn't an unreasonable time at all. Average length of car ownership is 4.18 years. So it's a wash.

      Of course you haven't accounted for resale values at the end of your ownership. So the difference may be more or less than $7500 taking the full cost of ownership into account.

    234. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Also, keep in mind that when the government gives you a nice tax credit for buying an EV, they are just giving you back your own money, so you shouldn't count that either.

      As an individual of course you should count that. Your tax credit doesn't come from you, it comes from the general tax take. You are better off if you take advantage of it and worse off if you don't.

      As to taxing electricity, they can't tax home charging at any different rate than electricity in general. Tax on electricity may increase to counter the fall in petroleum taxes, but it would have to rise for ALL electricity use. Which would mean that electricity for cars wouldn't carry as much tax burden as petroleum for cars. So again, as an individual, your best move tax wise would be the EV.

    235. Re:2 Words by MercTech · · Score: 1

      Don't forget much higher cost.
      Need to do a 480vac mod to your house to get rapid charging
      Lack of charging points for trips...yeah, part of infrastructure.

      And, for me, the bottom line: Uses more fuel than a gasoline engine.

      The best efficiency we can get in room temperature motors and generators is 28% (.28 power factor)
          So, you generate electricity with a 28% conversion (under fantastic conditions) then turn it back to mechanical energy with a 28% conversion.
          Hmmm, so putting the chemical burner in the car cuts out two inefficient conversions for the electrical and we go with only a chemical to mechanical conversion.

          Ok, I will give it that it takes combustion products off the roadways... and puts more of them out in an industrial area. So, we can have cleaner highways if we burn more fuel into greenhouse gases.

      --
      NRRPT/RCT
    236. Re:2 Words by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      Those roadside checks are not common in the US. But a widely available method that does work for US drivers is to use a GPS. TomTom and Garmin GPS units (and possibly other brands though I have no personal experience with them) show your speed of travel, and you can compare that result to the speedometer display. Do this on a straight level stretch of road; hills and curves decrease the accuracy of the GPS-derived speed readout.

    237. Re:2 Words by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      That electric SUV doesn't exist yet because the kind of environmentally minded drivers who buy EVs don't want them. The majority of SUV drivers don't have any real need for a vehicle of that size, though some do and you may be one of them.

      An SUV EV presents some other difficulties as well. The high boxy shape of most SUVs has lousy aerodynamics which means poor efficiency. A vehicle the size and weight of an SUV, even if the aerodynamics are improved, is going to need a lot more battery for a given range than a small EV, which means a lot more money. Consider that the longest range version of the Tesla model S contains something like $30,000 worth of batteries, then double that number for an full sized SUV with comparable range. The result: a vehicle that sell for over $100,000.

      Toyota makes a RAV4 EV. (It was originally only sold to fleet owners and in California; it's more widely available now.) But that's a cute ute, not a full sized SUV like yours. And the $50,000 price tag is rather steep, though it presumably qualifies for the EV tax credit which will reduce the sting a bit.

    238. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      All true, but as an individual my best move is to pollute the crap out of the environment and let everyone else pay to clean it up.

      If I do what is in the best interest of everyone, I don't do that, nor to I take into account tax credits that cost everyone money.

      That's the trick, you can't have it both ways. Either we are in this together, or we are not.

    239. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Well you can have it both ways, because there are different ways of looking at things.

      The idea that you should move to EVs because they are better for the planet is a moral consideration. The idea that people should do what's best for them tax incentive wise, even if it it's a wash over the country as a whole is a game theory consideration.

      Game theory is a better predictor of overall population behaviour than moral imperatives though. So tax incentive nudges will do more for EVs than moral discussions.

    240. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      There are several assumptions there to make the numbers look nicer.

      Try these numbers, making only small changes.

      2,688 gallons at $2.79 gal (our current price)
      That's 75,264 at 28mpg (small cars the size of Leaf can get this in mixed driving)
      At 12,000 miles a year, that is 6.12 years to break even.

      But the fun part is the power is not free to charge the car... Real break even is about 8 years when you take that into account.

      But it gets worse... Since you have to pay the $7,500 up front, there is a cost to that in time value of money. And yet it gets worst STILL, because there is a $7,500 tax credit that we all have to pay for and that won't be there if EV sales gain any traction, it would become too expensive.

      I see over and over how people are trying to twist it to make EV cars seem competitive, they are not. If they were, they would be selling. They are selling in hobby numbers, not serious numbers. The Prius has sold well, but it isn't $15,000 more than a non hybrid, it has been close enough, without the range problems, to sell. Volt doesn't have range problems, but costs too much, even after the tax credits.

      This is the same argument being used by Linux supporters who think that if people just *understood* why Linux was so much better, we'd all ditch Windows en mass and move to Linux on the desktop, without understanding *why* that hasn't happened has nothing to do with technical reasons.

      EV ownership isn't going anywhere until the cost problems get solved. I don't think the range is the biggest hurdle, many people can work with that, but the cost is a show stopper.

    241. Re: 2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pfft... you're talking unicorns and mermaids-- any EV driver is likely to tell you the same thing. My 13-year-old Corbin Sparrow has a range of 120 miles, more than most EVs, but more than most of us would need for the vast amount of our driving. EVs have so many advantages and plus-points, that we tend to ignore the only two issues dingbats can point to as "problems". Do you REALLY want me to list the DOZENS of serious issues I resolve by driving electric? You don't, for instance, find it a SERIOUS issue that when we buy gasoline, we continue to enrich the same psychos that financed the 9/11 attacks, and continue to have us in their crosshairs? It is genuinely insane to be buying oil from our most intrepid enemies, who continue to finance suicide bombers, underwear bombers, shoe bombers, improvised explosive devices and the kind of nut jobs that
      want to kill marathon spectators and holiday travelers?

    242. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      There are several assumptions there to make the numbers look nicer.

      I just took the first current "average" value for the US I could find for each of those values. Of course fudging those figures in the direction you want will change the calculation.

      But it gets worse... Since you have to pay the $7,500 up front, there is a cost to that in time value of money. And yet it gets worst STILL, because there is a $7,500 tax credit that we all have to pay for and that won't be there if EV sales gain any traction, it would become too expensive.

      Against which is the fact that gasoline is likely to go up in price over the ownership of the car. And in your hypothetical future where the tax incentive has disappeared, the EV has got cheaper anyway as a result of ever improving battery technology, and economies of scale with larger production numbers.

      I see over and over how people are trying to twist it to make EV cars seem competitive, they are not.

      Well you seem to be the one twisting here.

      If they were, they would be selling.

      As I pointed out elsewhere, they ARE selling, in increasing numbers each year. They are not at all anything other than one would expect in the early adopter stage of a new technology.

      This is the same argument being used by Linux supporters who think that if people just *understood* why Linux was so much better, we'd all ditch Windows en mass and move to Linux on the desktop, without understanding *why* that hasn't happened has nothing to do with technical reasons.

      Not even slightly the same. Linux has only been unsuccessful on the desktop. And that has been because FOSS turns out to be poor at designing interfaces. Where Linux has had a GUI designed by a commercial entity - Google's Android - it has been successful. This is no parallel to the EV world. All markets are different, and cars are not like computers, despite the long standing Slashdot love of trying to use each as a metaphor for the other.

      It's pretty certain Linux will never be successful on the desktop. And even if it is, that market is in terminal decline. It's pretty certain EVs will take over the majority from ICEVs. It's just a question of how long it takes.

    243. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Yes, I moved the numbers, but I didn't move them outside of reasonable, I was showing how small changes make a huge difference to the final calculation, since your point was that break even was just over 4 years, when I think a lot of people using slightly different numbers would disagree with.

      EV cars are selling, but in low numbers. The title of the submission is "why are EV car sales low?". They are low, hobby numbers low.

      How low? In October 3,733 battery powered EVs were sold in the US. Total car sales in the US in October? Over 1 million.

      EV car sales are just noise right now. It may become more in the future, but frankly, no matter what numbers you use to try and say, "oh, EVs don't cost so much when you consider TCO", the sales numbers do not lie.

    244. Re:2 Words by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      I've driven over 20,000 miles a year for each year for the last 12. I drove more than 200 miles in a single day about 6 times a year. If I had an electric car with a 200 mile range, I would just rent something with a gasoline or diesel engine for the days I need it.

      The problem isn't the range, it's the price. The Model S with the full range, and presumably the longest lasting battery pack, is ~$75,000. The shorter ranges of the Nissan Leaf, Ford Focus Electric, Mitsubishi iMiev, etc... mean that I'd exceed the range too frequently. A Chevy Volt would work for me.

      As it is, I solved my transportation problem the best way I could - I have a full time telecommuting position now.

    245. Re:2 Words by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      The Leaf has a reliable 65 mile range. In good conditions and at slower speeds, you'll get a 100 miles. So it won't run much past an hour or two anyway under most circumstances.

      The Model S is painfully expensive. But it's got an 85 kwh battery pack - so each hour your battery is supplying energy to heat the car, that's less than 5% of its capacity.

    246. Re:2 Words by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      You have to play politician and spin the numbers for the Model S to work out. If you consider the styling cool, and you like the fact that there is no engine noise, and the torque response when you press the throttle is instant (no wait to build engine RPM, no wait for the transmission to drop a gear, etc...) then you can compare the Model S to, say, an equivalent price luxury car.

      But for someone shopping it against, say, a Honda Accord, the numbers don't work out unless the battery pack lasts an exceedingly long time.

    247. Re:2 Words by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      You have to pay for the electricity that powers your EV. I think the Tesla Model S uses 0.3 kwh per mile, so if you pay $0.20 per kwh (which, by some strange coincidence, I do). So you have to look at the difference in cost per mile. Your 24.5 mpg car at $3.18 per gallon costs $0.13 per mile in fuel, a Tesla Model S would be $0.20 per kwh times 0.3 kwh per mile = $0.06 per mile. So electric saves you $0.07 per mile. $7500/$0.07 = 107142 miles

    248. Re: 2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I car pool (slug actually, look up "slugging" for the details) but I have to drive 33 miles round trip to do that. I could take the train and it is only 16 miles round trip to the nearest station but I'd have to get there at 6:00 am to get a parking spot, pay $250 for a monthly pass, pay for the subway round trip to get me from the train to within 1/4 mile of my office (K street in Washington DC) and it would take me a minimum of 45 minutes to an hour longer each way with limited scheduling.

      I'm not complaining, that is the commute I'm willing to put with to live outside the beltway where there is a reasonable cost of living and still make city salaries.

      Recently I've been working from home, even 4-5 days a week. That has it's own challenges. It takes a toll mentally, one I never considered. The line between when I am working and not working is getting blurred. I even treat going out to the store at 7:00pm well past my normal working hours as I am stepping away from work. I know it's strange.

       

    249. Re:2 Words by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      What you're getting in those cases is not a "deal". It's the equivalent of a discount to clear out inventory. That's not a deal as much as a concession by the dealership. It's caused by the dealership having *raised* the prices in the first place, to then lower some of their marked up pricing.

      If you want to pay the closer to real price (as a Tesla does), try paying invoice minus dealer holdback - all incentives. Then you're still about 10-20% off the real cost on every vehicle sold by a dealership worldwide.

    250. Re:2 Words by Agripa · · Score: 1

      The problem here is that I don't *want* bells and whistles. They are just more things to break. One of the major reasons I prefer small RWD pickups is because they are easier and less expensive to maintain.

    251. Re:2 Words by RivenAleem · · Score: 1

      What is your point? An EV has to drive through that same dense air on a cold day. Given equal aerodynamics, the air breathing car takes some advantage of driving through dense cold air, the EV does not.

      The converse is also true, on a hot day, the air breathing car is less efficient, but both cars are pushing through thinner air.

      This is still comparing apples to oranges, though.

    252. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Trucks are moving, and they are towing, and they are carrying stuff

      Someone should tell that to the thousands of trucks around here sporting shiny unscratched everything that have clearly ever seen a day of hard labor in their entire lives.

    253. Re:2 Words by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Nobody needs extra horsepower, unless they're hauling heavy loads up steep grades, and even then you can usually get the job done with gear ratios.

      Yet, extra horsepower has sold at a premium for decades, higher cost to purchase, higher cost of operation and maintenance... go figure.

      I guess you could also argue that nobody needs to patronize the oldest profession, yet....

    254. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are plenty of Prius owners who are happy to have a vehicle sans "extra" horsepower.

    255. Re:2 Words by PrimaryConsult · · Score: 1

      Both of these could theoretically be solved today with an infrastructure of overhead wires running along highways (similar to electric trolleybuses)... Charge / run on overhead wire while on highways, and use the batteries on local roads. Meter the usage in the car. The issues would be:
      1 - some may find wires over roads and pantographs on the roof of cars "ugly"
      2 - cars would need to be taller (then again the average SUV is halfway there)
      3 - people would need to remember to drop their pantograph for changing lanes
      4 - There's also the danger of high voltage lines all over the place

      I'm not claiming this is a good solution, but this is a solvable problem.

    256. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You drive a Yukon, and think the Odyssey is behind on technology? Your car has the suspension from an ox-cart for pete's sake...

    257. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      How low? In October 3,733 battery powered EVs were sold in the US. Total car sales in the US in October? Over 1 million.

      Sure, it's still small numbers. But they are doing better than hybrids did in their early days. And I see Priuses driving around most days.
      http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1085724_electric-cars-sell-faster-than-hybrids-did-at-same-point

      It may become more in the future

      There is no "may". It does become more each month, and technology and fossil fuel trends will only make them a better prospect as time moves on.

      "oh, EVs don't cost so much when you consider TCO"

      But its a fact. TCO difference in price is less than sticker price difference.

    258. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      No, it may... They had indeed increased, about 2,000 were sold in January of this year, but frankly these are rounding error numbers.

      The question is, will it grow to 30,000 a month within 5 years?

      It might, I wouldn't discount that... But it isn't assured either.

      As for TCO being less than the sticker price difference, you have to project a long time in the future for that to be true, and make a number of assumptions to do it. To the average car buyer, EVs TCO for them is higher in the time frame they will own it.

    259. Re:2 Words by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The question is, will it grow to 30,000 a month within 5 years?

      Well it took Hybrids about 15 years to get there. So that's a big ask. Why would that be the target for success? As I pointed out BEVs are making better progress than hybrids, so it's possible - but I haven't done the maths.

      As for TCO being less than the sticker price difference, you have to project a long time in the future for that to be true, and make a number of assumptions to do it.

      No, it starts happening on day one. Every mile that you travel that is cheaper with electricity than gas is reducing the difference between the sticker price of the cars.

    260. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      We must have a different idea of what TCO means. You don't get to a cheaper TCO until all the gas savings added up is more than the purchase price difference, plus the time value of money.

      Why 30,000? Because that is 3% of the car market in the US, any less than that and you're in hobby numbers, 1% of the market doesn't really make a difference or matter. As it stands, it is about 0.3% of the market, which is why I called it a rounding error.

      I see EVs taking off once the price comes down, when that happens, we will see an uptick in sales, I don't believe we will see one before then.

    261. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      About the only time this wouldn't be the case is right upon startup, before the motor temps start climbing. Fluids will be cold and harder to move throughout the engine. After 30-45 seconds, this becomes a non-issue.

      The direct effects aren't the only thing to consider. Every time you start up an internal combustion engine that is cold, it causes significant wear on the engine (equivalent to thousands of km of actual driving). There is a solution to this; pre-warming the engine (in countries with cold winters, pre-startup engine-heaters are common), but that obviously has a significant energy cost.

      Unless you're living where your idea of "cold" weather is anything less than +15 C.

    262. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, more power doesn't necessarily translate to better fuel economy.

      There are thermodynamic reasons why operating an engine in a cooler environment gives better efficiency (thermodynamics tells us the the maximum efficiency possible for any engine is determined by the temperature difference between the engine and the environment). That's a primary reason why commercial airplanes fly so high up in the atmosphere: the cold temperatures up there allow the engines to be more fuel efficient (even to the extent of compensating for the considerable fuel costs associated with climbing that high).

      This principle of basic science does, of course, have to be compared with all the other factors that are relevant. A car is not just an engine, and the engine in a car is not a thermodynamically ideal engine. Nor is it necessarily the case that with a car this consideration will dominate to the extent that it does with long distance air travel.

    263. Re:2 Words by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Yup. A hint closer to Germany, hence the spelling.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    264. Re:2 Words by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      Intrastructure is the real killer.

      The largest market (urban dwellers) are either well-served by public transport or have no way of charging the things overnight.

      This is especially true in european cities and I doubt that a network of curbside charging posts is practical due to vandalism issues.

    265. Re:2 Words by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      In essence, SUVs and trucks are very power-hungry vehicles. They can be loaded with a ton of stuff, and they can tow huge trailers. Batteries that can deliver so much power would cost a million dollars, and they would occupy too much space - and they would take a significant part of the weight of the vehicle.

      I couldn't get the actual prices for each model of Smith commercial truck, but I found a newspaper article talking about one costing 30k more than a typical diesel. It didn't describe the model.. but I have to assume it has a fairly good carrying capacity to be used as a delivery truck for Staples.
      http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052748704584804575644773552573304
      http://www.smithelectric.com/

      Where did you get the notion of a million dollars for battery cost?

    266. Re:2 Words by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      I *want* an EV. If I had to buy a new car today, I wouldn't buy one. Besides the above average costs, I see longevity being a problem. The car I have now is over 10 years old. I have serious doubts in the longevity of the current EVs, and part replacement costs. As I understand it, the Volt battery pack is $8,000. Nissan Leafs batteries cost $15,000. Nissan has a payment plan deal, which still ends up costing you thousands.

      I didn't look up pure EV's, but the Prius has plenty of data now about how long batteries have lasted in real world conditions. Lots of info to google about longevity. A new prius comes with a 8 year warranty on the batteries. I'd assume other EV's are similar.

      I'd like an EV also. The only thing holding me back is size and cost. I want to be able to get through snow like I can now with my 4-runner. Instead, I end up most winters pulling Prius's out of snowbanks when it gets icy here (Oregon).

    267. Re:2 Words by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Cost is my only issue right now.

      Am I in the minority when it comes to range being an issue? I must just not travel that much. 3-4x a year maybe, and in those cases it wouldn't be a big deal to rent something.

      A full size sedan from Enterprise is 28 dollars a day. Pickup trucks are 33 dollars a day if you need one for a weekend project.

      I have done the math, but I assume the weekday daily commute gas cost would more than cover the handful of times I need range or hauling.

    268. Re:2 Words by tftp · · Score: 1

      Where did you get the notion of a million dollars for battery cost?

      Extrapolated Tesla's battery costs. Roadster's battery costs $50K, but that car is not a truck. Battery costs can be also lurking in other costs, such as in the purchase price, in leasing fees, or in service fees. Smith's warranty on battery is only 3 years, for example. How much will it cost to replace? One hidden cost is right here.

      In general, it's not too surprising that there are companies who undersell Tesla. Electric forklifts and other vehicles are not a new invention - they are a necessity indoors.

      As matter of fact, EVs on fixed routes make most sense - you can always be sure that there is enough charge to complete the route. Additionally, an EV fleet allows you to not worry about one or two vehicles being not functional, if need be (lead time of a battery may be long,) and you can put EVs only on routes that they are capable of. This is a valid use of a truck, but one can't say that it will work for a general purpose vehicle - say, of your electrical contractor. Nevertheless, it's a good start.

    269. Re:2 Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A truck can have a tank that holds 25-30 gallons of gasoline. That is equivalent to 26 MJ/L * (30*4) = 3 GJ, or 833 kWh of energy.

      There's one problem with your math: only about a third of the energy in gas can be used to turn the wheels; the rest is wasted in the unavoidable inefficiencies of a heat engine.

      The equivalent battery to a 30-gallon gas tank is 275kWh, not 833kWh. Once you divide everything by 3, you get a Supercharger time of 2 hours 20 minutes (unacceptably high if you're trying to cover long distances), a home charging time of 23 hours on a 240V/50A circuit (high, but you're probably not using your truck's full range every day, and taking a few nights to recover from the weekend's use isn't a problem), and a range extender is a 50kW generator in the bed of the truck rather than a 150kW generator that needs its own trailer.

    270. Re:2 Words by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      I've been watching Craigslist and local dealership ads for them. I have pretty much nothing for money right now, so it's just more of a passing interest. :) I've mostly been looking for Honda Insight and Toyota Prius, in the older versions. That puts them about 10 years old.

      I decided a long time ago, I'll never sink a fortune into a car again. The last new-ish car I bought a 2000, that I bought in 2001 for Something like $35k. In the end with all the interest, it cost about $45k. Current value is about $8,500. That means I lost $36,500 on it. Buying a new car means, ya, you'll have a nice virgin car that no one has ever spilled a drink making a hard stop. It may not have had major body damage, but as I've learned plenty of new cars are damaged in shipping and are repaired by the dealer so there is no record of it.

      The last vehicle I bought was a '99 SUV. It had issues. Lots and lots of issues. I also only paid something like $1,200 for it. Now the book value is $3,800. Until a recent accident, I did all of my own mechanical work. Paying to have it fixed would have been really expensive. Since I did it myself, I only have about $800 more invested. So I effectively paid $2,000 for something I could sell tomorrow for $3,800.

      Looking at listings for a 10 year old hybrid shows the problems they have. The engines seem to do fine, since they're basically water cooled generators. Their electrical systems break down. A lot of the listings, they're selling because the batteries are failing, or have already failed.

      Apparently, you can convince a Honda Insight to drive with the battery dead or disconnected.

      The Toyota Prius, if the battery goes, you're having it towed back to Toyota for repairs. A couple people I've known with the Toyota Prius told me some of the disadvantages. Like, if the battery dies, you have to get it towed to Toyota to get a minimum charge put back in. If you leave it sitting for months, you'll have to get it towed to Toyota to get a minimum charge put back in. If the battery pack dies.. well, you get the idea.

      One of them had a problem with the Prius, where the headlights would blink on and off. It was an electrical issue with the HID lights. A piece overheats, and the headlight turns off. It was just out of warranty, so Toyota told her something like $600 to repair it... Fucking $600 to fix a headlight. $200 for the bulb, $100 for the HID control module, and $300 for labor. Changing the headlight in that car (or at least that year) involved disassembling the entire nose of the car. Ya. no.

      In the years of Honda Insight I was looking at, they used nickel metal-hydride batteries. They're actually kind of cute. There are a bunch of sticks that look like a row of C size batteries, in a stick, with special ends. I was curious about changing to Lithium Ion. Apparently lots of people have considered the same thing, and the general consensus is, you don't do that. I looked at how to do it, as if I had the car. I'm sure people look around and say "ya, you can do it! I saw a post talking about this guy who did." Tracking that back to the guy who really did it, or finding a vendor selling anything for it turns up just about nothing.

      Plug-in charging options exist, but not for all of them. Some are totally hacked solutions. Like one I saw, a guy took two ATX power supplies, some fans, and a big warning of "don't leave it charging unattended. The batteries will overheat and catch fire". It sounded like he learned that through experience. Oops. If I go drop $5k on a car, it won't feel as bad catching it on fire as dropping tens of thousands on it and doing the same thing. Still, I don't really like the idea of wasting $5k, or the potential arson charge.

      My biggest thing is, when I buy a car, it's not for 5 to 8 years and then I'll trade it on another. I am not interested in perpetually funding any corp for the pleasure of transportation. My cars are coming up on 14 and 15 years respectively

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    271. Re:2 Words by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      If you, falling into the "actually need it category," are the exception to the rule, then I don't see how your personal story fits in with the larger discussion about the value of electric vehicles.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    272. Re:2 Words by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Why does my personal situation fit within the conversation?

      Frankly, there isn't an EV version of the Odyssey, so the problem remains, the EV cars being offered are these little things that are useless for anyone trying to move a family around.

      An EV version of the Suburban would be very useful, all that torque would be wonderful for towing, the total amount of gas to be saved is far larger than what a little Honda Civic burns...

      I just get tired of people telling me "oh, you don't need that urban assault vehicle, buy a minivan instead", as if that matters or has anything to do with anything related to EVs.

    273. Re:2 Words by maharvey · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, meat emissions. That says it all, I think.

    274. Re:2 Words by Calinous · · Score: 1

      Winter gasoline might be "lighter" than summer gasoline, and you might leave your engine running longer to defrost windshield before starting to drive. Even considering that, winter fuel use didn't change much from summer

    275. Re:2 Words by thehumble1 · · Score: 1

      The volt is an amazing car, like driving one of those slot track electrics back in the day. I wasn't somewhere I could get the pedal down, but the power is perfectly smooth and unlimited from stop. I think it also fixed what Toyota had messed up by running a gasoline engine constantly.

  2. I'll buy one... by Max+Threshold · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...when I can buy a used one for $5,000 and expect it to last me five to ten years without major maintenance.

    1. Re:I'll buy one... by elrous0 · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Hard as is is to believe for the prosperous folks in Silicon Valley, Austin, Seattle, et. al.-- but most of us can't drop $60,000 on a toy.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    2. Re:I'll buy one... by blue+trane · · Score: 0

      Govt should subsidize the cost.

    3. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The government that's already running a deficit of $1 trillion a year?

    4. Re: I'll buy one... by fizzer06 · · Score: 1

      No.

    5. Re:I'll buy one... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Informative

      One big issue I have is battery life.

      I'm driving a 14 year old pickup truck, and a 23 year old sports car, both purchased brand new. Ya know the most common replacement component in both? Batteries.

      Yes, Lithium-Ion / Fe whatever is different from lead-acid. Do you hear any electric car company making a claim that their multi-thousand dollar battery packs are going to last anywhere near 14 years? How about 23?

    6. Re:I'll buy one... by Max+Threshold · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sure. They can take the money from oil subsidies.

    7. Re:I'll buy one... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 4, Informative

      They already do to the tune of $7500 per EV.

    8. Re:I'll buy one... by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Exactly! I'd even pay significantly more than that for a nice used electric car. But $40k for a new Volt or $80k+ for a new Tesla? Eh, no thanks.

    9. Re:I'll buy one... by crdotson · · Score: 1

      Yeah! Then it'll be FREE!

    10. Re:I'll buy one... by Teancum · · Score: 4, Interesting

      One big issue I have is battery life.

      I'm driving a 14 year old pickup truck, and a 23 year old sports car, both purchased brand new. Ya know the most common replacement component in both? Batteries.

      Yes, Lithium-Ion / Fe whatever is different from lead-acid. Do you hear any electric car company making a claim that their multi-thousand dollar battery packs are going to last anywhere near 14 years? How about 23?

      I think this is a legitimate issue. Tesla battery packs are claimed to last about ten years before they need to be replaced (where they are expected to have about half of the charge capacity as a new battery pack). Tesla even wrote a blog post about the topic a little bit before they started to deliver the Roadster, and showed how they reprocessed the old batteries with almost a 100% recovery of the contents with recycling efforts (hence the environmental issues are almost moot). Still, when you are calculating the per mile cost of operating an electric automobile you do need to consider the cost of the battery pack replacement in the figure.

      I haven't seen the actual figures from Tesla or other similar companies, but some "fans" have estimated a battery replacement cost of about $10k-$15k. Cheaper than buying a new car, but certainly a non-trivial cost.

      The funny thing is how the Baker Electric automobiles had a battery technology that didn't need nearly so much maintenance, and in spite of the fact that those batteries are now over a century old many of those automobiles (largely in museums now... but still serviceable) still have the original factory installed batteries that have only needed minor refurbishment and some new chemicals put into the battery. The trade off is that they don't really hold that much charge.

    11. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're willing to help pay for my car? Thanks!

    12. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm driving a 14 year old pickup truck, and a 23 year old sports car, both purchased brand new. Ya know the most common replacement component in both? Batteries.

      Sounds like you need to get the alternators or regulators serviced.

      You are right generally about the longevity of electric cars being severely questionable, but lead acid batteries should last a whole lot longer than NiMH or Li-Ion batteries unless they are icing up or being incorrectly charged (by a broken alternator or regulator). If you're having to replace your battery more often than your oil or tires, you've got a problem elsewhere.

    13. Re:I'll buy one... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      It is worse than that... people like myself who are fortunate enough to be able to afford such cars and trucks, still aren't buying them.

      My two trucks were purchased new in 2011 and 2012, for about $110K between them. I can afford all these cars and I'm still not buying.

      Why?

      Because they are all tiny little cars that are of no use to me, I drive full size SUVs, I have a family, I haul stuff, I use every inch of my trucks.

      Give me an EV version of a full-size SUV for about the price of the gas version, or a version with the "volt" technology for $5K more, and I'm a customer.

      $40K for a Volt is insane, that price buys a very well equipped full size pickup, it buys a mid-level Suburban. $40K for a little 4 seat car? Are you kidding? That's crazy.

      You can buy cars just as nice for $25K with a gas engine that get very good gas milage.

    14. Re: I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am willing to pay for my air to be cleaner.

    15. Re:I'll buy one... by litehacksaur111 · · Score: 2

      What the hell happened to the EV 1. That car by GM cost only $25,000 and had about as much range as the electric cars nowadays. We already solved this problem once. Why are we trying to resolve it?????

    16. Re:I'll buy one... by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean, but I still see little reason in buying a *new* vehicle of any type, really, whether it's a truck or a sports car. Used cars are so reliable these days (as long as you shop carefully) you basically pay a 50% premium for the new car smell. Then again, I guess if price was no object, neither would be my car purchase ;)

      I spent $60k between my two current (used) vehicles (and have had both for almost 5 years with not much more than routine work for vehicles with their mileage - battery, brakes, clutch...) One can haul everything I need within reason (medium size SUV), and the other has a top speed of 190mph (not that I have gotten up that high... yet... ;)

      I might pay $40k for a Tesla S Sport with 40k miles if it would get another 100k miles without seriously major work (i.e. potentially more than it's worth). But at that point the battery will be shot so there's a nice $30k "required maintenance" right there. I fully expect my 997S to go 150k+ miles before it ever needs the equivalent of an entire engine swap! Resales of a 4 year old iPhone are pretty weak... let's see about the resale of a car where the battery is 1/3 of the MSRP...

    17. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't seen the actual figures from Tesla or other similar companies, but some "fans" have estimated a battery replacement cost of about $10k-$15k. Cheaper than buying a new car, but certainly a non-trivial cost.

      WhatTheFuck!

      So a $10K-$15K cost every ten years for a $100K car vs. a $100-$200 replacement cost every 5 years on a $20K car that lasts 20 years is somehow cheaper.

      What FUCKING fantasy land world do you live in and what do they smoke in said world?

    18. Re:I'll buy one... by blue+trane · · Score: 2, Funny

      Reagan proved deficits don't matter. The Fed just expands its balance sheet to buy govt bonds, taxes aren't even necessary. Then govt uses fiscal policy to subsidize wages so there's no wage-price spiral inflation. Electric car companies produce cars with a low payroll liability, and govt further subsidizes the cost for the consumer because it's a good idea and helps society. Everybody wins.

    19. Re:I'll buy one... by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Taxes aren't necessary to fund the government. Buy government bonds instead, they pay you interest. The Fed can buy the bonds from you and pay you the interest upfront.

    20. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No doubt you believe the laws of thermodynamics and conservation of angular momentum can be violated, too.

      There's no such thing as a free lunch, man.

    21. Re:I'll buy one... by firex726 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're not considering the reduced maintenance costs.
      You have one $8,000 maintenance item with the battery, as opposed to twenty $800 items over those 14 years; of course by then you'd be ready for a trade in anyways.

    22. Re:I'll buy one... by luckymutt · · Score: 1

      This movie covers it:
      Who Killed the Electric Car?

    23. Re:I'll buy one... by Oligonicella · · Score: 0

      Uhhh..... Fuck No. The government should *not* subsidize the feel-good needs of the guilt-ridden affluent.

    24. Re:I'll buy one... by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Reagan proved deficits don't matter.

      You just tell yourself that when the Dollar crashes.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    25. Re:I'll buy one... by luckymutt · · Score: 2

      Long story short, GM did not sell the EV1. They only leased them.
      The claim was that they wouldn't be able to sell them profitably, so they canceled all leases and repossessed them all.
      Although I don't think it would be unreasonable to think they were pressured from their industry associates (oil, engine manufacturing, etc.).

    26. Re: I'll buy one... by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Then what you want is for people to drive used cars until they fall apart. Commonly neglected in the whole "I'm for clean air" espousings is the pollution caused by manufacturing *a new car*. Also, electric car batteries are not going to last forever. Replacement costs are rarely mentioned.

    27. Re:I'll buy one... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      I totally get the logic behind buying used vs. new.

      Used is cheaper, no doubt about it...

      That being said, over the long term, it isn't 50% cheaper.

      I've done the math on buying 3 year old cars and keeping them until 6 years old, vs. buying brand new cars and selling them at 3 years old.

      More less, for any given vehicle, it is about 20% more expensive to do the latter than the former.

      So it costs me about $200 more a month to drive a brand new truck every 3 years rather than a 3 year old truck every 3 years. It is always in warranty, it always has the latest features, it has never been smoked in, never been abused, and I can enjoy it as my own.

      For less expensive cars/trucks, the difference per month is even less. For a $24K new car, that is $400 a month to buy it at 0%, to buy the same car used would save about $80 a month over the long term.

      Is that $80 a month worth it? That is a personal decision, to many people that is a lot of money and I respect that. To me? I'd rather have new, and frankly, someone has to buy new, or you'd have nothing to buy used! :)

    28. Re:I'll buy one... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The government should *not* subsidize the feel-good needs of the guilt-ridden affluent.

      Nor should it subsidize the irrationally car-centric lifestyle of the average American. Remove all the direct and indirect subsidies from gasoline, and when gas hits it true price -- on the order of $13/gallon -- market forces will kill gas-powered cars in no time.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    29. Re:I'll buy one... by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      That being said, over the long term, it isn't 50% cheaper.

      I've done the math on buying 3 year old cars and keeping them until 6 years old, vs. buying brand new cars and selling them at 3 years old.

      Well, that entirely depends on how you drive it and how long you want to keep it ;) My math is more like, buying a 3-4 year old car at half price and keeping it until it's 10+ years old - if it works and you are happy with it, why replace it? Really, why would you want to replace a 3 year old car you bought new - that is probably still under warranty?? I guess I do know some people who just "get bored" and have to replace their car every few years, but in no way is that the smart financial decision... that's a hobby. If you shop carefully for the long term and have a good mechanic, it's definitely pushing 50% savings for the useful life of a car (and WAY more vs. trading in a car every 3 years).

      And as far as warranty - that's another mostly non-issue for reliable cars... I got an extended 4 year warranty for $1k on each of my current cars and never even used either of them (since batteries and brakes aren't warranty items...)

    30. Re:I'll buy one... by Opportunist · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Reagan only proved that you could already spend money your kids will have to earn. Problem is: We're the kids.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    31. Re:I'll buy one... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      My math is more like, buying a 3-4 year old car at half price and keeping it until it's 10+ years old

      That indeed would be 50% (or more) less expensive than swapping out cars every 3 years (new or used).

      We each put our money into whatever is important to us. My son's best friend's dad is seriously into bicycles. He has a garage full of them, over $10K worth. I think that's insane, but it is his hobby and makes him happy, so who am I to judge? He can afford it, he loves it, more power to him. :)

    32. Re:I'll buy one... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I already am, propping up the failing car industry. Might as well do it with a product that has some kind of future.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    33. Re:I'll buy one... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Europe already pays that. Well, almost at least.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    34. Re:I'll buy one... by mlts · · Score: 1

      As a devil's advocate, there is another technology which gives very high MPG, and that would be the turbo diesel engine. They may not be hybrid models or EVs, but they are very economical, and because they usually have some form of turbo, they don't lose much in the way of power at higher altitudes.

      I'm sure the next step within the next few years will be hybrid diesel/electric vehicles.

    35. Re:I'll buy one... by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      We each put our money into whatever is important to us.

      Yep, I wholeheartedly agree. If all you wanted to do was "get around" in a car it can be achieved for a surprisingly low amount of money compared to anything we were talking about.

      And yeah, I have a friend who almost hits that $10k with one bicycle. My current bike, the other hand, cost about $500 and I thought it was a big splurge. But hey, I ride mine once in a while, and he does double centuries and triathlons... I suppose a lot of people would pay even more than $10k to get in that shape...

    36. Re:I'll buy one... by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Yes but they produce a lot of carcinogenic micro-particles, and currently available, cost-effective filters are typically not efficient enough.

    37. Re:I'll buy one... by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Seems like Palin's making a lot of money saying that. The economic fact is that the Fed creates money to buy govt bonds, and returns the interest to the Treasury. So govt borrowing costs are essentially zero. Like banks, you keep the loans rolling over. (The Fed holds more Treasury bills than China and Japan put together.)

      The idea that a government can only spend what it takes in in taxes is feudal, obsolete. Japan has a 230% debt-to-gdp ratio, China over 200% (source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/11/21/china-banks-shadow-idUSL4N0J426S20131121 ).

      Why don't economists who say these are too high (and have been wrongly predicting Japan's imminent collapse for decades) mention that banks are regularly leveraged at 30 to 1, which is equivalent to a debt-to-income level of 3000%?

    38. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Major maintenance on an EV??
        I guess there's no guarantee that the cylinder head gasket won't need changing, or that the transmission will have to be rebuilt and since you never know how a previously-owned car was maintained, perhaps 2 or 3 cylinders will seize at once.

    39. Re: I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those "replacement costs" for EV batteries ARE frequently mentioned and EXAGGERATED by EV detractors.
      You might want to check how many of the NiMH batteries in the Priuses & RAV4s needed replacing before reaching 200,000 miles.
      With the investments and improvements in the pipeline for better battery tech, it's going to be a lot less that most imagine.

      And the old batteries won't be scrap either - they'll still have about 70% of original capacity and would make for some awesomely powerful but lightweight UPSes ( compared to lead-acid )

    40. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The original RAV4 EVs from '97 have batteries that lasted 150,000 miles and every current EV manufacturer is giving an 8 yr warranty. And you have much lower running, "fueling" and maintenance cost with an EV anyway.

    41. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Which are less than $5 billion per year. And the majority of that are subsidies for oil and gas use in farming and low income heating.

      The oil and gas companies themselves don't receive that many tax breaks.

      How many batteries do you think you can buy?

    42. Re:I'll buy one... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Tesla battery packs are claimed to last about ten years before they need to be replaced (where they are expected to have about half of the charge capacity as a new battery pack).

      No, they are not. They are guaranteed for 8 years and unlimited mileage. Beyond that Tesla has stated that they expect them to last ~200-250k miles, similar to a petrol engine. Replacement cost is likely to be similar to a petrol engine as well, in the $10-15k range for new but of course much less for a reconditioned one.

      Battery packs tend not to degrade much until the very end of their life. Most of the degradation comes from cells fails, but the pack is designed so that individual cells dying won't prevent others from working. You can of course get the failed ones replaced at a far lower cost than getting the entire pack replaced.

      Unfortunately this is one area where a lot of bullshit has been spread about. Tesla and Nissan both do an 8 year warranty, but some people seem to assume that means the pack will be dead by then or very soon afterwards. How many manufacturers guarantee their combustion engines for more than 8 years? Top Gear even quoted 7 years for the Leaf battery, even though the warranty is a year longer!

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    43. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Buy government bonds instead, they pay you interest.

      Until they don't. The default discussions mentioned not paying bondholders, not cutting programs. Do you not watch congressional proceedings?

    44. Re:I'll buy one... by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      work out how much you spend on gas and oil and servicing, replacement of engine parts over 10 years then compare. plus i bet in 10 years time battery tech would have improved vast amounts by then

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    45. Re:I'll buy one... by mean+pun · · Score: 1

      Europe already pays that. Well, almost at least.

      Which is why we have much smaller and fuel-efficient cars here.

    46. Re:I'll buy one... by Wdomburg · · Score: 1

      That's because Democrats wanted people to believe default was a credible threat. It wasn't. No one who knew what they were talking about thought it was, hence the stability of interest rates.

    47. Re:I'll buy one... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Paying 1.7 to 2 euros for a litre does not kill gasoline cars.

      I have serious doubts that even 2 over euros a litre would do that - and if you go over that then you start hitting a point where creating diesel from coal starts making economical sense for whoever does it. ..and uhh, subsidizes? any us oil import subs could be offset with not taxing gasoline. in most western countries something like ethanol makes sense to use in fuel because of subsidies coupled with not taxing said ethanol like gasoline. gasoline is fucking friggin cheap cheap cheapo cheeeeeeeaaap on the free market.

      (if anyone bothers to check your link they'll notice it just talks about economic cost pulled out of air though, with that logic you could easily say that the true cost is 100 bucks a gallon... or 50, or 200.)

      you want to talk about subbed gas prices go look at some 3rd world countries where it's true..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    48. Re:I'll buy one... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      EVs have many of the same wear items. AC compressors, wheel bearings, brake rotors, ball joints. Yes you do not have the transmission or engine issues but you still many other parts that will have to replaced over time. And yes you even have a cooling system for the battery to worry about.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    49. Re:I'll buy one... by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      The manufacturers don't care about what you want. They sell new cars.

    50. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure. They can take the money from oil subsidies.

      And where will the other $996,000,000,000 come from?

    51. Re:I'll buy one... by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      I'm driving a 12 year old Buick now, and it just needed a new starter. With a few other issues resolved during the replacement, it cost about $600. The following week, we replaced the front tires and had it aligned, for a total of over $300. So the first major work the vehicle has needed cost about the same as replacing the four tires with an alignment would cost.

      What twenty items did your car need replaced?

      And a trade in??? Who is going to accept an EV with a dead battery for anything other than $0.00? The dealer would have to buy a new battery just to push it out the door, since no customer looking to buy a used EV is going to get one that's 10 years old with the original battery.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    52. Re:I'll buy one... by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      work out how much you spend on gas and oil and servicing, replacement of engine parts over 10 years then compare.

      Gas/oil/servicing my daily driver for 10 years works out to about $12,000. That's less than the price differential between the latest model of my car and a new Leaf. In seven years, I've spent less than a thousand dollars for parts (including tires), with none of that going towards the drivetrain. You talk like $10,000 is nothing, but the fact is that you can replace pretty much the entire drivetrain (engine, transmission/transaxle, etc.) in any other car for that amount.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    53. Re:I'll buy one... by Imagix · · Score: 1

      Still, when you are calculating the per mile cost of operating an electric automobile you do need to consider the cost of the battery pack replacement in the figure.

      Do be sure that when calculating the per mile cost on the IC automobile you include the costs of rebuilding the engine/transmission, and the rest of the IC maintenance (timing chains, spark plugs, etc).

    54. Re:I'll buy one... by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      AC compressors, wheel bearings, brake rotors, ball joints.

      Brake rotors would last a lot longer in a Tesla S or any EV with regenerative braking. Friction brakes are only used for emergency braking. It's unlikely you'd ever have to replace them in the life time of the car. And it's not often you'd need to replace the pads.

      Overall there are many times as many parts to go wrong, or that need periodic replacement on an ICEV than an EV.

    55. Re:I'll buy one... by kenai_alpenglow · · Score: 1

      Which 20 $800 items are you talking about? I keep my vehicles until they drop dead. For the first 15 years I *may* have to replace a clutch ($500) at 200,000 miles. Other items are wear items that would exist on either vehicle (brake pads, wiper blades, tires, etc). Over 30+ years I have *never* had any $8000 item to replace. Heck, even rebuilding an engine at 300,000 (head gasket wore out--rest of the engine was in great shape) cost less than $3000... I would love an electric or gas/diesel electric... but the economics aren't there yet.

    56. Re:I'll buy one... by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      We each put our money into whatever is important to us.

      Indeed. And whilst you might want to spend your money on a new car every 3 years. Someone else might want to spend a similar amount of money buying an EV and keeping it a few years longer.

    57. Re:I'll buy one... by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1

      Wrong question. I'm not proposing a solution to the debt crisis; I'm proposing shifting oil subsidies to electric subsidies.

    58. Re:I'll buy one... by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1

      $5 billion a year in direct subsidies, plus $5 trillion in the last decade for oil wars...

    59. Re:I'll buy one... by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      have you added inflation to current prices as well? I'm not saying $10000 is nothing but unless you compare the prices properly, you get an artificial difference.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    60. Re:I'll buy one... by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      I was comparing current pricing for both vehicles as new. Inflation should affect pricing on maintenance items for both cars to a similar degree, so while the maintenance costs for an ICE vehicle may increase, so may the cost of the battery replacement for the EV. The battery may be $10K today, but might be $13K when it comes time to replace it, which makes a substantial difference in the value proposition.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    61. Re:I'll buy one... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Replacement cost is likely to be similar to a petrol engine as well, in the $10-15k range for new but of course much less for a reconditioned one.

      Who charges $10-15K for a new engine?

      That aside, the #1 thing electric car manufacturers could do to boot buyership would be to offer a battery warranty replacement plan, with the cost knowable at the time of purchase.

      "Starting at year 8 you may elect to pay $500 a year through year 20, to cover the cost of battery replacement" or whatever.

      At least that way people could properly calculate their total cost of ownership.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    62. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Youve had the cars 14 & 23 years & never changed the oil?

    63. Re:I'll buy one... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      You picked up one item. From the list. I never they where equal but they are far less unequal than EV enthusiasts claim. My care has 200K+ miles and the transmission and engine have cause only one problem and that was an purge valve on the vapor recovery system. I have had brakes, wheel bearings, shocks, alignment, AC relay, thermostat, cooling fan, and so on. All parts that are on an EV.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    64. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lead acid batteries are designed to pump out cold cranking amps. It's a product that's all about massive discharge of electrons. It shares nearly none of the desirable characteristics required for an electric vehicle, and the "surge" is part of the reason why it's life is low.

    65. Re:I'll buy one... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Actually, what Reagan proved (and George W duplicated) is that deficits don't matter if there's a Republican in the White House, whereas when a Democrat is president any deficit is horribly evil and needs to be eliminated regardless of any other factor.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    66. Re:I'll buy one... by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You picked up one item. From the list.

      It was a short list. You got 25% wrong.

      The list of parts that are either consumable or subject to failure on an ICEV is long. Your anecdote about what you have had to change on your car is irrelevant. An anecdote isn't data. Just because you say you haven't changed the exhaust for example doesn't mean that ICEV drivers in general often have to. It's just one of many consumable parts, piled up high at any service station.

    67. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One big issue I have is battery life.

      I'm driving a 14 year old pickup truck, and a 23 year old sports car, both purchased brand new. Ya know the most common replacement component in both? Batteries.

      I would replace the brake pads, oil, and tires more often than the battery, but that is just me. Battery is supposed to last 5 to 10 years, so why are you replacing it so much?

    68. Re:I'll buy one... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      You are forgetting, I have owned both of those vehicles continuously, for a period of 37 combined years. The reality is:

      Truck: 1 set of radiator hoses, 1 temp sender (early life failure), 1 ABS wheel sensor (early life failure), 1 set of shocks, 1 wheel bearing and spindle, 1 brake refurbishment, 1 transmission service, total cost around $3000. Also, 4 or 5 batteries at about $60 each, maybe 25 oil changes, and I forget how many sets of tires.

      The sports car has needed one alternator, one water pump, one timing belt, 2 total brake services, one clutch cylinder, one clutch replacement, one set of hoses, one radiator - hardly twenty $800 items, most ran around $400.

    69. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A week late, but here it goes.
      From what I’ve seen, the replacement cost for a Tesla battery pack will be approximately $80. And takes less than 4 minutes. You drive into one of their battery swap locations, and they swap out your battery for a new(ish) one.

      Google Tesla Battery Swap

    70. Re:I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GM invested over $1B in building the EV-1. They were betting that the next battery breakthrough was around the corner.
      It wasn't, and when it came time to calculate the cost -- the batteries cost more than the car.
      GM leased the car for $800/mo -- and lost money on the deal.
      They couldn't sell the car, because the batteries inside the car would cost more than people were willing to spend on the car.
      Batteries have come down in cost significantly since then.
      I'm still disappointed in the "Who Killed the Electric Car" documentary because they didn't even mention the cost of EV-1 batteries, but provided excellent coverage on the funerals for the car.

  3. money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A cheap electric car that performs well will sell like crazy.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    1. Re:money? by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1, Informative

      Not if it's range is a few hundred km and the recharge time is 30+ minutes. Many of us may use our cars for in-town trips much of the time but we still want them to be able to go on long distance journeys a few times a year for family holidays. This, plus the current cost, are the only reasons we've not gone electric.

    2. Re:money? by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but we still want them to be able to go on long distance journeys a few times a year for family holidays

      I'd like to take a moment to introduce you to a fledgling little company known as Hertz.

    3. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A cheap electric car that performs well will sell like crazy.

      Define "cheap". I bought my Nissan LEAF because, compared to every other new hybrid or ICE-only vehicle I looked at, it was the cheapest option.

      Now, I was looking to buy new, not used, which means I was looking at a higher price point than a lot of people, and I am willing (and able) to spend a little more money up front in order to save it over the longer term. Within those parameters, though, and making some assumptions about the price of fuel (which, I have to admit, are pretty far off base right now; I didn't anticipate such a dramatic drop), the three EVs I looked at were all significantly cheaper than any of the other options over an eight-year time horizon -- and that was without even considering the lower maintenance costs, didn't factor in the tax credits and included some pretty pessimistic assumptions about EV resale value.

      With the tax credits available, the break-even point against the next-best vehicle (the Honda Insight) as just a bit over two years. And the price of the LEAF has dropped significantly since I did the analysis.

      Assuming a LEAF or an i-MiEV or similar fits your driving needs, they are very cost-effective options. And my LEAF is a lot of fun to drive; it performs quite well.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    4. Re:money? by slinches · · Score: 1

      This is essentially what I came here to say. It just doesn't make financial sense at the prices they want for electric cars. The cost difference between an electric and the gasoline powered equivalent seems to be around $7500 (after the tax rebate) which makes the fuel cost break even point somewhere around 100k miles. It may drop to 80k miles if you consider reduced maintenance costs as well, but there's no avoiding that it'll take a majority of the life of the vehicle to reach the point of being a net gain. Then there's the opportunity cost of not being able to invest that $7500 elsewhere.

      I've done the same sorts of calculations for home PV electric systems and they just don't quite make sense yet. I'll keep checking, though. I like the idea behind both solar and electric cars. They are moving in the right direction of increased efficiency and lower cost while fossil fuel based power will only keep getting more expensive.

      --
      Knowledge Brings Fear
    5. Re:money? by elrous0 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You obviously haven't priced a rental car lately. The figures simply don't add up. Electric costs SERIOUS money over gas, no matter how you cut it. Most people just can't afford it.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    6. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      which means I was looking at a higher price point than a lot of people,

      Well that's why people aren't following you to all buy EVs.

      Incidentally, your post motivated me to check out the Leaf's 0-60 time, which appears to be 7.9 seconds, which is indeed fairly reasonable. So now we're just looking at price.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    7. Re:money? by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Fast, cheap, long range.
      Pick two.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    8. Re:money? by deathguppie · · Score: 1

      also, large cheap bars of gold will sell equally well. Yes, the universe is full of free energy, that doesn't mean that harnessing it to "your" needs is going to be cheap. We live fat and happy off all the work the dinosaurs(mostly plants but I digress) put into creating energy, but never take into account that they used only a small portion of the energy available to us in the solar system. The question is not how to make cheap electric cars but how to make cheap electricity, because then even the creation of the cars becomes more economical.

      --
      once more into the breach
    9. Re:money? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      I would say that is largely a factor of the rarity of getting an electric automobile rental car (there has been a backlog of even getting cars from Tesla for awhile) and the fact that those who might be interested in renting such a vehicle is willing to pay a premium for such an experience. Furthermore, most rental car agencies have the infrastructure at their shops to deal with electric automobiles as that requires some capital outlays that are not needed for gasoline automobiles.

      Simply said, while you are correct that electric automobiles cost more than gasoline automobiles from rental agencies, that is something which over time may change (no promise.... just that it might). I wouldn't expect rental car agencies to be leading the charge for adoption of electric automobiles, but they will be following market conditions and if ordinary consumers are adopting them in large numbers you will also see rental agencies similarly purchasing larger fleets of electric automobiles for largely the same economic reasons.

      I could also see a kWh charge applied to the bill of any electric automobiles returned less than fully charged... and that bill to be insanely high too.

    10. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The article makes the point that long-range isn't necessary for most people (you can rent a car, after all, for long trips).

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    11. Re:money? by slinches · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've been trying to price out electric car ROIs as well and I'm getting basically the opposite outcome. They all seem to be ~$7500 more after the tax credit than the comparable gas powered car (e.g. leaf vs versa S plus) and that pays for quite a lot of gasoline. I calculate ~65k miles worth at 35mpg and $4/gal and that doesn't include the electric power costs.

      Using this calculator I keep coming up with a break even point of about 8 years.
      Cost of New Gas Car: $13970
      Fuel Efficency of Gas Car: 35mpg
      Cost of Gas: $4/gal
      Cost of Electric Car: $21300
      Cost of Electricity: $0.06/kWhr
      kWh/100 miles: 34
      Annual Driving Distance: 10000mi

      --
      Knowledge Brings Fear
    12. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That is a good question, but until it is answered, the question of 'how to make cheap electric cars' will still be useful.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    13. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (you can rent a car, after all, for long trips).

      Or I could spend a hell of a lot less money and buy a real car.

    14. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A cheap electric car that performs well will sell like crazy.

      A cheap [noun] that performs well will sell like crazy.

    15. Re:money? by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Many of us may use our cars for in-town trips much of the time but we still want them to be able to go on long distance journeys a few times a year for family holidays. This, plus the current cost, are the only reasons we've not gone electric.

      For most people, it isn't just a few times a year. The national average commute to work is about 16 miles, or a 32-mile round trip. The worst case range on a Nissan leaf is only 47 miles. So if you have to make an extra stop across town to drop your kid off at school or pick up groceries, then even a driver with an average commute under worst-case conditions might not make it home without a charge. So for about half of all drivers (assuming the median is probably near the mean), electric cars aren't practical or are just barely practical when brand new.

      Oh, but it gets worse. The older the battery gets, the less capacity it has. By the time a car is ten years old, I would expect it to have about half as much range as it did when it was new. Thus, the range of a 10-year-old EV is likely to be inadequate for the overwhelming majority of drivers in their day-to-day activities.

      The magic number is 200 miles for the worst-case range. This ensures that when the vehicle is a few years old, its range will likely still be enough to handle the majority of owners' commutes. This translates to about a 300 mile average range. In other words, the batteries on existing EVs are undersized by more than a factor of 4 from what I would consider to be a usable vehicle. They're simply nowhere close to being ready for prime time.

      --

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

    16. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the point of the post.

      The point is you can hire a GAS car for the rare times you need to make a long journey, and OWN your electric car for driving every other day.

      The GP wasn't suggesting hiring an electric car.

    17. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 2

      which means I was looking at a higher price point than a lot of people,

      Well that's why people aren't following you to all buy EVs.

      No, that doesn't explain it, because there are plenty of other people who buy new cars. In fact, the article is all about new car purchases.

      Incidentally, your post motivated me to check out the Leaf's 0-60 time, which appears to be 7.9 seconds, which is indeed fairly reasonable. So now we're just looking at price.

      It's actually even a little better than that -- not that 7.9 seconds is wrong, but the acceleration feels even zippier than the number expresses, partly because it's front-loaded as compared to ICE vehicles with similar 0-60 times and partly because it feels really cool to accelerate like that in near silence.

      Put it this way... my teenage kids' friends think my LEAF is more awesome than their dads' BMWs and Audis, even though those cars are actually more capable in virtually every respect (and more expensive!). All it takes is me putting the pedal all the way down once and they're sold. And it's not because they care a bit about "saving the planet".

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    18. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is you can hire a GAS car for the rare times you need to make a long journey, and OWN your electric car for driving every other day.

      Or you could save shit to of money and just own a gas car.

    19. Re:money? by noc007 · · Score: 1

      Nissan Leaf. Obtainable price and I'd say it's selling pretty well. In the area I live it's pretty common. I'd never want one, but can't deny how well it's selling. Personally I'd go for a Tesla if I could afford one.

    20. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I'd like to take a moment to introduce you to a fledgling little company known as Hertz.

      Funny... :)

      Point taken, but the truth is, you end up spending so much on a rental that you might as well have just bought the gas car, renting a nice car 4 times a year wipes out the gas savings very quickly.

      Not to mention that you probably can't rent the same thing you drive, it won't be as well equipped as your own car, and so on.

      It gets worse when you move up the food chain, it is very hard and very expensive to rent something big. We take a few road trips a year in our Yukon XL, have you ever tried to rent a Yukon XL? A few places rent Suburbans, but they are basic models without all the nice stuff.

      The people who can afford to buy EV cars aren't going to rent beaters, and to rent the nice cars costs so much, you might as well buy a nice gas car and be done with it.

    21. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think you got it backwards... The poster talking about Hertz was saying that you can buy an EV car to drive around town, when you need to drive cross country 1 or 2 times a year, rent a gas car from Hertz.

    22. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      the three EVs I looked at were all significantly cheaper than any of the other options over an eight-year time horizon

      This is probably what changed your viewpoint to be different to most people.

      1/3 of all new cars are leased, and few that are purchased are kept for 8 years.

      EVs probably do make more sense when looked at over 8 years, but when looked at over a 3 year lease, the fuel savings in that time frame does not compensate for their higher price point.

      Right now, Ford is doing a special on the Fusion, $229 a month, nothing due at signing, total out the door cost every month TT&L included, $229 a month.

      That is NOT for the EV version, they could never do an EV for 39 months for that price, but the gas version is nicely equipped for that price.

      The gas Escape is going for $239 a month, same deal, nothing due at signing, total monthly cost of $239 a month.

    23. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 2

      Well, none of the gas cars I looked at were $14K. The cheapest was $18K (IIRC), mostly because I wanted an apples-to-apples comparison and the EVs are pretty loaded. And, I actually wanted all the gizmos. In addition, I drive quite a bit more than 10K miles per year, which increases the operational cost advantage of EVs.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    24. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      No, long range isn't required, but renting a car several times a year just adds to the total expense, plus the rental is rarely as nice as what you own, plus you're spending more to have an EV in the first place.

      It just makes no sense right now, unless it is purchased on principle, to buy EV cars.

    25. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The average age of a car in the US is currently 11.4 years. Mine is 12 years and I have absolutely no reason to buy another car. I can afford it, easily, but I'm not going to.

      http://www.autonews.com/article/20130806/RETAIL/130809922/

    26. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 1

      Yeah, although I actually did end up leasing my LEAF, mainly because the technology is changing rapidly right now and I think there's an advantage in being able to walk away and by the new hotness in three years, in general I'm a "buy it new and drive it for 15 years" kind of guy. My other vehicle is a 2004 and I expect to get at least another five years out of it.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    27. Re:money? by slinches · · Score: 1

      I guess it's just a case of different priorities then. I see all of those extra gizmos as unnecessary things that are more likely to break and cost more to repair. I don't think I've seen a broken window crank in a car less than 20yrs old and even then it's a $10 fix instead of $150 or more for a new window motor.

      Still, with the prices dropping the way they have been it may only be a few years before it's a better investment for me as well.

      --
      Knowledge Brings Fear
    28. Re:money? by RubberChainsaw · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Cost of Unleaded Regular gasoline in 2003 was avg. $1.50 (http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/surveymost?ap), and is $3.60 in 2013. We can likely expect similar rises in price over the next 10 years.

      You might want to run your cost calculations with a higher value on the price of gas to see a more accurate picture.

      --
      I welcome our new 99% overlords.
    29. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm leasing a leaf for $200/month over 3 years with $2k upfront, that comes down to ~$255/month. Leases work out well for EVs due to dealers taking the federal tax credit off the top.

    30. Re:money? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Point taken, but the truth is, you end up spending so much on a rental that you might as well have just bought the gas car, renting a nice car 4 times a year wipes out the gas savings very quickly.

      You go on long trips four times a year? My family is more like one. For that matter, right now my job has me so far from them that I fly. Anyways, I once attempted to calculate out at what price point it makes sense to own two vehicles for the purposes of saving money - the results were that you'd need to be an extremely prolific driver to beat the 'just own the more capable vehicle in the first place' or 'rent the more capable vehicle when you need it'. Results vary, but it's something like driving 3x the average to make two vehicles worth it, and renting only makes sense if you use it for 10 days or less a year.

      Not to mention that you probably can't rent the same thing you drive,

      Why would you want to, especially if you're renting because you need capabilities(range, cargo space, etc...) that your normal vehicle doesn't have?

      it won't be as well equipped as your own car, and so on.

      It's not tough to beat the feature set of my truck.

      The people who can afford to buy EV cars aren't going to rent beaters, and to rent the nice cars costs so much, you might as well buy a nice gas car and be done with it.

      Remember, quite a few of these types are also the ones that will hire a plane to fly 300 miles rather than drive it, then rent a vehicle on location if appropriate. They'd be renting a car even if they had a gasoline one back home.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    31. Re:money? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      The magic number is 200 miles for the worst-case range. This ensures that when the vehicle is a few years old, its range will likely still be enough to handle the majority of owners' commutes. This translates to about a 300 mile average range. In other words, the batteries on existing EVs are undersized by more than a factor of 4 from what I would consider to be a usable vehicle. They're simply nowhere close to being ready for prime time.

      I haven't seen sales figures, but I think the hottest selling EV today is the Model S, which has around 300 miles of range.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    32. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 2

      I should also mention that when it comes to the "with tax credits" side of the evaluation, I had not only the $7500 federal tax credit, but also a $4800 state tax credit. I'm actually philosophically opposed to subsidies like that, but I'll take any route I can find to legally reduce my tax liability. The fact that I projected a break-even point within the lifetime of the battery warranty even without the credits was impressive, and convincing, to me, though.

      BTW, in practice the car has turned out to be an even better deal than I projected. I hadn't considered the fact that my LEAF requires virtually no maintenance -- really just consumables like tires, wiper blades, etc. -- and I overestimated the amount of charging I'd have to do at home. In practice I do 90% of my charging at the office, letting my employer pay for the electricity. Also I had budgeted for a 240V charger installation at home, but ended up decided that the slow 110V charger that came with the car was adequate.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    33. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Personally I'd go for a Tesla if I could afford one.

      So true.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    34. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      You go on long trips four times a year?

      I go on about 4 trips a year that are well outside the range of an EV. It only has to be more than 100 miles to hit that limit.

      Why would you want to, especially if you're renting because you need capabilities(range, cargo space, etc...) that your normal vehicle doesn't have?

      My normal truck is a $60K Yukon XL Denali, it has air conditioned seats. I think you'll find it hard to find a rental with air conditioned seats. :) You'll also find it hard to rent a truck with more space than mine, short of a U-Haul (and those aren't really very "luxury".

      Frankly, this is the problem. I'm the target customer for Tesla, I can afford one. But I'm not interested because it isn't a full size SUV. Even when it comes out, it is likely to be so expensive, I won't care.

      I could afford it, but I didn't end up with money by making such foolish financial decisions. It either makes economic sense, or it doesn't. When it does, I'm all over EV, I believe EV cars and trucks are the future, once the cost comes down.

      I don't need 250 miles of range in an EV, 75 miles is plenty. The 250 miles doesn't help me because when I need that, I really need 500-1,000 miles of range, refilling my gas tank takes 5 minutes, recharging a 250 mile range SUV takes 5 hours.

      Next year we're taking the kids to Disney World, it is a 2 day drive from Texas, if you drive all day. 3 days if you take your time. An EV doesn't work for that, so I either need a gas truck, or a "Volt" technology version, which I would be interested in, if the cost were about $5K more than my current truck. Any more than that and it isn't worth it.

      Can we fly to Florida? Yes, but I hate the airlines, airports, and all the crap that goes along with flying these days (and I say that as a pilot!), I would much rather drive. Driving doesn't save any money, the cost to drive my truck to Florida and back is actually about the same as 5 coach round trip tickets. I can charter a plane, but that is 4 times the price, but interestingly enough, about the same cost as 5 first class round trip tickets.

      So we drive and make an adventure out of it.

    35. Re:money? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Yes, Tesla is the exception that proves the rule. They're pretty much the only car company who has the slightest idea what they're doing in the EV space, as far as I can tell.

      --

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

    36. Re:money? by nabsltd · · Score: 1

      A cheap electric car that performs well will sell like crazy.

      Define "cheap". I bought my Nissan LEAF because, compared to every other new hybrid or ICE-only vehicle I looked at, it was the cheapest option.

      No more expensive than an a gasoline-powered car of similar ability.

      In the case of the LEAF, a good comp would be the Nissan Versa Note, which is $8000 cheaper (MSRP). At 35mpg for the Versa and with the silly assumption that the cost for charging the LEAF is $0, you still end up with 70,000 miles in the Versa before you hit the price of the LEAF.

      And, neither one of these cars is useful to me, as I need room for more than two adults (yes, I know that both technically have 5 seats, but most of the people I haul aren't friendly enough to sit with their hands in their neighbor's lap) and their cargo. Once you can get a fully-electric vehicle of the same size as a Camry, Accord, or Sentra, then people might be more interested. Unfortunately, by that time, there will be hybrids or fully-gasoline versions of those same sized cars that will still be a better overall deal.

    37. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      I'm curious, if you don't mind sharing... What is the monthly cost of your Leaf and how much (if anything) did you have to put down when you bought it?

      Just trying to compare a real-world example to the current leases on gas cars. I personally like the idea of EV, it just isn't there for me yet.

    38. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 1

      A cheap electric car that performs well will sell like crazy.

      Define "cheap". I bought my Nissan LEAF because, compared to every other new hybrid or ICE-only vehicle I looked at, it was the cheapest option.

      No more expensive than an a gasoline-powered car of similar ability.

      Actually, yes, the gasoline-powered cars of similar features and similar ability (except range), were more expensive for my driving needs. It took about six years to hit the break-even point against the most competitive ICE vehicles... but only without the $13K in tax credits (federal and state). With those, break-even was two years.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    39. Re:money? by Cochonou · · Score: 1

      Your comment is very interesting, because I think it reflects that for some matters, the USA are really unlike any other place. I've made a few times road trips in the US - and I found them really tedious and a chore. And it's not that I don't like to drive - but I can hardly see the pleasure of driving for several hours on a mostly straight road - I'd rather take a high-speed train if it's for watching the scenery. Yet, you're talking about your trip as an adventure, and I don't doubt at all that you really consider it to be a pleasant moment with your family. With that being said, I think it's easy to see why EV will have a hard time in the US market. But bear in mind that there are many other places in the world where they might be much more suited to the people expectations.

    40. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buy gas futures with the difference.

    41. Re:money? by mlts · · Score: 1

      What I've wondered about is why an EV vehicle maker do what a lot of RVs makers do... install an Onan, Kohler, or other inbuilt generator. This way, the vehicle can be truly an EV, and the only thing different is a fuel tank, genset, and charger for the battery, components which are already off the shelf and very well tested, so long term upkeep would be fairly easy.

    42. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the energy bubble is over
      oil prices have stabilized

    43. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really want to be fair don't forget the rising electricity prices too. And I have no idea where you can get electricity for .06. It certainly isn't anywhere in the united states. That link tells me that, in 2011 the average was double what is being used for that cost calculation.

    44. Re:money? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I go on about 4 trips a year that are well outside the range of an EV. It only has to be more than 100 miles to hit that limit.

      Model S range is 300, or are you going camping? As for the seats, I'm more worried about heat(Alaska).

      Frankly, this is the problem. I'm the target customer for Tesla, I can afford one. But I'm not interested because it isn't a full size SUV. Even when it comes out, it is likely to be so expensive, I won't care.

      I disagree; you're not their target 'yet'. They're still selling as many cars as they can make, with responsible expansion. They're planning a small SUV next year, the model X. Don't think that's quite up to your standards yet, but the idea of dual motors powering the front and rear wheels gets my attention.

      I don't need 250 miles of range in an EV, 75 miles is plenty. The 250 miles doesn't help me because when I need that, I really need 500-1,000 miles of range, refilling my gas tank takes 5 minutes, recharging a 250 mile range SUV takes 5 hours.

      You need supercharging stations then. They can slap ~200 miles on in under an hour.

      Can we fly to Florida? Yes, but I hate the airlines, airports, and all the crap that goes along with flying these days (and I say that as a pilot!), I would much rather drive. Driving doesn't save any money, the cost to drive my truck to Florida and back is actually about the same as 5 coach round trip tickets. I can charter a plane, but that is 4 times the price, but interestingly enough, about the same cost as 5 first class round trip tickets.

      Well, as a pilot you should realize that if you charter a plane you don't have to deal with all the airline terminal stuff. It's hilareous watching commercial passangers in Alaska for the first time see a bush pilot with a handgun strapped to his hip walking to his plane.

      I don't disagree that EV's aren't quite 'there' yet. They're in an interesting spot where they're only economic to people who fit very specific profiles, but that's okay; cut the price of the batteries in half again and I think you'd see 10X as many people driving them.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    45. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Sadly we have almost no train system in the US, and we'd do well with it if it wasn't for the airlines and their lobbies.

      Any trip about 500 miles or less is generally better via high speed train than via airplane. The train doesn't have the weather issues of airplanes, nor security problems (it has some, but not as many, you can't really fly a train into a building).

      The other benefit? The train can be electric, it is rather hard to make an electric 737.

      We also have the wide open spaces need to put straight track for high speed trains.

      But no, we can't have those, the airlines would lose too much business. Grr.. :(

      I went on an overnight train trip as a child and have fond memories of it. I've also been on British Rail, nice experience. I love trains. :)

      As for EV in the US market, one of our problems is that our gas is cheap, we don't tax it like Europe does (and probably like we should). So it makes it hard for EVs to make any sense because of cheap gas.

      The range issue is only a real problem for single car households, for anyone who owns 2 cars, one of them could be an EV without range being a serious issue, most of the time. Cost then becomes the primary problem.

      As for other places, I firmly believe that just because something does or does not work for me or people near me, doesn't mean it can't work for someone else. If EV works for you today, great, more power to you. Not for me to judge or to take away.

    46. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Model S range is 300, or are you going camping?

      We have been camping, but that isn't really the reason for the truck. 2 adults and 3 kids on a 5 hour car ride in a Model S is just not the same experience as the same trip in a large SUV. The kids can move around in the back, we have captains chairs in the middle, so they can all sit in the third row, move to the middle row, etc. There is room for games, snacks, etc. There are two DVD screens, one in the second row and one in the third row, that is nice as well.

      The front seats are comfortable and tall, it is rather like sitting up, rather than being in bucket seats, very comfortable for long drives. Gets 12 mpg in the city but closer to 20 mpg on the highway. Not bad for nearly 3 tons going 70 mph. :)

      Then there is price... The Model S is $20K MORE than this truck, for half the vehicle. I don't mind spending a bit more for some things, but that is just nuts. Call me when the Model S is $40K, it will become interesting at that point. The Chevy Volt is also nice technology, but for $40K, GM is out of their minds.

      I disagree; you're not their target 'yet'.

      Fair enough, perhaps not... I did mean more in the "ability to pay" category, but you could well be right. My primary issue is that it also needs to make economic sense. I'm not going to spend $100K just to say I have an EV when the gas version costs half the price If the Model S is $80K, I shudder to think what a EV version of my truck would cost. :(

      Price is my primary concern, with range being the second concern, but I think range can be solved with Volt technology. Supercharging doesn't really compete with filling up with gas, because if 1 hour of charging gets me 200 miles and I'm trying to drive 2,000 miles in 3 days, well, there is a math problem there. :) We need a range extender option for such trips, otherwise we'll have to keep one dead dino burning truck for those trips. I actually believe the future is in EV, not burning gas. I'd love to see a goal, within 50 years, of no longer burning fossil fuels in the US. It can be done, if we're serious about it.

      Well, as a pilot you should realize that if you charter a plane you don't have to deal with all the airline terminal stuff.

      Yes, that is true, but the price is also a lot higher. The cost to charter a plane is about equal to the cost of two weeks at Disney World. I'd rather take a second two week vacation than to pay for a fancy plane flight.

    47. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you think we can expect a similar increase? from 1980-2003 the price of gasoline hovered generally between $1-$1.5

      What exactly makes the last 10 years a good sample for future increases when the previous 23 was flat? It could just be adjusting to a new plateau that will run for the next 10 years...

      The point is, you cannot actually extrapolate your conclusion based on the data you are referencing.

    48. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You didn't include the lower maintenance costs and higher resale value.

      Just because something starts out $7500 higher in cost doesn't mean that $7500 all disappears at resale time.

    49. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And have your kids and grandkids live in an inhospitable wasteland.

    50. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I regularly rent cars for trips longer than 200 miles, a quick two day turn around trip is less than $50 and the savings in wear and tear on my owned vehicle pretty much covers the cost of the rental.

      You are another person who looks at the cost of something, ignores the benefit and declares it not worth it.

    51. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like the Chevy Volt?

    52. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here in Ontario to cost to consumers is around $0.25/kwhr all in and forecast to double over the near term. Regardless of the 'clean and green' propaganda the government is pushing out, real people are moving back to stuff like wood heat (not the cleanest) simply because using electricity is becoming unaffordable. Manufacturers have been saying similar things about the impact of soaring power costs on their bottom line and appear to be voting with their feet. An EV would be a wonderful thing in the universe where power was too cheap to measure (like we were told Mr. Atom would deliver in the future), but not here. Maybe for the very affluent but for ordinary folk conventional tech is the way to go. Gas floats between $5 and $6/gallon. Solar panels to recharge might be an idea, but because this is Canada one has to figure 4x the cost in the US. So EVs are still a nice idea for some rich guys in California but not even a dream in rural Ontario.

    53. Re:money? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Then there is price... The Model S is $20K MORE than this truck, for half the vehicle. I don't mind spending a bit more for some things, but that is just nuts. Call me when the Model S is $40K, it will become interesting at that point. The Chevy Volt is also nice technology, but for $40K, GM is out of their minds.

      It's mostly the battery that's killing the Model S's price. With the Volt since it still has an engine it has all the complexity of a IC vehicle AND that of an EV, plus a still fairly substantial cost for the battery.

      Around a decade ago I said that there's nothing wrong with EV's that a battery that costs half as much for double the capacity wouldn't fix. This was back in the lead-acid/NiMH days, LiIon came along and doubled capacity, but also doubled cost. It's made a lot of gains on cost since then, and actually has a theoretical max cost lower than that of NiMH, but it's still about twice as expensive as I'd like it to be.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    54. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For most people, it isn't just a few times a year. The national average commute to work is about 16 miles, or a 32-mile round trip.

      Looks like a fallacy to me. If the average is 16 miles and we assume a bell curve distribution then half of the population has a shorter commute. When you say "For most people" you actually mean "Less than half".
      With the round trip you assume that there is no possibility to charge the EV at work. I think you'd be surprised how many companies that would actually be willing to install charging possibilities just for the ability to claim that they care about the environment, the parking lot where I work have a couple of dedicated spots for electric vehicles. (Not that it matters to me, I live within walking distance.)
      But even then, everyone have different needs and we can't expect everyone to change to EV immediately. The question is why not even 10% are driving an EV when it is clear that the current capabilities are more than adequate for a far larger part of the population.

    55. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Under what condition does a Leaf have a 47 mile range? For my habits, the Leaf is perfect enough. My wife has a gas powered car and I have the electric for my daily commute (she works at home). When I need to go farther, I just use her car. It's a match made in heaven. I personally think the BMW style "range extender" method is the best way to go; however, that price is way too high for what you get - even for the EV lover.

      Here is my numbers (different for others, obv)

      $150 - price in gas that I paid before buying my leaf -- one could argue that I would have paid less with a new car purchase over my old 20 mi/gal vehicle, but I could have also continued to drive this one.

      + $30 - increase in electric bill from charging
      + $219 - monthly cost on my 2 yr Nissan Leaf lease
      - $2000 - down payment on the lease which would bring the "real" monthly cost to: 302
      - $900 - cost of the charger + installation for my EV ($37/mo if you only count it toward the leaf's lease - even though I'll continue to use afterward)
      + $300 - tax credit on EV charge install ( $37 reduced to 25.9/mo)
      -----
      True cost: $208/mo for a 2 year lease on a "fully loaded" Nissan Leaf, leather, navigation package, etc. Sure, it's not as roomy as an Altima or another "midsize" sedan, but that's my tradeoff for saving money in the long run.

      Lets not forget the lack of maintenance required on an electric car. Oil change? Nope. Transmission fluid? No transmission. Sure, the battery needs to be replaced, but if you factor in the fact that I basically rotate my tires every 7500 miles only, it's a pretty significant win for me.

    56. Re:money? by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Not really. There are factors holding the price at the pump to the $3-4 range. One of them is that uptake of electric cars would be higher if the price of fuel was much past the break-even point on cost for electrics. OPEC wants more money, but they don't want to kill their market.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    57. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cost of Unleaded Regular gasoline in 2003 was avg. $1.50 (http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/surveymost?ap), and is $3.60 in 2013. We can likely expect similar rises in price over the next 10 years.

      The price of gasoline in 1993 was abt $1.25. Why is the 2003-2013 rate more credible than 1993-2003? Keep in mind that fracking has increased us crude production by 35% in the last 2 years and are likely to exceed imports in the next year or so.

    58. Re:money? by fnj · · Score: 1

      Cost of Electricity: $0.06/kWhr

      Where did you pull that number from? I pay $0.22/kWh for my electricity. I expect that's a lot closer to what most people in the US and Europe pay.

    59. Re:money? by fnj · · Score: 1

      Fast, cheap, long range.
      Pick two.

      OK, I'll bite. Which two of those does ANY EV have? I would say EVs have zero to one of those attributes. There are plenty of gas cars that have all three though.

    60. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many places have real good transit. Its just the US that does not have real good transit but you can travel many places very inexpensively others less so. To buy a car to go somewhere for 2 weeks is not a smart decision. There are many that need a better range but transportation in the US is backwards but it exists. If electric cost less I would want nothing else.

    61. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually even a little better than that -- not that 7.9 seconds is wrong, but the acceleration feels even zippier than the number expresses, partly because it's front-loaded as compared to ICE vehicles with similar 0-60 times and partly because it feels really cool to accelerate like that in near silence.

      Oh, come on. You can't get away with shit like that on /. The measurement is 7.9. How it feels is just you sniffing your own farts.

    62. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The National Average for commute range is nice, but in your larger States, not applicable. I realize in the NorthEast you can drive for 3-4 hours and cross several States. What many don't understand is I can start driving from Houston headed West and I will still be in Texas TWELVE HOURS later. A run to Dallas from my home takes ~5.

      For fifteen years my one way commute was 46 miles. I only recently have been able to cut it down to 23 miles one way. ( And I'm thrilled about it )
      Factor in some traffic variables ( weather, wrecks, gridlock, police, what-have-you ) and all of a sudden the low range electrics are quite out of the question. Hell, the damn thing may not even make a round trip into Houston from my house if any traffic issues come up.

      Additionally, in flood prone areas, EV's are probably a bad idea.

      To top it off, imo, either the EV's are too expensive ( Tesla ) or just tiny and / or ugly as hell. Or all of the above :D

    63. Re:money? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      Hook it up to a charger at work. No big deal.

      Work doesn't have chargers? Lobby for them.

    64. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the savings in wear and tear on my owned vehicle pretty much covers the cost of the rental.

      I can't imagine too many situations in which a 500 mile trip would incur $50 worth of wear and tear on a vehicle.

    65. Re:money? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      -- and I overestimated the amount of charging I'd have to do at home. In practice I do 90% of my charging at the office, letting my employer pay for the electricity.

      And your employer is fine with this? I can see it if you are a key player in a professional office environment, but for common workers I don't see management saying "Sure, use our electricity, we don't mind. By the way, your request for a raise has been approved."

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    66. Re:money? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      (it has some, but not as many, you can't really fly a train into a building)

      Back when I drove monorails for Disney, I often did that dozens of times a day. ;-)

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    67. Re:money? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen sales figures, but I think the hottest selling EV today is the Model S, which has around 300 miles of range.

      That's only if you order it with the (pricey) high-capacity battery option. It's about 30% less without it.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    68. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the cost of gas was also ~$1.50 in 1985. unless you give a good
      reason that the cost of gas in the next 10 years should model
      2003-2013 rather than 1985-2003, i would think the slowly rising
      prices is more likely.

    69. Re:money? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      I don't think I've seen a broken window crank in a car less than 20yrs old and even then it's a $10 fix instead of $150 or more for a new window motor.

      The problem I keep seeing is that manufacturers keep using the cheap and fragile Bowden cable assemblies for the windows instead of the old scissor-bar mechanism that was a lot more durable. Stainless steel cable over nylon pulleys is pretty much a recipe for ensuring maintenance revenue.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    70. Re:money? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Tesla S would fit your figures. But beyond that, for the commuter who occasionally has to go further, the plug-in hybrid is possible answer. Most of the time you'd be using electric, but with gas available for those times when you go further.

    71. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You might want to run your cost calculations with a higher value on the price of gas to see a more accurate picture."

            It isn't just gas that's gone up. Grid electricity in the 1980s was $.04/kilowatt now it's $.12/kilowatt. All energy is going up, not just gas. There's also replacing the battery pack in what wouldn't be even the half life of a gas car which isn't a cheap or environmentally sound issue in itself.

      celle

    72. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      How much of the 80k cost is the battery? Knowing that will give us an idea of how much it can come down.

      My current objection to buying an EV has to do with price more than anything else, fix the price and I'm very interested.

    73. Re:money? by celle · · Score: 1

      "Fast, cheap, long range.
      Pick two."

            That's for Electric vehicles. The gas car has all three, I pick that.

      Until EV stops forcing useless often artificial choices on us it will never take off as more than a specialized transport medium.

      If these big companies wanted to get the market going they should be selling the cars under cost if necessary to gain entry and market development/dominance like what China often does. Right, it's all about ball-less waiting for the other guy.

    74. Re:money? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Oh, come on. You can't get away with shit like that on /. The measurement is 7.9. How it feels is just you sniffing your own farts.

      Not so. 0-60 time is just a common measurement for low-end torque and its impact on acceleration, which feels good to many people (pretty much anybody who enjoys a good roller coaster).

      The electrics have all of their low-end torque at 0 mph and a strong electric will plaster you against your seat. 0-60 time isn't just about merging onto the highway.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    75. Re:money? by gutnor · · Score: 1

      According to Tesla, their expected production capacity was 20,000 cars per year. 580,258 cars were sold in the US ... in October 2013 alone.

    76. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 1

      -- and I overestimated the amount of charging I'd have to do at home. In practice I do 90% of my charging at the office, letting my employer pay for the electricity.

      And your employer is fine with this? I can see it if you are a key player in a professional office environment, but for common workers I don't see management saying "Sure, use our electricity, we don't mind. By the way, your request for a raise has been approved."

      Yep. My employer installed the EV chargers specifically so employees can use them.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    77. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 1

      It's actually even a little better than that -- not that 7.9 seconds is wrong, but the acceleration feels even zippier than the number expresses, partly because it's front-loaded as compared to ICE vehicles with similar 0-60 times and partly because it feels really cool to accelerate like that in near silence.

      Oh, come on. You can't get away with shit like that on /. The measurement is 7.9. How it feels is just you sniffing your own farts.

      Nonsense. Neither EVs nor ICEVs accelerate with perfect consistency. There are peaks and dips in the acceleration based in many different factors, but one difference that is fairly consistent is that EVs have maximum acceleration at zero mph, while ICEVs need to spool up a bit. The result is that the EV gives you a real kick in the pants, and does it instantaneously. An ICEV that meets the same 0-60 time has to have greater acceleration later in order to make up for the slower start, and in fact if an EV and an ICEV have the same 0-60 time the ICEV will almost certainly be faster 0-90.

      There's a YouTube video of a Tesla racing a Dodge Viper that demonstrates this; the Tesla wins the quarter-mile drag race quite handily, but you see that the Viper is actually moving faster towards the end -- but it can't make up what it lost from the Tesla's phenomenal hole shot.

      So, what I said is exactly true: The LEAF feels zippier than an ICEV that has the same 0-60 time, mostly because of that initial kick in the pants. After that begins to taper off, though, people are still very impressed because the car continues to accelerate at a very healthy pace, with no more sound than a quiet whine. The combination is... very cool, and much more interesting than an ICEV that does 0-60 in 7.9 s.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    78. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 1

      I pay $230 per month, and put nothing down on the vehicle, though I did have to pay sales tax on the difference between sale price and residual value. That's with 12K miles per year mileage allowance (which does restrict my usage of the car a little). I actually pay almost nothing in electricity costs for it, since I mostly charge at work, so my total expense for commuting is basically that lease fee, plus insurance and taxes. If I did pay for the electricity I'd be spending about $30 per month for it.

      My car is an SL (the high end trim) with GPS navigation, XM radio, backup camera, power everything, heated seats and steering wheel, allow wheels, etc. Sticker price was around $36K. Nissan got the $7500 federal tax credit, I got about $2K of the $5K Colorado tax credit (it's pro-rated based on the difference between sale price and residual value).

      Oh, yeah, forgot about that part; the state of Colorado effectively paid the sales tax back to me through the tax credit, plus a little.

      All in all, I'm very pleased with both the car and what it costs me to drive it.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    79. Re:money? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      With the tax credits available, the break-even point against the next-best vehicle (the Honda Insight) as just a bit over two years

      So, it's a good deal if other people pay for a good sized chunk of the costs of an EV? Makes sense. Getting other people to pay for your stuff always makes them cheaper....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    80. Re:money? by swillden · · Score: 1

      With the tax credits available, the break-even point against the next-best vehicle (the Honda Insight) as just a bit over two years

      So, it's a good deal if other people pay for a good sized chunk of the costs of an EV? Makes sense. Getting other people to pay for your stuff always makes them cheaper....

      It's a better deal, yes. But it's a good deal even without the tax credits. Break-even in that case was just under six years.

      And, I never asked anyone to pay for my car. If there's a legal way for me to reduce my tax liability, however, I will take it.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    81. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Interesting, thanks for sharing. That is a very good lease price, I can see why you'd take it. We don't have the $5K tax credit in Texas, and Texas charges sales tax on the whole price of the car when you lease, making car leases a worse deal here in Texas sadly.

      Thanks for sharing and glad it works for you. It will be interesting to see where it all goes.

    82. Re:money? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Well, that a nice thing to have. It factors into the perks offered for the jobs then.

      I remember a couple stories from a while ago that people assumed they would plug in at work, and their bosses either told them "no", or charged them for the amount of electricity used.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    83. Re:money? by amorsen · · Score: 1

      OPEC is not sitting on a sufficient fraction of the oil market to actually have much influence anymore. If they try anything, Canada will just boil some more sand.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    84. Re:money? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I've heard that the shorter ranged car is selling substantially worse though - especially since you don't get access to things like supercharging stations without it.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    85. Re:money? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Well, let's consider:
      60kwh Tesla : $62.4k, 85kwh Tesla : $72.4k
      Cost for 25kwh: $10k (roughly, the 85kwh model has a few other premium options like free access to supercharge stations)
      This gives me ~$24k for 60kwh, $34k for 85kwh. Or almost half the cost of the car.

      Browsing around searching for the cost of the battery pack shows that Tesla is offering to sell replacement batteries upfront for $10-12k, but that's with deliveries 8 years in the future and currently LiIon batteries are dropping ~10% a year. 'Rule of 72' means that in roughly 7 years the batteries should cost half as much to make. Combined with the interest, that would be inline with the current cost estimate.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    86. Re:money? by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      Like flying, renting a car is rarely practical or worth the trouble for spontaneous or mid-range trips.

    87. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I do it all the time for mid-range trips.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    88. Re:money? by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      Maybe you have a system worked out - most people don't and don't care to. This is especially true for trips in the 100 - 300 mile range.

      To be fair, I too rent a car when I'm going on a trip of that range for business or need a larger vehicle for a family trip. Those are ones that are pre-planned though. I wouldn't go to the trouble for a spontaneous mid-range trip.

    89. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't go to the trouble for a spontaneous mid-range trip.

      I'm interested how the planning is helpful. I usually just walk into the rental shop the day I leave and grab a car.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    90. Re:money? by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      The planning helps in finding a good deal at a rental location that is nearby. The locations with any decent selection tend to be concentrated at the airport unless the car is reserved days in advance. The locations in the suburbs tend to be bare bones.

      A person can easily lose half a day driving to the rental location, bringing it back home & packing it up. Even if you just leave on your trip directly from the rental location, it is likely to be completely out of the way.

      Again, it sounds like you have a system that you've worked out and that the rental locations are convenient to your routes. That is more than most people would care to do for an unplanned trip.

    91. Re:money? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm probably lucky in that I have several rental car places a few minutes from my house/work.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    92. Re:money? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Under what condition does a Leaf have a 47 mile range?

      I have no idea. Those are Nissan's numbers, not mine. My guess would be that it involves low temperatures with the heat on, driving over a mountain. In other words, my daily commute, but colder.

      --

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

    93. Re:money? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      That's nice in theory, and actually might be successful where I work. Not so much for checkout clerks at Target. Remember that folks working near the lower end of the wage range are the majority, and for those folks, asking for an electric car charging station is approximately tantamount to asking their employer to double their hourly wage for a year. The only sort of lobbying that is going to make that happen is lobbying your local government to pass ordinances that make a certain number of charging stations mandatory for every business with more than five employees....

      --

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

    94. Re:money? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Frankly, this is the problem. I'm the target customer for Tesla, I can afford one.

      You're not the target customer for Tesla because:

      But I'm not interested because it isn't a full size SUV.

      Telsa dont want to make SUV's.

      This may not occur to you but a lot of people dont want an SUV. They're slow, unwieldy and prone to rolling in an accident.

      You wanting an SUV isn't Tesla's problem, it's yours.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    95. Re:money? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      This may not occur to you but a lot of people dont want an SUV. They're slow, unwieldy and prone to rolling in an accident.

      I totally get that not everyone wants one, no worries there...

      But slow? Really? Have you driven one? It will do 0 to 60 in 6.5 seconds and the quarter mile at 90 mph in 15 seconds. The Toyota Camry V6 does 0-60 in 8.5 seconds and the quarter mile at 85 mph in 16.5 seconds. 403 horsepower and 417 lb-ft of torque can overcome all that weight, the only issue is fuel economy sucks, no way to sugar coat that one.

      For a 3 ton truck, that isn't "slow". Actually, for anything that isn't "slow", it is quite reasonable. It isn't a sports car, but sports cars have their own limits and issues.

      As for handling? You might be shocked, but it isn't that far off from the Toyota Camry V6 on it's skidpad numbers (less than 10% difference), it handles really well and has a tight turning radius, many people are shocked the first time they see it turn around on a 2 lane road without running off the other side.

      Can it roll over? Of course, it is top heavy, that is a concern with such vehicles. You simply can't drive it like a small car, you have to leave a little more room and not try and drive the slalom with it, however if you want to try, it will do it at 54 mph, which is really good for a 3 ton top heavy truck. The Toyota Camry V6 will only do it at 59 mpg.

    96. Re:money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why cherry pick your data? why 2003 to 2013? why not 1993 to 2003?

      while gas prices are sure to rise over the next 100 years, to assume will see the same short term trend back to back is stupid.

      2003 to 2013 was a correction. it will last us a while.

    97. Re:money? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      Actually getting one installed at a Target is fairly likely if requested. Might not be in the employee parking area, but I imagine you could use it for an hour without anybody complaining. Ok, so my local target has a few more Teslas running around than most, but still possible on a broader scale.

    98. Re:money? by hab136 · · Score: 1

      IRS mileage rate for 2013 is 56.5 cents per mile, so 500 miles would be $282.50.

      Subtract the cost of gas (US new car average of 24.9 mpg, so 20.08 gallons @ $3.269 US average = $65.64) and you're left with $216.86 as the cost of operating a car for a 500 mile trip.

      The IRS rates are high, you say. This calculator says between $0.15 - $0.30 per mile for wear and tear. Let's use the low figure, $0.15, which gives us 500 x $0.15 = $75.

      Note that "wear and tear" includes depreciation, because the more miles you drive, the lower the car is worth. A 2002 car with 20,000 miles is worth more than the same car with 200,000 miles. It also includes tires, brakes, oil, timing belts, etc because the more you drive, the more often you have to change these things.

      Many people don't count those as per-mile costs, and instead act like a new clutch or timing belt is a total surprise, instead of an expected result after so many miles of driving. However, they are valid per-mile costs, and if you budget appropriately, you likely won't ever have $1,000 surprise repairs - you'll just have expected repairs.

      So if it costs the rental car company $75 and they charge you $50, how do they make money? Well, it doesn't cost *them* $75.. they have their own mechanics to do oil changes, brakes, tires, etc, and they get bulk rates on parts and fluids.

  4. Relatively cheap global oil price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come back when oil is $500

    1. Re:Relatively cheap global oil price by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Come back when oil is $500

      That will be some time in the next couple of years when a loaf of bread costs $50. It is just a matter of time.

    2. Re:Relatively cheap global oil price by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      When oil is $500 per barrel, electricity is unlikely to remain at 12 cents per kilowatt hour.

      If power from the wall is 60 cents a kilowatt hour and oil is $500 a barrel, what has changed?

    3. Re:Relatively cheap global oil price by kanweg · · Score: 1

      What has changed? The price of solar panels. It will have come down even further.

      The sun will be providing us with the same amount of energy every year for quite a few years to come. No shortages are expected.

      More to the point: take a closer look at the math.

      Item 1 $12
      Item 2 $120
      Difference in price (e.g saving): $108

      Both items 5 times more expensive, the saving is $540. That is $432 more in the piggy bank.

      Anyone doing the math on EV vs ECI should consider:
      - more than the purchase price
      - when doing the math, don't base the calculation on the current fuel/electricity cost, but the average cost over the next few years. (I drive ICE, here the price has gone up in about 8 years with over 30%, and there have been periods when it was 40% higher).

      Bert
      You could consider helping the environment by buying electric now/encouraging others to buy. Technological progress needs sales.

    4. Re:Relatively cheap global oil price by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      What has changed? The price of solar panels. It will have come down even further.

      Perhaps, or perhaps they will go up as well.

      To get oil to $500 a barrel, you need massive inflation. Oil is priced in dollars, it won't go anywhere near that high, short of a major war, major shortage, or major inflation. All of those are likely to affect the price of everything.

      Anyone doing the math on EV vs ECI should consider:
      - more than the purchase price
      - when doing the math, don't base the calculation on the current fuel/electricity cost, but the average cost over the next few years. (I drive ICE, here the price has gone up in about 8 years with over 30%, and there have been periods when it was 40% higher).

      Where is "here"? In the US, gas prices are actually lower than they were 8 years ago. They go up and down, but overall, gas is unlikely to have huge spikes in the near future, not the timeframe of owning a car in any case.

      As for "more than the purchase price", if you're referring to helping the environment, I'm not sure that is much of a valid reason. Replacing gas with coal doesn't strike me as a huge improvement. Yes, in theory coal fired power plants can be "clean", but most aren't, and I don't think many in Texas are very clean.

      Frankly, if my goal is to help the environment, paying the premium to install solar PV on my roof would do more than buying an EV would.

    5. Re:Relatively cheap global oil price by Teancum · · Score: 1

      When oil is $500 per barrel, electricity is unlikely to remain at 12 cents per kilowatt hour.

      If power from the wall is 60 cents a kilowatt hour and oil is $500 a barrel, what has changed?

      That was sort of my point. It was more or less bringing up the issue of quantitative easing that has been policy of the Federal Reserve for the past couple of years and has really kicked into overdrive this past year. When the money supply is expanded by trillions of dollars, you should expect massive inflation to result.

      Yes, this isn't going to be restricted to just oil purchases.

      The other "shoe" to drop here too is a what-if possibility that the U.S. Dollar will no longer be the world reserve currency. There is no special status to the U.S. dollar, and a number of countries that are active (in particular China and India) in finding a "replacement currency" to dollars. If the U.S. Dollar loses that global reserve currency status, you will see the price of oil in particular skyrocket and become insanely expensive in comparison to other forms of energy for average consumers.

      For those who suggest there is no inflation, assuming that the same standards for measuring inflation in 1980 were applied today, the current inflation rate would be hovering around 10% annually at the moment. Most ordinary Americans know in their gut this has been the case, even though official statistics substantially understate this inflation rate.

      Hopefully there are some very smart people at the Federal Reserve that actually care about ordinary people and don't want to see the U.S. economy go down in flames. That is a whole bunch of religious-type of faith in people that don't exactly have a very good track record in deserving that kind of faith.

  5. Nowhere to plug one in by spaceyhackerlady · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's as simple as that.

    I live in an apartment building. I've discussed the matter with the building management but we haven't come up with an answer. While new buildings must have electrical hookups for electric cars, there is no incentive to retrofit old buildings.

    ...laura

    1. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by mysidia · · Score: 0

      I live in an apartment building. I've discussed the matter with the building management but we haven't come up with an answer. While new buildings must have electrical hookups for electric cars, there is no incentive to retrofit old buildings.

      The problem is you already live in that building..... get lots of prospective renters asking about it, and making clear the absence of the hookup is the reason they'll be looking elsewhere; at a time when the building owner is having trouble filling up all the vacancies.

    2. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by elrous0 · · Score: 2

      Chicken, meet egg.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    3. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      This is a chicken-and-egg problem, but once a critical mass buys electric cars, you'll start to seeing them in parking lots at your apartment, work, at restaurants, and many other places you spend time. They will do this because it offers a competitive advantage, the same way that offering free wifi does.

      Gas stations will also provide this service, but I figure they will mostly go extinct once the entire country converts to electric (assuming this actually happens).

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    4. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gas stations will also provide this service, but I figure they will mostly go extinct once the entire country converts to electric (assuming this actually happens).

      Probably not. Gas stations make almost no money on gas. Cigarettes, soda, candy, coffee, etc. People will still buy that. Gas gets people to come in, but they will still stop if they want that coffee.

      But there just won't be one on EVERY corner. Probably will move to less expensive locations and be replaced by more drug stores, but convenience stores will still exist and do fairly well.

    5. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by girlintraining · · Score: 2

      Chicken, meet egg.

      It wouldn't be hard to have outdoor chargers; the problem is that they suck a lot of juice and you'd attract leeches like nobody's business without some way to charge them and do so securely -- ie, if the charger was tampered with it or disconnected would shut off. Tragedy of the commons, theft of services, etc.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    6. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by Dahamma · · Score: 2

      That's an easily solvable problem. There is no reason that an apartment complex or a random charger on the street needs to be *free*. Charge per hour, just like a parking meter. In fact I can't imagine that isn't going to be the future of urban electric charging anyway. If the majority of cars in the future are electric, then pay chargers will be almost as common as parking meters...

    7. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by hawguy · · Score: 1

      It's as simple as that.

      I live in an apartment building. I've discussed the matter with the building management but
      we haven't come up with an answer. While new buildings must have electrical hookups
      for electric cars, there is no incentive to retrofit old buildings.

      ...laura

      I've got the same problem, but I live in a Condo. I have a detached garage with an assigned space that's about 40 feet from my electric meter and main panel. I'd have to run conduit under a driveway and 2 sidewalks to get power to my parking space. Needless to say, it wouldn't be cheap.

      I heard that Palo Alto is considering requiring new construction to put in appropriate provisions to install a charge station in the garage. (no need to run wires, just rough in penetrations and/or conduit to allow wires to be run later if desired). If they had done that here, then putting in a charge station would be trivial, just pulling wires through conduit. At least, trivial if only one or two people want a charge station. I'm not sure that the utility feed is sized to handle 30 charge stations since no one here has central air conditioning and has gas heat + cooking.

    8. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by LoztInSpace · · Score: 1

      Or combine the two. Parking meters with an option for recharge (or chargers with an option for just parking if you prefer).
      You could even use the car as a battery and sell power you harvested overnight back into the grid during the day in exchange for parking costs.

    9. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Gas stations will also provide this service, but I figure they will mostly go extinct once the entire country converts to electric (assuming this actually happens).

      Probably not. Gas stations make almost no money on gas. Cigarettes, soda, candy, coffee, etc. People will still buy that. Gas gets people to come in, but they will still stop if they want that coffee.

      But there just won't be one on EVERY corner. Probably will move to less expensive locations and be replaced by more drug stores, but convenience stores will still exist and do fairly well.

      So you're saying that gas stations will still exist, but there will be less of them and they'll become convenience stores and drug stores. Isn't that the same as saying that they'll no longer exist?

    10. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by number11 · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be hard to have outdoor chargers; the problem is that they suck a lot of juice and you'd attract leeches like nobody's business without some way to charge them and do so securely

      I dunno how you'd do it for large apartment buildings, but with the smaller (4-10 unit) ones in cold climates around here it's not uncommon for each unit to have an assigned parking space, with a plugin that runs off the unit's electric meter and can be turned on and off from the apartment. Right now they're intended for plugin block heaters, but no reason you couldn't use the same for a 110V charge, or put in 220V ones.

    11. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      The first one is exactly what I was talking about and think will be the case (modern parking meters require power, might as well distribute it). The sec one not so much since a two-way meter requires significant extra up-front hardware investment... who knows in the future, but for now these ideas need to *make* money as a whole to get traction :)

    12. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude! Don't say rough in penetrations!

    13. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Given energy densities and such, it'd need to be at least 220V.

      A model S uses 330 wh per mile. Because the compoents tend to get more efficient as they get bigger, leafs are in the same category.

      This translates to, with some overhead, and allowances for waste, about 5 miles an hour charging at 120V@15A, or 40 miles over an 8 hour period. Not 'quite' enough for what I'd consider sufficient overhead for the 'averge' round trip commute.
      Kick it up to 240V@15A(max you could theoretically do without running heavier wire, which would really cost), and you're looking at 80 miles in the same time.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    14. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I've got the same problem, but I live in a Condo. I have a detached garage with an assigned space that's about 40 feet from my electric meter and main panel. I'd have to run conduit under a driveway and 2 sidewalks to get power to my parking space. Needless to say, it wouldn't be cheap.

      Not cheap, no, but with the hydrolic drills and such they'd be able to punch a line over there pretty easily without touching the driveway or sidewalks, for less than you might think.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    15. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by mysidia · · Score: 1

      I dunno how you'd do it for large apartment buildings, but with the smaller (4-10 unit) ones in cold climates around here it's not uncommon for each unit to have an assigned parking space, with a plugin that runs off the unit's electric meter and can be turned on and off from the apartment.

      You probably need a little box, that you attach the charger to, then plug it into your car, and enter in a user id and secret PIN number, to power on.

      The charger is powered up, and starts charging your car.

      After a specified duration, kilowatt hours, OR whenever the load drops below a threshold (charging done); the power to the outlet shuts off.

      At the end of the month, you pay a small service fee plus kilowatt hours spent.

    16. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by mlts · · Score: 1

      There will be landlords who will tell them, "if you want chargers, find some place that has them." Of course, there will be places that will have them... but their rent will more than offset those costs. Especially in towns like Austin where apartments get filled up regardless of amenities.

      It may make a good selling point, but it likely will come with a pretty stiff price tag, likely more cost total than the costs of a gasser.

    17. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by xaxa · · Score: 1

      It would be interesting to compare America (and Japan) to elsewhere, where 230V is the normal voltage. I don't know how much power you can draw in other countries, but in the UK it's 3000W (13A at 230V), and off-the-shelf appliances exist that have this power draw (electric room heaters, kettles).

      The electric grid would probably require improvements if the load pattern changed with lots of EVs, but for an individual buying a car now, powering it should be much simpler.

    18. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by mysidia · · Score: 1

      There will be landlords who will tell them, "if you want chargers, find some place that has them." Of course, there will be places that will have them... but their rent will more than offset those costs. Especially in towns like Austin where apartments get filled up regardless of amenities.

      Well..... If they have a Swipe-Your-Credit-Card machine.... perhaps the charging outfit could make them money, selling to the public in general, not necessarily just tenants.

      A parking space, and a bench for the vehicle owner to sit at and wait for their car to charge, is a lot cheaper for a landlord to deliver, than an entire apartment unit

    19. Re:Nowhere to plug one in by LauraHwhatever · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Some apartment complexes are starting to do just that. At the apartment complex where I live they've installed one charger (that takes credit cards) with at least one more in the pipeline.

  6. Price !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    How about they're too fucking expensive? Ever considered that?

    1. Re:Price !!! by MoFoQ · · Score: 1

      amen!

      if I could afford it, I'd get myself a Tesla Model S

      Range is a concern too.

      also, some of the other electric cars....are just ugly.
      If Tesla can make an electric car that looks as nice and sexy as the Model S, why can't the other manufacturers?
      Perhaps, they don't want to or think it won't sell.
      Of course, if you make something that people want and at a reasonable price, it wouldn't be a problem.

    2. Re:Price !!! by Pentium100 · · Score: 2

      also, some of the other electric cars....are just ugly.
      If Tesla can make an electric car that looks as nice and sexy as the Model S, why can't the other manufacturers?
      Perhaps, they don't want to or think it won't sell.

      Two reasons:
      1. Battery technology is not there yet - so the car has to be as aerodynamically efficient as possible. A Mercedes W140 with an electric motor probably would not go very far.
      2. If your electric car looks exactly the same as a gasoline car, how will anyone be able to see that you are driving an electric car and saving the planet?

    3. Re:Price !!! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Battery technology is not there yet

      It well and truly is for an earlier position of that goalpost. People were saying "call me back when they can do a hundred miles - as if" not so long ago. Now the range is as long as some small fuel driven cars so they make sense for commuters.
      I don't have one, but it makes perfect sense for some people.
      I'd say cost is a far bigger deal that batteries are even if you use the strawman of twenty year old batteries instead of what you can get retail now.

    4. Re:Price !!! by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      Did you read the whole sentence? Yes, electric cars can now go 200km and more on a single charge. However, they do not look like (and are not the same size as) Mercedes W140. To be able to go 200km or more on a single charge the car has to be extremely efficient - including the air resistance, so you cannot make a car that looks better if that compromises the efficiency.

      Also, there are no electric SUVs as far as I know. I wonder why...

      The range of fuel burning cars does not really matter - the tank can be refilled in a few minutes (including paying for the fuel) and the fuel stations are very common.

    5. Re:Price !!! by Teancum · · Score: 1

      If Tesla can make an electric car that looks as nice and sexy as the Model S, why can't the other manufacturers?
      Perhaps, they don't want to or think it won't sell.
      Of course, if you make something that people want and at a reasonable price, it wouldn't be a problem.

      In following the development of the Roadster and subsequently the Model S over the years, I've gained respect towards automobile companies and what they need to go through in terms of producing a production automobile (of any kind... Diesel, gasoline, or even electric). The government safety requirements alone are among many reasons why Tesla is the first genuinely new American automobile manufacturer to be remotely successful in the past hundred years. Otherwise, all you see is a serious of continual consolidation as the capital needed to produce an automobile and meet all of the legal requirements is huge.

      The only previous company that even came close to duplicating that effort was Tucker Automobiles, and even that was a sort of financial disaster for a great many reasons including claims that the major automobile companies deliberately sabotaged them legally. Other companies started in other countries where they either had huge government support or at least became well established companies in other countries first (with presumably more lax standards) and then made specific automobiles which targeted the American market. An example of a company which simply gave up after trying was Isuzu, which used to sell automobiles in America but then didn't want to bother any more and has retreated to only selling in Japan (and some large commercial trucks, but nothing for consumers).

      While competition is certainly stiff, it is this difficulty of getting something to market in the first place that makes it harder for other companies to make something that doesn't suck. That and the fact most electric automobiles were mainly an adaptation of golf carts and looked like golf carts too.

    6. Re:Price !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      200km is not a lot of range. That's not even a single round trip to the closest city near me (Miami). And that is an ideal range -- run the A/C on a 40degC day for a drive and that 200km isn't even close.

    7. Re:Price !!! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Also, there are no electric SUVs as far as I know

      There are fucking huge electric mining trucks that can fit a dozen SUVs in the back so please do not attempt such a silly distraction, it just makes people angry and makes them think you are far more stupid than you could possibly be. The same with appearance.
      There is a niche for electric vehicles. Replacing offroad diesel 4WD is a different one and just because they don't fit in that niche does not mean they don't fit in another.

    8. Re:Price !!! by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      There are fucking huge electric mining trucks

      1. Are they actually electric and not diesel-electric like locomotives?
      2. Do they go any distance without the cable?

    9. Re:Price !!! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You've shifted the goalposts to number two! You win your mass debate game on an incredibly irrelevant sidetrack from your irrelevant SUV sidetrack!

      Meanwhile the cars have a niche and are being used no matter how much you and I discuss various bullshit.

    10. Re:Price !!! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Also, there are no electric SUVs as far as I know. I wonder why...

      Actually now that I think about it a bit more I saw a battery powered light utility truck built from a Toyota Land Cruiser chassis or similar in 1987. It was built to be used underground. I'm not sure how successful it was or wasn't but there's your "electric SUV".

    11. Re:Price !!! by TranquilVoid · · Score: 1

      There are fucking huge electric mining trucks that can fit a dozen SUVs in the back

      I don't think that's a fair comparison. Electric haul packs are not constrained by on-road design regulations, allowing them to fit proportionally more batteries. Further, they can use special heavy-industry chargers at a single, controlled location rather than house mains. More importantly they are not designed for high speed travel (which is where the exponential wind resistance increase would really hit a non-aerodynamic vehicle)

      EVs are already at the limits of acceptable range, recharge time and cost. An electric SUV would have significantly worse performance in all three.

    12. Re:Price !!! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      He was using a very stupid size argument as a distraction so I answered in kind.
      If you want a fair comparison there's battery powered electric vehicles of SUV size that have been used in underground mines for a couple of decades too that probably have similar performance to a fuel SUV if somewhat less range. In a mine that's fine but for long offroad trips it would not be.
      The size argument is silly anyway. Electric vehicles are for pollution shifting and can be whatever size and performance you like so long as other tradeoffs are made.

  7. No Jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No jobs no butts in seats. Economics 101.

    1. Re:No Jobs by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      More government stimulus, in the form of direct payments to people, like Bush did. Make it a permanent basic income. There is no production capacity problem, only a demand problem.

    2. Re:No Jobs by crdotson · · Score: 1

      Yeah! And none of this $600 crap, either. I want a million bucks.

    3. Re:No Jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! So now that Obama is king of no-jobs-land, Bush has become Mr-Good-Guy with his magical money-checks? Remind me again who was king of Merica-land when Gitmo concentration camp was opened? Was it Mr-Good-Guy? Well was it? Have you ever considered that there would be more Government Money available to pay you your Basic Income if your government stopped wasting your money on Concentration Camps?

    4. Re:No Jobs by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Denmark does a basic income.

      The USA is very different than Denmark, in so many ways.

      I would like to see a real study, unbiased done without a goal in mind, to see what would happen if the USA introduced a $2,000/month household basic income. What would happen?

    5. Re:No Jobs by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      Even more people would sit home on their dead asses waiting for their check, while an ever-decreasing work force would have ever-increasing tax burden.

              It's already like that, to some extent. Something like 50% of the population takes government handouts already, and workforce participation is as low as it has been since records have been kept.

       

    6. Re:No Jobs by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      This is true, so perhaps not much would change. Maybe the system would become more efficient and easier to use, perhaps crime would go down and the savings from our absurd prison system would help pay for it.

      Another question... at what point do machines and robots make enough "stuff" that most of us no longer need to go to a "job" anymore?

      As it stands, our farm industry continues to employ fewer and fewer people. Already large tractors can drive around the fields without anyone in the cabs, machines can make machines, when do we no longer need an economy based on "manual labor" from most people?

      Serious question, because I see the time coming when there is nothing left for most people to "do". McDonalds is looking into automatic hamburger machines, what happens when even fast food jobs are endangered?

    7. Re:No Jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Workforce participation is low because the HR industry is destroying the workforce.

      It used to be that you needed experience to get a job, which was fine when education and prior employment counted as experience. But now it's worse: you need a job to get a job. HR departments are actively reducing the size of the workforce by refusing to hire unemployed persons. People sit home on their asses not because they're lazy or don't want to work, but because commonly agreed-upon hiring practices by HR will not allow them to work anywhere.

    8. Re:No Jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There already is enough automation to provide enough food for everyone, most of us already don't need to go to a "job" anymore, and many "jobs" are completely unproductive and pointless. The problem is that psychotic "managers" really like to tell people what to do, and they perpetuate the myth of "jobs" to ensure themselves a supply of subordinates to victimize.

    9. Re:No Jobs by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      Most likely, massive inflation. That is what happened to university costs once easy money became available through loans and other means.

  8. i love my 15 year-old car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I plan to drive it until it dies, and after that will most likely buy another gasoline-powered vehicle. It's not that I'm biased over how my vehicle gets its power, it's just that the vehicles I like are not available as electric.

  9. Because they're EXPENSIVE by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let me know when a used one is in my working-class budget range, and we'll talk.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      seconded

    2. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Economics 101. They are too expensive.

      If the cars were there, there would be a market for outlets at every parking spot. That stuff will all come out in the wash. Until then, big money folk will buy them, and the market will remain small. Rolex or McDonald's (or Ford and Jaguar, if you prefer). Those are the only two real models.
      Right now electric cars are only for folks with Rolex.

    3. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      We haven't bought new cars in 10.2 years, on average. Price of electrics takes a back seat to price of cars.

      Ask about electrics when normal cars are selling like hotcakes.

    4. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Let me know when a used one is in my working-class budget range, and we'll talk.

      What is your working-class budget?

      I see plenty of working class people in shiny $30K F250's. The average car price in the USA is around $30K.

    5. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by gknoy · · Score: 1

      The key word was "used" car. My car budget is around $10k, and even that I am not eager to pay (since I do not have the cash for that right now).

    6. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by VVelox · · Score: 1

      Let me know when a used one is in my working-class budget range, and we'll talk.

      What is your working-class budget?

      I see plenty of working class people in shiny $30K F250's. The average car price in the USA is around $30K.

      Those people are called idiots.

      From my experience vehicle shopping, once the price goes over 2k the utility to price ratio goes shit.

    7. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by deathguppie · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't(haven't) recommend buying an ev. However, the Nissan Leaf in my area (Seattle) can be leased for $200/m with $2000 down. This is a great lease price for a car that you don't wan't to own due to battery degredation, and many people here have taken advantage of that.

      --
      once more into the breach
    8. Re:Because they're EXPENSIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can pick up a Leaf for $21k.
      Edmunds estimate of true cost to own is $25,550 over 5 years.
      http://www.edmunds.com/nissan/leaf/2013/tco.html
      Compare this to the Chevy Sonic ($15k) which they say has a true cost to own of $30,744 over 5 years
      http://www.edmunds.com/chevrolet/sonic/2013/tco.html

      So which one is in your price range?

  10. PRICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    PRICE!! I'd buy one in a heartbeat if they were a sane price compared to a gasoline equivalent.

    1. Re:PRICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same here. I'd also like to buy organic vegetables if it wasn't for cost. Whole Foods is expensive, y'all.

    2. Re:PRICE!! by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      And ironically (actually, no, it's not ironic - not even coincidental) the last time I was at Whole Foods (in Cupertino) I counted 5 Teslas in the parking lot...

    3. Re:PRICE!! by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      Doesn't sound ironic to me. Sounds like an example of why trickle-down economics doesn't work.

      The gap between the rich and the poor and the loss of a true middle-class is creating an automotive marketplace that can't support mass adoption of electric cars. Long-term ROI means nothing to the people living paycheck-to-paycheck. They need a car they can afford now, and the up-front cost of an electric/hybrid car is too much for people on the side of the economic pyramid that's getting heavier, making the potential customer base for those vehicles shrink as time goes on.

    4. Re:PRICE!! by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Um wow, reading comprehension fail on the ironic bit...

      But I also don't agree with the rest of your post. I don't think it's yet proven out that electric cars will be unaffordable to the masses, and certainly not likely that the market will shrink. A lot of new technology starts at the high end and works its way down. Take HDTVs - the first ones out were $10-20k, and now you can get a decent one for a few hundred dollars. If it's a GOOD idea and can be improved with technology and economy of scale, it will get cheaper.

      The one thing I would be concerned about with "ROI" and the "struggling middle class" as far as electric cars is their maintainability and feasibility as used vehicles. I'm not struggling, but I have little interest in paying the premium for a new car. And no one seems to talk about how much it will cost to replace a Tesla battery after 8 years. Tesla has a policy - if you *pay* for it up front - that says they will replace it for something like $12k, but the current cost to replace one is closer to $30k. They are basically betting that costs will go down by then, otherwise there will be a lot of highly depreciated EVs out there...

    5. Re:PRICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks at the Smart Electric vs it's gasoline version. After rebates in California you can get the Smart EV for less, much less.

    6. Re:PRICE!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you replace the battery after 8 years? The battery is guaranteed for 8 years, but that doesn't mean it fails after 8 years. Does you car stops functioning immediately after the warranty expires? Tesla predicts battery life to be in the range of 200 - 250k miles. Which for most people with gas cars is similar to a range where you need to put some money into engine repair or replace the car anyway.

  11. Duh, no place to plug into by fozzy1015 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems obvious to me. I, like many others, live in an apartment. My parking spot doesn't have an electrical outlet anywhere nearby, and neither does my office parking lot.

    1. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sort of the same problem. Where my house is, we have only on-street parking, and the house is 60 feet from the curb (behind another house--it's a tightly-packed city neighborhood). No way to plug in. Public charging stations are starting to pop up, but not enough to rely on. And sure price is an issue, but presumably that will improve as the numbers go up (how much did your first computer cost?). Battery cost is a big part of that. As it is, though, I mainly use my car on the weekends, so it's just not worth it to spend a lot of money on a new car.

    2. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by BlueStrat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seems obvious to me. I, like many others, live in an apartment. My parking spot doesn't have an electrical outlet anywhere nearby, and neither does my office parking lot.

      In addition, how exactly does one bring a "can of electrons" to a car that's died along the road somewhere? I know they have meters for the amount of charge, but there will still be times when people end up having their electric car die along the highway.

      If there's a storm and a power failure, possibly for days, what then? Tie up money and resources to have both a gasoline and an electric car? Tell your boss you can't come in because the electricity is out?

      I can carry enough gasoline in one hand to fuel a car for 125-plus miles easily (5 gallons x 25mpg), and it only takes as long as it takes to pour the stuff into the tank to be on the way.

      Energy density/portability is a serious issue with electric vehicles, particularly when charging infrastructure is almost non-existent, and charging turnaround times are also an issue.

      Until those problems are addressed such that they can compare favorably with gasoline, electric cars will be a niche market restricted to mostly higher-income people living and working in urban metropolitan areas, and then mainly as an additional "commute-only" vehicle.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    3. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can carry enough gasoline in one hand to fuel a car for 125-plus miles easily (5 gallons x 25mpg), and it only takes as long as it takes to pour the stuff into the tank to be on the way.

      5 Gallons of gas weighs about 15kg, you might be able to carry it in one hand, but unless you're a buff cunt, it's not easy, for any significant amount of walking, that is.

      Until those problems are addressed such that they can compare favorably with gasoline, electric cars will be a niche market restricted to mostly higher-income people living and working in urban metropolitan areas, and then mainly as an additional "commute-only" vehicle.

      That fortunate, because urban metro areas are one of the places that would benefit most from EV adoption, since there's a large number of vehicles in a small space, replacing them with zero emission vehicles would have far more profound positive health outcomes (lower pollution), than replacing a bunch of rural vehicles, even if replacing those rural vehicles resulted in greater total emissions reductions (actually urban commuter vehicles consume more fuel per mile travelled than rural vehicles, due to traffic and low speeds).

    4. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      We are a 2 truck household, both myself and my wife work.

      I'd be very interested in an EV to replace 1 of them, perhaps both if they were "volt" type technology with range extending engines.

      But there are no full-size SUV EVs. So we drive gas trucks. The little cars are of no interest to us.

      BTW, just to be clear, I'd be a buyer of a full-size SUV EV if the price is about the same as the gas version, or $5K more if it is the "volt" technology. Much more than that and I'm not really interested.

    5. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      I can carry enough gasoline in one hand to fuel a car for 125-plus miles easily (5 gallons x 25mpg), and it only takes as long as it takes to pour the stuff into the tank to be on the way.

      5 Gallons of gas weighs about 15kg, you might be able to carry it in one hand, but unless you're a buff cunt, it's not easy, for any significant amount of walking, that is.

      How much does the battery assembly in a Model S weigh? How far do you think you could carry it compared to a 5 gallon can filled with gasoline? Can you say "forklift"? Can you pop a freshly charged battery into a Model S with a dead battery on the side of the road in a minute or two and be on your way like one can with 5 gallons of gasoline?

      Energy density and portability that can compete favorably with gasoline are hurdles that will have to be overcome if EV technology is to be widely adopted. We're not there yet.

      Until those problems are addressed such that they can compare favorably with gasoline, electric cars will be a niche market restricted to mostly higher-income people living and working in urban metropolitan areas, and then mainly as an additional "commute-only" vehicle.

      That fortunate, because urban metro areas are one of the places that would benefit most from EV adoption, since there's a large number of vehicles in a small space, replacing them with zero emission vehicles would have far more profound positive health outcomes (lower pollution), than replacing a bunch of rural vehicles, even if replacing those rural vehicles resulted in greater total emissions reductions (actually urban commuter vehicles consume more fuel per mile travelled than rural vehicles, due to traffic and low speeds).

      First, most people won't replace their gasoline vehicle, just supplement it with an EV. So then you've nearly doubled the amount of resources used and pollution created in the making of vehicles, not to mention the money that will be sunk into a second EV car that will no longer go to support other parts of the economy.

      Second, the poor and working-poor cannot afford EVs, and the working-poor are the largest part of the commuting workforce by far. You're not going to see Walmart, 7-11, and McD employees driving Teslas or Volts. Even many lower-middle and middle-income families that once were two-car families are having to downsize to a single vehicle, and since most people want the ability to travel more than 200 miles without stopping if they need to travel, an EV won't be the one vehicle they choose. I don't think you'll see anywhere like the magnitude of reductions you imagine.

      Finally, you're adding the externalities of EV production to the existing externalities of gasoline vehicle production. Then you have to add in the externalities of the additional electrical generation capacity required and the additional externalities involved with building & deploying the huge amount of new infrastructure and refitting of old infrastructure necessary to support EVs. Even if the vehicles and infrastructure components are mostly manufactured outside the US, that's just exporting the pollution and other negative externalities.

      The reason more EVs aren't being sold is that the technology isn't ready for prime-time quite yet and simply can't compete.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    6. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by cowwoc2001 · · Score: 1

      Even if they did: how would they track billing? I assume they don't plan to give out electricity for free?

    7. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      We are a 2 truck household, both myself and my wife work.

      I'd be very interested in an EV to replace 1 of them, perhaps both if they were "volt" type technology with range extending engines.

      But there are no full-size SUV EVs. So we drive gas trucks. The little cars are of no interest to us.

      BTW, just to be clear, I'd be a buyer of a full-size SUV EV if the price is about the same as the gas version, or $5K more if it is the "volt" technology. Much more than that and I'm not really interested.

      The reason the electric vehicles generally tend towards being smaller & as light as possible is the reason a truck/SUV isn't anywhere near practical. Energy storage density/weight/size efficiency & practicality. The same reason there won't be electric intercontinental passenger aircraft any time soon.

      Now, in an ideal world without Darwin-award contenders and nut-jobs, I was thinking about a small heavily-shielded and sealed thorium-based reactor that simply heated water for steam to drive a turbine. Plenty of power and torque for a truck. No moving parts. Heat exchanger built around it and encases it. Design the reactor to produce one constant temperature calculated to cause no damage if the heat exchanger is not in a vehicle and doesn't have water.

      Heck, you could standardize the things and use them for cars/trucks, and for heating/cooling houses and buildings as well as produce electricity.

      I'm afraid that in the real world, with the aforementioned Darwin-award contenders and nut-jobs strongly represented, the thing would have to use such a large quantity of such an extremely low-grade thorium bed material, and be so heavily armored against tampering/opening, that the thing would end up being nearly the size (and weight!) of a bank vault and end up incapable of producing enough energy to move it's own weight/mass.

      [sigh]

      This is why we can't have nice things.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    8. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice. I've never heard someone point out the problems of "running out of juice" before.

    9. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the power goes out the gas pumps at the gas stations won't work. What on earth are you going to do then?

      You can panic or you can improvise, like call a co-worker and carpool in a gasmobile.

    10. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by Shompol · · Score: 1

      My $25,000 car is expected to live until it accumulates 150,000 miles. That is an additional 150000 mi / 25 mi/g * $4/mi = $24,000 over its lifetime. You cannot honestly expect an EV sale price to match when the total cost of a gasoline car is roughly double the purchase price?

    11. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Perhaps.... But...

      You probably won't own that car for 150k miles. You might, but most people don't.

      Gas isn't $4/gal, around here it is $2.79/gal.

      Time value of money, the gas has to be paid over time, the car has to be bought up front. If I drive less, I buy less gas.

      If I buy an EV, I probably plan to drive less, it has limited range, so the fuel I would use in any given year is limited. 10,000 miles driven a year, that 150,000 miles would last 15 years. That is longer than the battery lasts, add in the cost of a new battery.

      Electricity isn't free, you have to add the cost of recharging. Yes, it is lower than gas, for now. If 25% of gas cars are replaced with EV cars, gas may well get cheaper, electricity may well get more expensive.

    12. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by Shompol · · Score: 1
      No matter how deep we get into finer details of of total cost estimation, or how good the model is, you cannot claim that price of gas vehicle can be compared directly with price of EV, as you stated previously. When the price is the same the total cost difference is still in the ballpark of 2X the original price!

      You probably won't own that car for 150k miles. You might, but most people don't.

      I will. For those who won't -- they recoup most of it as resale value.

      Gas isn't $4/gal, and here it is $2.79/gal.

      And your car price is $xx.xxx, and the mileage is xx mpg, yet there is still a significant fuel cost markup

      Time value of money, the gas has to be paid over time, the car has to be bought up front.

      Gas also becomes more expensive with time, we can assume that present value of future gas spending = present price of gas.

      If I drive less, I buy less gas.....I probably plan to drive less...

      But your car lives longer if you drive less. You will recoup EV markup over a longer time period, that does not affect my formula.

      Electricity isn't free

      Cost to Drive 25 Miles $0.96

      That knocks down the difference from $4 per 25 miles to $3 ($3 to $2 in your case) , but does not make it insignificant.

      add in the cost of a new battery.

      This is a topic of a separate research, but you might never need to replace one.

      It looks like you are not an EV backer, because you forgot to include

      1. Tax rebate and

      2. Much lower maintenance costs for EV, such as oil changes, etc.

      If 25% of gas cars are replaced with EV cars, gas may well get cheaper, electricity may well get more expensive.

      This one is my favourite!
      2. If Obama builds 25 nuclear power plants, electricity will become dirt cheap.
      3. If oil reserves dry out, gas cars will become landfill
      4. if WWIII starts, you will get to drive a tank for free, all the way until #3 happens!

    13. Re:Duh, no place to plug into by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I will. For those who won't -- they recoup most of it as resale value.

      Maybe, is there a huge history of resale values of EV only cars going back many years?

      The resale value after 5-10 years might be terrible if newer cars cost less and have twice the range, just like buying technology.

      Gas also becomes more expensive with time

      Yes, but not over the typical ownership lifetime of a car. Gas is cheaper today than it was 8 years ago. :)

      It looks like you are not an EV backer, because you forgot to include
      1. Tax rebate and
      2. Much lower maintenance costs for EV, such as oil changes, etc.

      The tax rebate doesn't count, that is just the government giving me back my own money, anyone who pays taxes and counts a tax rebate is just fooling themselves.

      I'm not anti-EV, I'm anti-foolish money decisions. Right now EVs just make no sense from a financial point of view. If you're ok to spend more to get less to help the enviroment, great. Assuming of course the production of the battery plus the production of electricity is actually cleaner than the production of the gas engine plus the burning of the gas. I'm not totally convinced that is the case. Not when my local power is provided by coal, and dirty coal at that.

      Oil changes do not cost enough to matter in the typical life cycle of a car. My truck needs an oil change every 10,000 miles, it costs $30 to have the oil changed. For a 5 year ownership, that is maybe $200.

      There really isn't anything else to do to a car the first 5 years of owning it either, other than perhaps a set of tires and wipers, but all cars need those.

  12. Really? And WHO says this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To simply make a claim that people love them without ANY supporting documentation is what you expect from the biased propaganda of a slashdot'ng wanker.

  13. dirty and not affordable by mexsudo · · Score: 0

    oil fired electricity is very dirty and way more expensive than gas, propane or diesel. I am too green and too poor.

    1. Re:dirty and not affordable by Beeftopia · · Score: 3, Informative

      Electricity generation in the US, by energy source.

      "Coal 37%
      Natural Gas 30%
      Nuclear 19%
      Hydropower 7%
      Other Renewable 5%
      Petroleum 1%"

    2. Re:dirty and not affordable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey dumbass, you can generate electricity lots of other ways than burning stuff.

      We will start by cremating pricks like you who insult people
      because they have nothing more valuable to offer the discussion.

    3. Re:dirty and not affordable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey dumbass, that would require a HUGE investment in infrastructure and still would only, at best, produce SUPPLEMENTAL energy.

    4. Re:dirty and not affordable by StarWreck · · Score: 1

      Give me coal any day, what have you got against the hillbillies working their butts off in Appalachia? You insensitive clod!

      --
      ... and in the DRM, bind them.
    5. Re:dirty and not affordable by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Insightful
      We can fix that...

      Nuclear could be 75% of our power, that is the base load. Renewables could be the other 25%. (the percentages could vary, it could be 50/50, or 65/35, the principle remains the same)

      Within a generation, if we wanted to, we could rid ourselves of fossil fuels completely.

      For some reason, we just don't want to. I support it, but I feel like I'm in the minority.

    6. Re:dirty and not affordable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What have you got against hillbillies hunting, fishing, logging, and serving tourists indefinitely as opposed to having their beautiful country ruined for a few decades of fuel. Nobody hunts, fishes, or tours around a contaminated mountain-top removal site. They might log there again some day. I guess.

    7. Re:dirty and not affordable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My house = 100% solar.

  14. Cost, range, software, and strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I think that's the right order.

    Initial outlay for the car is expensive.

    You have limited range unless you shell out for a high-end Tesla. Supercharging is awesome; but too expensive (see previous reason).

    The software sucks and/or wants to do things it should't do, like phone home about your driving habits. Get the privacy issues worked out, and use the KISS philosophy in your design. Separate the infotainment crap from mission critical systems, and audit the shit out of your code NASA red/blue team style and/or Open Source. That'll inspire a lot more confidence.

    Strategy is in some ways a combo of all the other points. I've half-jokingly said that I'd like to see so many EVs on the road that gasoline demand actually drops. First the cost of gasoline would drop, hit a bottom, and then creep back up when gasoline becomes a specialty item. If it gets to the point where you have to go out of your way to find a gasoline supplier, you're way past the point where you should switch to EV. It's not known if drivers of existing ICE cars will ever see this EV didvidend, but it's nice to think about it.

    1. Re:Cost, range, software, and strategy by JasoninKS · · Score: 1

      You're close, but need to also add infrastructure and vehicle size. Many people have no way to charge at their house/apartment, and no where to charge at work. Let alone anywhere while out on a road trip. And a good many people need a vehicle with some sort of cargo room. These tiny Matchbox cars they're selling aren't much good for hauling a load of groceries home.

  15. Range. That's #1. by Tugrik · · Score: 5, Informative

    The three year lease on my Nissan Leaf is over in a few months. I absolutely adore the car. It's been the best commuter vehicle I've had in all ways but one -- range. This is the biggest complaint of all those I've shown it to, as well. Many of the co-workers and friends who have ridden in my car over the years want one! Then they hear what the range is like and they lose interest.

    My daily round trip (+lunch) comes in at just under 50 miles. With the highway speeds in my area (75 and up) and putting slightly better tires on it instead of the no-traction-in-rain stocks that I went through all too quickly, my real-world run-until-empty range is about 65 miles (When new with the super-eco tires and driving 65 on the freeway, I could get closer to 80-85 miles of range). This means that by the time I get home I can go back out to shop and return, and that's about it. I cannot use the Leaf for longer weekend runs, road trips, or even for the once every three weeks that I have to commute from San Jose to San Fran (about 120mi round trip). Therefore I have to have a second gas-powered car.

    Being that I work in Silicon Valley, owning one gas car and leasing an electric car alongside is feasible. With how much I save on gas the lease is nearly 75% covered anyway. With my office soon installing chargers at work my range will extend considerably. But for most of my friends having more than one car is out of the question, budgetary-wise, and the limitations of a car that can only go about 65 miles before it has to charge for 5 hours (my usual L2 charge is 4h:40m or so, overnight) are just too restrictive. With L3 chargers being few and far between, and often having a cost associated with their use, they don't help much. So, no EV for them.

    When my lease is up I'll probably try to get a Toyota RAV-4 EV. It supposedly has a real-world range of over 110mi - nearly double my Leaf. It's more affordable than the Tesla models, and more important to me, I can fit in it (I'm very tall-torso and short-legged; I simply can't get in the sports-car-low roof line of the Model S, and no Model X's exist that they will let a consumer sit in to see if they fit!). I'm bummed that Nissan hasn't found a way to 2x the range of the Leaf, or I'd gladly stick with that model. The Tesla-drivetrain RAV4 is still more expensive than I like, but it'll fit my EV driving needs far better.

    When battery technology increases enough that 150+mi range EVs are Leaf-level affordable _then_ you will see sales take off in the urban areas. Any advancements in fast-rate (L3 or better) charging will help that too. Until then, for all of their benefits and wonderfulness to drive, they'll remain a niche for packed-urban-area dwellers who can afford to have a second, dedicated commute car.

  16. Climate by mirix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Up here, at least. In the depths of winter I think you'd be using a lot more power for heating than for driving. Though, it would blow hot air right away, which would be nice.

    I imagine battery performance would be seriously hurt by the cold as well. I don't know how bad NiMH and Li-ion drop off in cold, maybe not as much as lead acid but still quite a lot I imagine, being how chemistry works... Get a big battery blanket, I guess.

    I'm yet to notice any EV rollin' around here, anyway.

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
    1. Re:Climate by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      Yea, people have trouble starting diesel cars when it's -25C outside, I wonder how far could you drivein an electric car - especially that heat is no longer "free" like in a gas/diesel car.

    2. Re:Climate by TubeSteak · · Score: 2

      I imagine battery performance would be seriously hurt by the cold as well. I don't know how bad NiMH and Li-ion drop off in cold, maybe not as much as lead acid but still quite a lot I imagine, being how chemistry works... Get a big battery blanket, I guess.

      The battery packs all have built-in heaters.
      The power draw for heating the battery means less range, but your battery's life/performance is more or less safe.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Climate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they need to be on or plugged in to work, don't they? My gas car can survive in -25 C without a block heater. It's not a good thing to do to it, the engine complains pretty loudly when I try to start it, but it can take it for quite a while before it hits the "won't start" point. On occasions I've done several hours at a time at night around and slightly below -30C with winds (down to -45C "windchill") to strip away what heat my car held on to, and it's survived.

    4. Re:Climate by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      I doubt you would need to use 10+kw for heating the car.

      but it is a legitimate concern - and you don't want to get stuck in -25c weather in the middle of nothing because battery suddenly drooped.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Climate by swillden · · Score: 1

      But they need to be on or plugged in to work, don't they?

      No. They run off of the stored electricity. If you leave it out in the cold for long enough to drain the battery (many weeks, if you start from a full charge), then it will no longer be able to power the heater and the battery will be damaged by the cold. This is why the EV manuals say that if you're going to leave the car parked for a weeks in cold weather, make sure it's plugged in.

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:Climate by swillden · · Score: 2

      Yea, people have trouble starting diesel cars when it's -25C outside, I wonder how far could you drivein an electric car - especially that heat is no longer "free" like in a gas/diesel car.

      My experience is that in sub-zero (F) temperatures my LEAF spends about 1 KW on heat. That alone would drain the battery in about 20 hours. Given that driving at freeway speeds (75 mph) will drain it in about one hour, running the heater decreases the range, but it's on the order of a 5-10% decrease... maybe as high as 20% if you're driving longer distances at lower speeds.

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    7. Re:Climate by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      This is why the EV manuals say that if you're going to leave the car parked for a weeks in cold weather, make sure it's plugged in.

      See, this is what happened to all the Atlantean artifacts, except theirs had to be plugged in to not disintegrate ;)

      This must be a plot in some extant sci-fi novel already, right? I suppose there's similarities in Ringworld.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:Climate by mirix · · Score: 1

      Maybe not 10kW, but a few. I've got an 800W electric heater in the car and it only keeps it maybe 15C over ambient or so.

      I don't know how that scales, but when it's -30, and you want 15-25 inside, it's gotta use at least a couple kW, I'd think..?

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    9. Re:Climate by fnj · · Score: 1

      Just how many places do you think people can drive 75 mph for one hour, given traffic? Highway speeds in populated areas average more like 10-40 mph. And since nobody can possibly drive only on the highway, what about city/town traffic? That is more like 5-20 mph. At speeds people actually drive, and counting regenerative braking, most driving consumes more like 2-6 kW than 20 kW. That means that 1 kW for heat, plus the much worse battery performance in the cold, add up to an enormous impact on range.

    10. Re:Climate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Texas, so I have the opposite problem. A/C isn't cheap energy wise, and the people I know with Leafs or Model Ss see some serious range degradation. Plus the heat is murder on batteries. Even the longest-life rated lead-acids only last two or three years, so I have to wonder what the lithium or NI based ones will do. No-one I know has owned an EV long enough to tell yet.

    11. Re:Climate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haven't you been following the news? It seems that the Tesla's, at least, have quite the innovative heating system.

    12. Re:Climate by Shompol · · Score: 1

      According to the article about an anti-EV Times journalist, cold temperature decreases auto-projected range of Tesla, but as you drive the battery pack warms up and the range reverts back to normal.

    13. Re:Climate by swillden · · Score: 1

      Just how many places do you think people can drive 75 mph for one hour, given traffic? Highway speeds in populated areas average more like 10-40 mph. And since nobody can possibly drive only on the highway, what about city/town traffic? That is more like 5-20 mph. At speeds people actually drive, and counting regenerative braking, most driving consumes more like 2-6 kW than 20 kW. That means that 1 kW for heat, plus the much worse battery performance in the cold, add up to an enormous impact on range.

      Yes and no. Yes the impact is greater, but it's also impacting a longer range. You get 50% more range out of the battery at 40 mph than you do at 75 mph. And stop-and-go traffic (if you know how to drive it to maximize regeneration) costs very little. On cold days when I'm a little worried about range I like heavy traffic because driving slower will help me a lot more than what the additional time costs me. Of course, I could always drive slower anyway, but that tends to really piss off other drivers who are anxious to get home :-)

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  17. Requires a garage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a large house with two large driveways, but no garage. The driveways obviously do not have power sockets. I don't want to spend thousands of dollars and dig up my driveway to fit sockets. It's that simple.

    Couple to this concerns about range: it gets cold up here in the north east United States and I'd have real concern driving to my mother in law's eighty miles away for the weekend given that she also has nowhere to charge and that'd be a 160 mile round trip plus whatever other driving we do. Add on the fact that gas drivers can just fill up, whereas visitors with electric have to borrow electrics, and oh god this is too complicated

  18. Can't recharge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every car that lives on the street, in a lot, or in a parking garage when not in use is a car that doesn't have a clear charging solution. I can't easily find statistics on Americans who own garages but there's a clear problem right there. The cars that *do* have a way to charge up when not at home or work (e.g. Tesla power stations) are way outside of my price range.

  19. Give me one, Elon! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll drive it all over the place. For realsies.

  20. Uh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and many experts say they're simply nicer to drive

    Many experts are apparently on crack.

    Sure, is an overpriced Tesla going to roll better than your Accord? Fuck yes.

    Is your Chevy Electriturd going to roll better than the Yugo that some seedy Eastern European paid *you* to take?

    No, it is not.

  21. Well, duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just open source the 3D files and people can 3D print their own car at home! It's future !!! Luddites!!!!

  22. Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycles by JoeyRox · · Score: 1

    People have been driving combustion automobiles since the industrial age. It takes time for new technologies to move through adoption stages, not to mention time for manufacturing costs and yields to improve.

  23. Still too expensive, plain and simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I make a good living, and an electric car like a Tesla would have to be a 2nd or 3rd car. I can't afford a 3rd car that costs $100k+. Other than the cool factor of having one, that's the only reason I'd have one. You don't buy one for the environment -- someone who drives a Tesla, doesn't have a Prius as a backup. When they hit $40k, I'll consider it, simply because it will never / can't be your only mode of transportation. Sorry, can't make that emergency run to the xyz because the Wife forgot to plug it in last night, vs you can always find a gas station on your way out with your main car.

    1. Re:Still too expensive, plain and simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you "make a good living" but have to suffer a daily commute longer than the Tesla's range (so it would be your "third car," rather than your first, leaving some cheap but reliable old gas car for the rare long trips), then you should seriously consider changing where you live or changing jobs. Even if the rent is higher or the pay quite a bit less --- how much of your life do you want to waste sitting in traffic? How about reclaiming a few extra hours a day for something worthwhile?

      I can understand not wanting a Tesla for the price (that's me and everyone else in ~95% of income brackets), but if "not enough range for my daily car" is your main objection, then your problem is not the Tesla. Stop screwing yourself over for money you don't have time to use.

  24. 40mpg by gnomff · · Score: 1

    I routinely get 40 mpg in my econobox car, and it only cost me 15k brand new. An electric car would be great but with my current gas bill I would never break even

    1. Re:40mpg by Moof123 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yep, you got it. When I run the math, it just is not in my favor yet.

      I drive a truck now, and have been looking to get a second car to commute with to keep the miles off the truck, as I like having a truck but never want to have to buy another one. When I run the math on a Leaf, or Focus EV the break even point is way out there. $35k ballpark vs. ~15k for gasoline. At $4/gallon that is 5000 gallons of gas for a break even point of roughly 200k miles. Given my commuting use of about 5k miles per year I am looking at a 40 year break even compared to a 40 mpg econobox. I'll still be racking up about 5k miles per year on long trips in my truck. So for me, despite the desire, the math stinks.

      I have seen this trend on a lot of the for sale Leaf's, commuting modest distances doesn't rack up many miles. Lots of folks end up selling simply because they change jobs and end up with a long commute, but the range isn't adequate. Sort of a catch 22.

    2. Re:40mpg by swillden · · Score: 2

      Your $35K estimate for the EV is too high. However, at only 5K miles per year it's extremely unlikely that the math will work out to favor EVs for you, at least in the near term. Now, if you were driving 15K miles (like I do), it would be a different story.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    3. Re:40mpg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's a little more favorable for EVs than you suggest. I purchased a LEAF six months ago (~40 mile commute, mostly freeway, large midwest city), and so have been through the calculation many times. In "close, but let's not quibble numbers", a gallon of gas is equivalent to 33 kW-h and costs US$3.30. It will move you 33 miles. Sure, prices and mpg vary, but these are probably generous to gasoline. From this, it costs US$10,000 to move 100,000 miles. Electricity prices vary, but US$0.10 per kW-h is relatively high. With hourly-pricing and overnight charging, we pay more like US$0.04 per kW-h. Our LEAF has averaged ~4.5 miles per KW-h, implying that the fuel costs to move 100,000 miles is in the range of US$900 to 2500, depending on electricity prices.

      There are no oil changes (US$50 per 10000 miles, or US$1000 for 100,000 miles -- almost the cost of the needed electricity!), and wear on the electric motor for 100,000 miles should be nil. Other maintenance costs are harder to predict. We'll call these even, though an EV does have fewer moving parts. The batteries will degrade. So, at the end of 100,000 miles (factory warranty) invest the money saved on fuel into new battery packs. You'll have a car with an 8 year old interior, a motor that can easily go another 200,000 miles, and brand new batteries. Not quite a new car, but one in far better shape than a gas-powered car with 100,000 miles.

      The tax incentives ($7500 federal + $3000 from our state) definitely help offset the US$31,000 cost -- it's definitely nicer than a $20,000 car (and quiet enough that the better audio is worth the price). Of course, there is some risk in new technology, but it looks economical ias a ten to twenty year investment. I'd agree that a used car could be cheaper. We replaced a car we bought new 17 years earlier and drove until parts were falling off. We intend to do the same with the LEAF.

      The range argument is valid. We have a gas car as well. It's ten years old, and we intend to keep it for another ten years.

    4. Re:40mpg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electricity prices vary, but US$0.10 per kW-h is relatively high. With hourly-pricing and overnight charging, we pay more like US$0.04 per kW-h.

      Must be real nice to have a basement full of Oompa Loompas to generate electricity for you, given the US average cost is $0.125 per kW-h, and the lowest price is $0.0897 per kw-h. The rest of your math is off by a factor 2 (minimum), or 3 (average).

    5. Re:40mpg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does your math neglect the cost of maintaining the vehicles, lower in an electric, and assuming that the price premium will disappear at resale time?

      It reminds me of people bashing the Prius because they were so much more expensive than a Corolla so it would take a very long period of ownership to justify the price difference. Seen any used Corollas selling for the same price as a used Prius of the same year? Nope, that price premium doesn't disappear the day you buy a Prius or an electric vehicle.

  25. Battery life and environmental footprint? by Beeftopia · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How long does the battery last before it must be replaced? And will that cost offset any savings I've obtained during the life of the vehicle?

    How does the environmental footprint of the battery compare with the environmental footprint of an oil burner?

    1. Re:Battery life and environmental footprint? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you perhaps mean to write, "How long does the battery last before it must be recycled and replaced with a much cheaper and possibly superior next-generation alternative?"

    2. Re:Battery life and environmental footprint? by swillden · · Score: 1

      How long does the battery last before it must be replaced?

      I don't think the batteries will ever have to be replaced, in general, though the vehicles' range will gradually decrease. I know Nissan warranties the battery to retain 70% of its capacity for 8 years. And the dropoff in capacity should get slower and slower as it ages... so if it's 70% after 8 years, it'll probably still be 60% after 15. We don't know for sure, of course.

      How does the environmental footprint of the battery compare with the environmental footprint of an oil burner?

      I don't really care; I bought my EV for financial reasons, not environmental reasons. Oh, if the footprint is smaller I do consider that to be a good thing, but it's a second or even third-order concern for me.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    3. Re:Battery life and environmental footprint? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stupid people keep trying to make this argument.

      Have you noticed the oil infrastructure and the mess it makes anytime recently?

    4. Re:Battery life and environmental footprint? by Beeftopia · · Score: 1

      What about a per-unit comparison of the environmental footprint of ICE cars versus battery-powered cars?

      The oil infrastructure to support the US is huge. The battery manufacture infrastructure is not. How does environmental impact work out on a per unit basis? On an aggregate basis, of course the oil infrastructure is dirtier - if for no other reason, it's bigger. But the per-unit comparison will provide an idea of whether an individual electric car is environmentally dirtier than an oil burner.

      I haven't seen a really good answer to the question yet.

  26. Telecommuter by JMandingo · · Score: 1

    My personal "why": I code from home, so my car leaves the house twice a week and even then only to go 5-10 miles. My car is a '98 Mustang Cobra with a supercharged V8. I paid 15k cash for it used in 2002. I only get 17 miles to the gallon, but so what? I fill up maybe once every two months. I do a lot of my own maintenance. An all-electric vehicle would be perfect for my needs, and I could easily afford one, but I plan on driving my '98 until it rusts out from under me. It is a blast to drive, and the cost of fuel is a non-issue for so few miles.

    --
    Vonnegut was right: Of all the words of mice and men, the saddest are, "It might have been."
    1. Re:Telecommuter by JoeMerchant · · Score: 2

      Get a garage, the fun will last longer. My '91 is still going strong.

    2. Re:Telecommuter by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      You better keep driving it at least twice a week. If you ever taper off, the catalytic converter will die and the oxygen sensors in the exhaust system will fail and it won't pass emissions testing. As it is, you'd better find an excuse to go farther somewhat regularly, or your catalytic converter will still die on you. They need to reach operating temperature and be kept there a minimum of 15 minutes on a regular basis, or they clog and croak.

      I found this out the hard way when I spent 3 years working from home and drove my 2001 Ram Air Trans Am only once a month. Infernal combustion vehicles really can't sit unused that much.

    3. Re:Telecommuter by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      My '91 is still going strong.

      '91? Youngster. In my household, we have a '71 and a '57.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    4. Re:Telecommuter by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      I have a '67 and a '59. Been in the family since '72 and '64 respectively. We commuted in them for many years, but I don't consider them practical cars anymore. They are now for car shows, and the occasional fun drive or commute if the daily driver is down for whatever reason. There are simply too many improvements over the years.

      Just between the '59 and '67 are a host of significant improvements. 1st gear in the '59 is not syncronized and there is no front seal on the transmission so one should not park it facing downhill or oil will leak out, it has drum brakes with 2 cylinders on all 4 wheels, the clutch and brake pedals must be manually adjusted periodically to compensate for the wear, the trunk has a big handle and a slider with a catch to prop it open, it has no sound absorption whatsoever so is quite loud in spite of having a tiny engine, the manifolds are real basic straight pipe designs with 90 degree bends, the air cleaner is an oil bath type, the radiator is a cheap design of straight fins which doesn't exchange heat as well so that the car will overheat if sitting and idling on a hot day, the starter motor disengages at the slightest kick from the engine making it extra difficult to start on cold days, the rear shocks are these "lever action" type rather than direct action which is just more points of wear and failure, and of course the car is totally unsafe having come with no seatbeats and a bare metal dash. The '67 addresses all those issues, but still has a long list of shortcomings compared to modern vehicles. For instance, it has seatbelts, but no headrests, and the stock manifolds have gentler curves but are still untuned and much inferior to aftermarket options. We've backported some improvements, in particular replacing the generators with alternators when the former wore out and dumping the points for electronic ignition, tires have gotten better, and that all helps, but these cars are still hopelessly obsolete.

      I treat 1996 as a cutoff year. That's the year the OBDII became standard on all cars. Another good cutoff year is about 1983, when fuel injection was starting to go mainstream, and the Japanese cars had been present and good enough quailty for enough years for American manufacturers to respond and stop fobbing customers off with total lemons with the damdest stupid defects, as they did so often up through the 1970s. Like, there was the Chevy Vega with that aluminum engine that wore out in under 10,000 miles. The Ford Fairmont was another poor quality car of the late 70's and early 80's. Distributors still had points, windshields were not easily replaced if cracked, same with disc brake rotors if they got warped, and the style of metalworking guaranteed your car would rust to pieces in as little as 3 years if you drove in winter weather.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    5. Re:Telecommuter by JMandingo · · Score: 1

      Thanks for that info, I'd never heard that before. The need to heat the converter up every once in a while makes sense. I will put the top town and take a trip down A1A every once in a while :-)

      --
      Vonnegut was right: Of all the words of mice and men, the saddest are, "It might have been."
    6. Re:Telecommuter by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Youngster, indeed. 1991 was the first year I could afford to buy a new car - so I did, just that once.

  27. Correlation is not causation by 0123456 · · Score: 0

    Duh. People don't love electric cars because they're better than ICE cars, only people who love the idea of an expensive car with limited range buy electric cars in the first place.

    1. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have that backwards. Republicans don't buy them because they want to actively damage the environment. Forget the hate they spewed recently in their diatribe here against solar power? The cars don't sell because of lack of love. They aren't selling because of hate.

    2. Re:Correlation is not causation by NeoMorphy · · Score: 1

      They're cheaper than they used to be. And some people like quieter cars that don't emit excessive heat and belch poisonous gases, the more you get used to them, the more other cars sound like harleys. Some people like harleys, I find them excessively noisy.

    3. Re:Correlation is not causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're trying to fight wrong with wrong.

  28. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    People have been driving combustion automobiles since the industrial age. It takes time for new technologies to move through adoption stages, not to mention time for manufacturing costs and yields to improve.

    Sigh. Not this 'electric cars is new technology!' nonsense again.

    Our ancestors had been driving electric cars for years before the internal combustion engine came along. They are an ancient technology, not a new one.

    They dumped electric cars almost immediately when internal combustion engines became viable, because electric cars sucked so bad. They still suck, for all the same reasons they did then.

  29. Higher cost, less convienence by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

    I believe that the cost of an electric car is still significantly higher than for a low-medium end conventional car (Honda Civic for example). The operating costs might be lower, but its not clear that is true. Now a Tesla is a much nicer car that a Civic, but out of the price range of most people. (If this isn't true, and electrics really are cheaper overall, then their marketing departments are doing a bad job).

    Then there is the range issue. I can get in a standard compact car and drive pretty much anywhere, I don't need to check if there are gas stations on the way. If I want to drive from the SF bay area to Los Angeles, I can stop for lunch anywhere on the I5, fill my tank in 5 minutes and be on my way. With an electric I'd need to be sure that a station was available, and it would take considerably longer to charge than it does to fill a gas tank.

    Its true that probably less than 5% of my driving would cause any range concerns, but I still want to be able to do that 5%. Renting a car for those missions is time consuming.

    An electric sounds great as a commute car - charge at home, charge at work (if available), no wasted time at gas stations. It might be a perfectly reasonable car for a person or family with 2 cars. It does need to compete though with the very reliable, high quality, low cost cars that are already on the market.

  30. Unrealistic cost by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They will do this because it offers a competitive advantage, the same way that offering free wifi does.

    You have got to be joking - do you have ANY concept of how much it costs to add a WiFi router to an internet connection the business already has, vs. running a high-load electrical connection out to even just TWO parking spaces? Not to mention cost of the electricity, not to mention the high likelihood of outside connections being vandalized...

    There is no way you can justify the cost of adding car charging outlets to every small business.

    This is the reason Electric is failing, because there's just so large a gap between the fantasy and reality.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Unrealistic cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plus given how crappy free Wifi tends to be I doubt you could even charge a car on public charger.

    2. Re:Unrealistic cost by beanpoppa · · Score: 1

      Ever hear of credit cards? Swipe your credit card, then recharge your car at a 20% premium over standard electric rates. The land owner can either get a cut of that, or can lease out the spaces to companies that install the charging stations and take the premium. One of the benefits to EV is that the fueling infrastructure can be very easy to build compared to what it took for gasoline. The electric grid is everywhere, and it's relatively trivial to turn parking spaces into refueling stations, compared to what it takes to build a gas station.

    3. Re:Unrealistic cost by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      I never said "free" charging. Just the opportunity to charge, probably for a fee.

      For that matter, some places might subsidize the electric eventually, but I doubt that would happen to begin with... especially considering that it would be unfair to those who don't have electric cars.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    4. Re:Unrealistic cost by couchslug · · Score: 1

      No shit, especially if the electric service for that business is already at capacity. Many panels aren't near where a car would charge, adding further to the cost. If power enters the back of a structure and the parking spaces are in front, which is common, only low wattage lines for lighting may be available up front.

      If the parking spaces are beyond a sidewalk, add demolition, concrete repair and underground conduit to the bill.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    5. Re:Unrealistic cost by swillden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You have got to be joking - do you have ANY concept of how much it costs to add a WiFi router to an internet connection the business already has, vs. running a high-load electrical connection out to even just TWO parking spaces? Not to mention cost of the electricity, not to mention the high likelihood of outside connections being vandalized...

      Except that companies like SemaCharge and ChargePoint will actually install and maintain the equipment for almost nothing. They make their money by charging for use (you get an account and they mail you a card which you have to tap to charge).

      I'll readily admit that I haven't looked into the details, but I know these companies are trying to address exactly the issue you're talking about, and to profit from solving that problem.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:Unrealistic cost by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      do you have ANY concept of how much it costs to add a WiFi router to an internet connection the business already has

      Do you? Are you figuring on hiring somebody to set it up properly so it protects your internal network? How about checking to see if you need to increase your connection bandwidth? QoS so your credit card transactions always has priority, etc...? How about hiring a lawyer to draft the agreement splash page to protect your ass from liability if/when somebody does something illegal over your public wifi?

      not to mention the high likelihood of outside connections being vandalized...

      I think vandalism is less of a concern in most areas than you might think. Stupid drivers running into them though, yes.

      As for attracting customers, I figure that the first round will mostly be free chargers being the 'trickle' type, and fast chargers costing money. Still, completely filling a Model S is like $8.50 worth of electricity, vs $85 for my truck's tank, for similar ranges.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    7. Re:Unrealistic cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you have any idea how long it would take to break even with that set up?

      Best case, you have to trench out conduit install the meter, get electrician to put it all together.

      Got to repair the damage of the trenching /pavement/sidewalk/ landscaping.

      find out if you garner new liabilities for having a high power outlet accessible to the public. eg dumb kids sticking stuff into it

      deal with vandalism/ cars banging into it/ install bollards to protect it? losing parking space for all this.

      Electric faults.

      Thats looking at the bright side.

          what if you have to upgrade infrastructure, or add new infrastructure?

      Oh yeah turns out the costumers with ev's don't bother to use it at your shop because they are going to charge it at home per usual.

      Also how does it affect the batteries to be plugged in for 20 minutes at a time? not charging it fully, I know it screws with the batteries on power tools if you don't pay attention to the power cycle of the batteries.

    8. Re:Unrealistic cost by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It isn't very expensive actually. In Europe we are on 230V anyway, in the US most places have two phase available. Doesn't have to be super high power either because its no problem to leave it on overnight. Installation cost in the UK is around £1000 at the moment, not horrendous when you consider what general building maintenance costs, and the tenant might contribute towards it if they already have an EV.

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

      Cost of electricity is a red herring. The appropriate thing to do for powered parking spaces is to meter it to the car owner. Much a gasoline pump, you would swipe your card before it would activate. I'm confident that charging stations like this already exist.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    10. Re:Unrealistic cost by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      You can have third party providers install the stations and sell back the charging. In Claifornia the utility companies have a pretty streamlined process for it, complete with incentives.

    11. Re:Unrealistic cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have got to be joking - do you have ANY concept of how much it costs to add a WiFi router to an internet connection the business already has, vs. running a high-load electrical connection out to even just TWO parking spaces?

      I don't think he meant to imply that the electricity would be free -- just that, like availability of wifi, availability of a charging station would attract more customers.

    12. Re:Unrealistic cost by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Except that companies like SemaCharge and ChargePoint will actually install and maintain the equipment for almost nothing. They make their money by charging for use (you get an account and they mail you a card which you have to tap to charge).

      Exactly this. With an electric car you won't go to the gas station, you'll go to the grocery store that has a charging system installed instead of the one that doesn't. That incentivizes the store to install the units, and they probably get a better deal than you do on home electricity, so they can make money on the power service as well and you can pay at the checkout.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    13. Re:Unrealistic cost by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "This is the reason Electric is failing"

      How do you define failing? Like in the same way the Mac is failing, because windows still dominates?

      We have a large amount of charging stations in Portland: http://chargeportland.com/info.asp

      It is just taking longer in other areas to gain momentum. But I don't think anyone would want to bet against electricity, eventually, being the dominate motor vehicle energy source.

    14. Re:Unrealistic cost by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      How do you define failing?

      As in not gaining general sales traction and needing huge subsidies to continue.

      Electric is the future. Battery power is just the stupid dead-end path to it.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  31. No significant portion of the population wants em! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because almost no one has wanted the damn things for around one hundred years.
    Do a little research, they have been in America for somewhat over a hundred years, with various models of supporting infrastructure.
    I don't want one and neither to most other people.
    The only reason we have as many as we do is because politicians have been pushing them with the taxpayers money. They don't want them themselves, they just want you to have use them.

    It is just another waste.

  32. Re:Range. That's #1. by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

    I don't drive too far, too often, but when I do a typical trip is 50 miles out and 50 miles back, with no guarantee of a charging station "on the far side..." that makes a claimed 115 mile range.... unimpressive. Even at 150 miles of actual range, I'd feel restricted, and I don't think I'm driving all that far, am I?

  33. it's easy by bitt3n · · Score: 3, Funny

    show me an electric car I can slap my truck nuts on without it looks like I'm doing it ironically, and you got yourself a sale

    1. Re:it's easy by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 3, Funny

      Elon Musk got quoted this week saying Tesla will be building a pickup truck in 2015.

      So... give it a couple-three years and you can dangle your nuts in public all you like.

      And knowing Elon, it won't be at all ironic. The motor on a Roadster is 60 lbs. With the space available in a truck frame, you can bet he'll put in a couple of fat puppies with so much torque it can drag around two F-150s like a pair of really dangly truck nuts.

    2. Re:it's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      show me an electric car I can slap my truck nuts on without it looks like I'm doing it ironically, and you got yourself a sale

      Sorry, but most people think you're already doing ironically.

    3. Re:it's easy by EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC · · Score: 1

      Uh.. truck nuts are ironic no matter what you slap them on.

      --
      Howdy howdy howdy
    4. Re:it's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have a look at the Mitsubishi Outlander? Not pure electric, but still a lot beyond "put a token extra battery in just to get the tax benefits".

  34. Because they don't fit budgets or lifestyles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't go far enough on a single charge, and they're priced like luxury vehicles. In this age where credit debt is at an all-time high, is it any real surprise that people aren't buying a special use-case car?

  35. It's the gasoline, stupid by Powercntrl · · Score: 2

    If you can afford an electric car, your budget likely isn't being squeezed by the cost of conventionally fuels. Those who actually would be helped substantially by the savings an electric car provides generally don't have the income and/or credit score to purchase a brand new electric vehicle. The other problems with electric vehicles:

    Range - For the most part, you can drive a conventionally fueled vehicle so long as it's mechanically sound and has fuel. Trip from Florida to Alaska? No problem, so long as you remember to stop for gas.

    Inconvenience - Forget to fill up your tank and you can solve the problem with a call to a friend (or a long walk) and 5 gallon fuel container. Forget to charge your EV and you need a tow, which is generally a lot more expensive than doing the walk of shame, to a gas station. You have to plan your trips around the level of charge in your car. Just got home from a road trip to your aunt Susy's and now the school is calling that your kid needs to be picked up because he puked his guts out? Sorry, little Jimmy, you'll have to wait while the car has enough capacity to make it to school and back home.

    Electricity - Sure, it's cheaper than gas today, but what happens if electric cars started catching on? They'd have to build more coal and natural gas plants (there's still that pesky fear of nuclear and renewables aren't feasible everywhere) and everyone gets to pay for them in higher utility costs. See, very little petroleum (roughly 1%) is actually used for electricity generation, so a shift towards electric cars would actually just make gasoline and diesel cheaper, while every fucking thing you use electricity for becomes more expensive. Now, I'm sure the car buyer who walks past the Model S isn't worried about it costing twice as much to microwave a burrito or watch the Superbowl on his 60" TV, but it is still something to consider.

    Battery lifespan - If the battery craps out, you could be on the hook for an extremely expensive repair. This will be a bigger problem in the future as more electric cars start entering the second-hand market.

    --

    ---
    DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
    1. Re:It's the gasoline, stupid by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      If you can afford an electric car, your budget likely isn't being squeezed by the cost of conventionally fuels. Those who actually would be helped substantially by the savings an electric car provides generally don't have the income and/or credit score to purchase a brand new electric vehicle.

      Thank you, glad someone said it...

      My "daily driver" is a 2012 GMC Yukon XL Denali, it has a 6.2L V8 that sucks down gas like dead dinos were going out of style (which of course they are). Costs me $100 to fill up and I fill up about 3 times a month.

      $300 a month for gas, for 1 out of my 2 trucks you say? That is a lot of people's whole car payment you say?

      Yea, but I pay about $1,000 a month for the thing (purchased with nothing down, 0% for 5 years), so while I "care" about the $300 a month in gas, if I "cared that much" I wouldn't be spending $1K a month on a truck payment.

      So while an EV appeals to me for many reasons, including reducing my use of dead dinos to power my truck, the cost has to be in line with the gas version. Give me a EV version of my truck for about the same price as the gas version and I'm very interested. Give me a "volt" tech version with a range extender engine and I'll pay $5K more for that feature.

    2. Re:It's the gasoline, stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electricity Glut!

    3. Re:It's the gasoline, stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electricity - Sure, it's cheaper than gas today, but what happens if electric cars started catching on? They'd have to build more coal and natural gas plants (there's still that pesky fear of nuclear and renewables aren't feasible everywhere) and everyone gets to pay for them in higher utility costs. See, very little petroleum (roughly 1%) is actually used for electricity generation, so a shift towards electric cars would actually just make gasoline and diesel cheaper, while every fucking thing you use electricity for becomes more expensive. Now, I'm sure the car buyer who walks past the Model S isn't worried about it costing twice as much to microwave a burrito or watch the Superbowl on his 60" TV, but it is still something to consider.

      Perversely, it could make electricity cheaper than it is today. By raising the baseload, and thereby reducing the baseload/peak ratio (assuming coordinated charge scheduling), it could result in cheaper electricity, as they are able to run generators closer to their capacity factor, increasing efficiency and rate of capitalisation. Also if there is a need to build additional generators, they will be of a more efficient type than older generators, though more expensive, due to a higher capital charge on them.

      The main reason Nuclear generation is so unpopular, is that the capitalisation risk is huge, it's cheap energy, but ONLY if you can guarantee it is run at capacity factors over 90%, because the cost is all in the capital and not the fuel. This could change with small modular reactors, as it is easier to get a contract for a firm purchase of 90% capacity on a 20MW generator than a 2GW generator, and you can scale the capacity in 20MW units as baseload demand expands.

  36. 32k is a new Mercedes or BMW... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who's going to trade that for a Nissan Leaf, Toyota Prius, etc etc?

    No doubt Yupsters.

  37. They need a lesson from Joseph Goebbels by Suiggy · · Score: 1

    "All propaganda has a direction. The quality of this direction determines whether propaganda has a positive or negative effect. Good propaganda does not need to lie, indeed it may not lie. It has no reason to fear the truth. It is a mistake to believe that the people cannot take the truth. They can. It is only a matter of presenting the truth to people in a way that they will be able to understand. A propaganda that lies proves that it has a bad cause. It cannot be successful in the long run. A good propaganda will always come along that serves a good cause. But propaganda is still necessary if a good cause is to succeed. A good idea does not win simply because it is good. It must be presented properly if it is to win. The combination makes for the best propaganda. Such propaganda is successful without being obnoxious. It depends on its nature, not its methods. It works without being noticed. Its goals are inherent in its nature. Since it is almost invisible, it is effective and powerful. A good cause will lose to a bad one if it depends only on its rightness, while the other side uses the methods of influencing the masses. We are, for example, firmly convinced that we fought the Great War for a good cause, but that was not enough. The world should also have known and seen that our cause was good. However, we lacked the effective means of mass propaganda to make that clear to the world. Marxism certainly did not fight for great ideals. Despite that, in November 1918 it overcame Kaiser, Reich, and the army because it was superior in the art of mass propaganda."

    - Speech by Joseph Goebbels on September 6th, 1934 to an audience of party members at Nuremberg , a series of training talks for Nazi party members

    1. Re:They need a lesson from Joseph Goebbels by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      Joseph Goebbels worked for slime, he might have even been slime himself...

      But he was really, really smart and knew what he was doing. Genius comes in all forms.

      Shame most people can't get past the "evilz" part to get to the genius part. Even Hitler has his plus points (don't misunderstand me, that does not in any way excuse the evil, just trying to take whatever good from the bad that is possible) when it came to uniting Germany and restarting her economy.

    2. Re:They need a lesson from Joseph Goebbels by 12WTF$ · · Score: 1

      Nevertheless, we need to understand that $SUBJECT's inability to see reality
      is rooted in his faith, and in powerful psychological conditioning,
      and that will never be changed by exposure to anything as simple as facts.

      --
      Cryonics - Keep cool and carry on.
    3. Re:They need a lesson from Joseph Goebbels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marxism [..] overcame Kaiser, Reich, and the army because it was superior in the art of mass propaganda."

      I don't think that superior propaganda was the reason the marxism overcame the German army.

  38. reasons by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    1. I like to do a lot of my own maintenance but the high voltage warnings under the hood scare the bejesus out of me.

    2. I don't drive enough to make it economically justifiable.

    3. I'm old and cantankerous and have noticed mostly hipsters drive electric cars. Not really a hipster fan.

    1. Re:reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3. I'm old and cantankerous and have noticed mostly hipsters drive electric cars. Not really a hipster fan.

      Exactly, the problem is a generation gap. Sales of electric cars will increase when the hipsters grow up and become cantankerous old people.

    2. Re:reasons by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      1. what sort of maintenance are you expecting to do on an electric motor? there are hardly any moving parts, no oil filters, spark plugs etc. 2. yep 3. being old is no excuse

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    3. Re:reasons by nblender · · Score: 1

      I'm old and cantankerous too and also do a lot of my own maintenance (including engine rebuilds, transmission/transfer case rebuilds, etc)... I'm not overly afraid of the electricity warnings if there were some sort of repair manual available... There's probably not a lot of user servicable parts in a Tesla drivetrain though... Just consumables like brake pads, light bulbs, etc. Maybe some gearbox fluids? Dunno..

      I have two reasons: My job situation is such that I'm not sure it's stable enough that I can handle consumer debt to buy one of these things, and also my almost religious aversion to buying a _new_ car fresh off the lot. I let other shlubs absorb the 20% instantaneous depreciation from driving it off the dealer's lot. It'll be a few years before you start seeing used Tesla's on the market and even then, I predict resale value would probably still be high... So buying a new Tesla would probably be a better choice than a new AnythingElse but still outside of my price range.

    4. Re:reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. There's really no maintenance to be done. Solved.

    5. Re:reasons by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      1. From what I've read, you wouldn't have any maintenance worth doing yourself. No air filters, no oil, etc...
      2. Well..
      3. Tesla is coming out with an F-series style truck. I doubt the hipsters will go for that one:)

  39. We are not ready for them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's actually good that electric cars are nowhere near as popular as our ordinary gasoline-powered vehicles. The infrastructure is simply not ready for it and I do not mean the lack of outlets near public parking spaces.

    We simply do not have enough electric power available to have everyone recharge their EVs. If we want to eventually replace most vehicles with electric ones, we need to improve our electricity generation first.

  40. Too expensive by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here in Australia the Leaf and Miev are both above $50k. I can buy two corollas and ten years of fuel with that amount of money.

    1. Re:Too expensive by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      don't forget about the oil changes, servicing, worn clutches and other moving metal parts that need replacing etc in your cost evaluation

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    2. Re:Too expensive by Feng · · Score: 1

      You're quoting old prices. The LEAF is now AU$39,990 drive away and the i-MiEV is AU$29,990. The sales are still dismal here though, the usual case of lack of infrastructure and advertising. The owners I know are extremely enthusiastic about them though.

      --


      --- if y cn rd ths y cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgmmng!
    3. Re:Too expensive by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Thats interesting, thanks for the update. The CERES environment park (near my house) has a Leaf housed in a little photovoltaic garage. It has a power controller of sorts which feeds solar power into the car. Their previous effort was a van which ran on recycled cooking oil. Whenever it drove past my house the smell made mu hungry.

    4. Re:Too expensive by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Yeah one other thought I had was that the prime market for electric cars is also a fairly poor market for cars over all. I would like to own an electric car but I ride a bike to work. It would have to replace my wife's Jetta, but there will be hell to pay for me if the new car doesn't satisfy 100% of her requirements.

  41. Let them eat cake! by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

    If you're asking the question, you probably don't realize how utterly clueless it is.

    Consider the case of a great princess. When told that the peasants were starving and had no bread, she suggested they eat cake instead.

    There are two obvious reasons (and every other comments makes them so I'll refrain). But if you live in a bubble, yes, you probably wonder why everyone doesn't buy an electric car.

    --
    Do you even lift?

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

    1. Re:Let them eat cake! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consider the case of a great princess. When told that the peasants were starving and had no bread, she suggested they eat cake instead.

      Apocryphal. Didn't happen.

  42. Capital Cost by dbIII · · Score: 1

    It's the same thing that let MSDOS stuff into the office while everyone loved the Sun workstations and similar. An electric vehicle may be a lot better for some situations but the cost to buy one is very high compared with the competition.

  43. It's the whole "getting stranded" thing by kriston · · Score: 1

    It's the whole "getting stranded" thing that doesn't exist with conventionally-fueled vehicles. I don't want to get a $300 towing charge to a recharger just because I want to drive around.

    I think fuel cells are the real answer. Batteries, even the express battery replacement option, won't answer the demand for people who don't want to get stranded in their overpriced electric vehicle.

    This is just reality.

    --

    Kriston

    1. Re:It's the whole "getting stranded" thing by StarWreck · · Score: 1

      So when you run out of hydrogen, driving around looking for a non-existent hydrogen fuel station, you're somehow not going to have to pay that $300 for a tow?

      A fuel cell is just a different type of battery.

      --
      ... and in the DRM, bind them.
    2. Re:It's the whole "getting stranded" thing by dugancent · · Score: 2

      You could potentially refill the H2 on the side of the road, just like gasoline. Not so with a battery

      --
      SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
    3. Re:It's the whole "getting stranded" thing by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      most sensible people will have a plan where all the hydrogen fuel stations would be on their route, a bit like making sure you have a gas station on your long journey. so it would be the same for a gas fueled vehicle. there could be a market for a mobile hydrogen station (if it can meet safety concerns) until all fuel stations include a hydrogen pump

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    4. Re:It's the whole "getting stranded" thing by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Refill? H2? Refilling from a portable battery pack on a cart is more realistic.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    5. Re:It's the whole "getting stranded" thing by dugancent · · Score: 1

      I can drive up the road and buy a tank of H2 in just a few mins. Trucks refill liquid propane for houses around here all the time as as there is no natural gas service. H2 wouldn't have to that different. Much better than the few hours it would take for a portable battery pack of generator to charge a battery.

      --
      SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
  44. hate paying the insurance twice for 1 driver by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

    Are we talking true electric or hybrid here?

    Both can be more expensive to maintain if you keep the car long enough to replace the batteries. If you don't keep it that long then it becomes the next chump's problem, but you still feel it in reduced resale value.

    Pure electrics have a serious problem with range. A multi-car family might be able to work with that for one of the cars, but a single person gets screwed. And they really get screwed if they have a second car that they use for longer trips, they end up being forced to buy liability insurance on each car, even though they can only drive one at a time. Note that I'm talking about the required liability insurance here, not the usually optional collision or comprehensive insurance. And I don't believe the big lie that the insurance is on the car, not the driver. Get a teen-age driver in the family and watch what happens to the liability insurance rate on the same car, or get points on you license or a DUI. The insurance is clearly on the driver, but that driver has to pay for it again if he wants a spare car to resolve the range problem. There is no way that I would ever buy an electric car (or even a tiny high mileage gas powered car with no carrying capacity) unless the lawmakers stop taking their instructions from insurance company campaign donations and clear up this insurance company windfall.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  45. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by NeoMorphy · · Score: 1

    People have been driving combustion automobiles since the industrial age. It takes time for new technologies to move through adoption stages, not to mention time for manufacturing costs and yields to improve.

    They adapted fine to most everything else.

    Power steering, power brakes, steer by wire, brake by wire, cd player, seat warmer, rear defrost, powered side mirrors, keyless entry, keyless start, alarm system, electronic fuel injector, unleaded gas, powered seats, ICE's with computer chips, satellite radio, dvd player, radar detector, cruise control, remote start, airbags, pressure sensors for the tires, halogen lights, powered moon-roof, shoulder belts, ABS, rear video camera, radar assisted parking, radar warning for when you are about to hit the car in front of you, automatic transmission, lojack, etc. I remember when most of these didn't exist. I remember having to warm up the car because it had a carburetor, thank goodness for EFI. Some of these features make a big difference in driving a car, try driving without power steering, or even parking a car without it. Hybrid cars are a seamless change from regular cars, took me seconds to adapt to my Prius. Obviously a non-hybrid EV is a much bigger jump, but if someone doesn't like changes in cars, they're screwed, because cars have been changing every couple of years and if gas prices go high enough I'm guessing less people will stay loyal to ICEs.

  46. (though more to buy in the first place) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Solved in one.

  47. Um, duh by FuzzNugget · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Price, range and infrastructure.

    Maintenance, schmaintenance, when was the last time you heard of an American spending more in something and thinking ahead to spend less later? (see: phone contracts)

    Anything that only goes only 60 miles at a time and then takes all night to be able to start again is worthless other than for very short, painstakingly planned, local trips.

    Even if the infrastructure *was* there, who is able to stop every 60 miles for several hours on end?

    Even if you're buying it to be "green" (ugh), how much energy was needed and how much pollution was created in the manufacturing process vs. that of a dead-dinosaur automobile? There are reports that these figures are tremendously high *just* for the batteries. Are you really causing less pollution or just relocating it?

    Speaking purely in terms of range capability, I think the Chevy Volt has the right idea. The propulsion is 100% electric. The batteries are charged by plugin or an gas-powered generator, so you use no fuel for short trips but can still make longer ones when you need to.

    1. Re:Um, duh by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1
      The beauty of the Volt is that it doesn't even have to be batteries. Anything that provides electricity is good enough, including fuel cells, batteries, generators, solar panels on the roof, etc.

      The Volt is genius design, but not ready for prime time, it costs to much at the moment.

      Get the cost down and I'm very interested.

    2. Re:Um, duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up!!!!

      Very rarely do people who talk about "being green" consider the end-to-end pollution. Even a hybrid vehicle makes more pollution during manufacturing. Offsetting the benefits it provides.

      Additionally the idea that 60 miles (ideal) is suitable round-trip without waiting is insane. It may work for a few areas but there are huge sets of the population that can't deal with such limited range.

    3. Re:Um, duh by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "Even a hybrid vehicle makes more pollution during manufacturing. "

      that will change when manufacturing goes green

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    4. Re:Um, duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I drive a Chevy Volt. The price I paid, after the $7500 tax credit, is less than what a plugin Prius would have cost.

      I can drive it 380 miles and fill up its 9.3 gallon tank at any gas station. Most days I don't use any gas because of the 40 mile electric range.

      As far as infrastructure, I can charge it at home in my garage, and anywhere there is a 120 volt outlet.

      I'm starting today on a long trip and will use gas the whole way unless I find a hotel where I can plug it in. It gets about 40mpg on the highway when using gas.

      I'm very happy with this car, as are most Volt owners.

    5. Re:Um, duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the Chevy Volt is ugly, inside and out.

      WHY must GM insist on trying new gimmicks on "new" models. A Buick interior in the Volt would have made a big difference. An Impala exterior on the Volt would have made a big difference.

  48. Waiting for Something Better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I can buy a new car at any time. But I am waiting for a diesel hybrid to be offered in the US. For some reason auto manufacturers in the US will not offer truly efficient vehicles. Why is there not a diesel hybrid? Why is there not a car that uses electric motors in each wheel yet?

    1. Re:Waiting for Something Better by couchslug · · Score: 2

      I'd love a diesel hybrid, especially a truck (can you say "jobsite power"?), but the reason we don't have cars with electric motors in each wheel is the unpleasant things which happen to wheels.

      Putting complex parts outboard where they'll get a water (or in the Rust Belt, salty water and urea in winter) bath isn't great for longevity. Cables would wear and short, especially on the front wheels. Multiple motors would be very expensive and at the size needed could not be very robust.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    2. Re:Waiting for Something Better by bazorg · · Score: 1

      The Peugeot 3008 hybrid powers the front wheels with a 2.0 HDI (diesel) engine and the rear wheels with an electric motor. The diesel engine powers the battery as well so it can work all EV for a limited range.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WdqjuYMqtvI

      This HDI engine is used by Peugeot, Citroen, Ford and Mini (BMW).
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSA_HDi_engine

      It's not a truck but shows that it can be done and sold by Ford.

    3. Re:Waiting for Something Better by couchslug · · Score: 1

      That would be a neat drivetrain for something the size of the old VW Caddy pickups, and with driven rear wheels offer better performance loaded.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  49. Limited selection - High price by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2
    I see two primary issues...

    First, we are a 2 truck family, so we could easily replace 1 of them with an EV, leaving 1 gas truck for long trips (or a "volt" technology version with plenty of range).

    Selection is a problem. All of the current EVs are little cars, which are only useful for people who want little cars. There are no big vehicles in EV trim.

    Price is also a problem. The EV version of all the cars is much more expensive than the gas powered version. The price needs to be the same, then you'll find customer interest.

    Give me a EV version of my 2012 GMC Yukon XL Denali and sell it to me for about the same price as I paid for this one ($58K) and I'm seriously interested. Even better, put Volt technology into it, give it a small engine for generator duty for long trips, batteries for all the small around town trips, and I'd pay about $5K more for it than I did for the gas only version.

    I suspect that the true cost would have to be $20K more, which I won't pay, which is why there isn't a "volt" version of the Suburban/Yukon/Escalade line of full size SUVs.

    1. Re:Limited selection - High price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are everything that is wrong with American drivers' buying habits summed up in one slashdot comment.

      2-truck family. Seriously? Not one truck and one efficient car (even if a big one)?
      Won't buy it unless it's a Yukon XL Denali (or bigger)!
      big big big bigger big big big! Heeyaw! Lookit mah truck/SUV, it'll destroy you!

      The Leaf is big enough inside for two hugely fat dudes to sit in the front, and two nearly as fat ones sitting in back, all at the same time. The forthcoming E-NV200 is a mini-work-van sized one similar to the Ford Transit Connect that can haul the beer-belly crowd back and forth to their Burly Construction Jobs with tons of room to spare for all their Sizeable Tools. The RAV4-EV can easily haul a four woman buffet clearing team around with plenty of space left over for the doggie bags of leftovers and gallon-sized pails of self loathing. But I think you need a 'big car' because of its penile replacement factor and looks, not 'big car' as in 'practical but big enough to fit comfortably inside'.

      Luckily for you there are a number of extended range ERMAGHERD TRUUUUUUK sized things heading to the market in hopes to get even cavemen like you to stop chuffing so much damn diesel. Look at the VIA Truck project, for instance. They're bringing a full sized pickup truck and an SUV to market with volt-like technology (40mi EV, then extended range gas).

      But something tells me it won't have enough chrome, blowing black smoke and truck nuts for ya. Because you're an American, dammit, and you're proud.

  50. Price and lack of options by TheHappyMailAdmin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Electric cars are still just too expensive for most buyers and don't come in the right options. No EV minivans, full size SUVs or pick-ups means a lot of buyers can't find an electric version of the type of car they want. I think the Model S is an awesome car but it's effectively a luxury sedan and the market for luxury sedans isn't that big. To get "butts in seats" someone has to come up with an EV pickup and sedan which get comparable range to their gas counterparts at the same price point.

    Hopefully battery prices will fall significantly with the new technologies being developed, but until they do I think we'll continue to see more gas powered cars than hybrids, and more hybrids than full EVs.

  51. Because by aliquis · · Score: 1

    Because money?

  52. It's a combination by kilodelta · · Score: 1

    Part of it is cost of the vehicles. Let's face it a Nissan Leaf is 30 grand. The other part is charging infrastructure. Until such time as places of business start installing quick charge stations you're not going to see widespread adoption of electric vehicles.
    The other thing that kills it is the range of electric vehicles. The Leaf gets about 60 miles on a charge. That's not good.

  53. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Serious question:

    We are a 1 car family in California (yeah, really) Carmel, actually, where Teslas are amazingly common.

    Our driving is local; but for long trips to San Jose / SF / Marin, we plan ahead. One of us stays home, other gets the car. For the last 4 years, we've needed 2 cars 3 times. And Enterprise / Hertz solved that problem.

    So in that scenario, why not keep the electric, and rent when you need a long-distance haul?

  54. It's all about the price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Until electric cars can stand on their own merit on price they will not sell.

    Like LED and florescent lighting before it, they are trying to sell them for $60, because technically that would be cheaper than buying $1 incandescent light bulbs. Well I bought a couple when they finally hit the $20 mark because I wanted some lights be to dimmable. When Lowe's started putting them only sale for $8-9 a piece I replaced every light in my house with LEDs.

    Electric cars will be the same way. When you see a "regular" sized/performance electric car with at least a 100mile range for $25,000 that will last for 15 years, they won't be able to build them fast enough.

    1. Re:It's all about the price by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      An electric car could cost more initially and still be viable, because electricity is the equivalent of about 60 cents a gallon gasoline. Buy an expensive vehicle, and then cheap out on the fuel costs for the next 5 - 10 years. If they could cure the other problems of range and how long it takes to refuel, I'd be interested.

  55. Why buy a lion that can't roar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Car culture is about feeling powerful

    1. Re:Why buy a lion that can't roar by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      Tesla 0 - 60 about 4.6 seconds. How fast do you want to go, anyway?

  56. Somewhat connected to that by aliquis · · Score: 2

    In Norway they sell well.

    Then again they have a high income and the government have likely tried to force people into that direction, they likely have a higher social environmental interest than people in the U.S. do.

    1. Re:Somewhat connected to that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most stuff is overpriced in Norway. The increased price for EVs probably simply fits in.

    2. Re:Somewhat connected to that by Ashtead · · Score: 1

      Norway's large sales of electric cars is mostly driven by positive incentives: electric cars may use the lanes reserved for busses and taxis, they go free of charge on the toll roads, they are not taxed with VAT when sold, and the yearly vehicle tax is only on the order of 400 kr as opposed to the approximately 3000 kr for cars with gasoline or diesel engines.

      --
      SIGBUS @ NO-07.308
  57. Terribly engineered for actual customers by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 2

    Right now electric cars are for very specific people who have fairly specific needs plus they are missing critical features.

    There are two sorts of people who can use a modern electric car: People who commute well within a basic battery range (less than 100km round trip) and the other are people like me who live downtown and mostly need a car to avoid using the terrible bus system or bike in bad weather.

    Quite simply it is impossible to build a reasonably priced electric car that can match a gasoline car so the simple solution is to not bother. So if you make a case to the less than 100km round trip commuter that they will basically never buy gas for their commuting again then you will have their attention.

    If you tell me as a very infrequent driver and generally short trip driver that I will never buy gas again then you will have my attention.

    But if you lie to me and tell me that electric is basically the same as a gas car then I will call BS and you won't have my attention.

    On top of all that there are a few bad design decisions. First is they keep trying to put too big a battery in the cars; this is just stupid until batteries get cheaper and better. Just meet the average commuter's needs for a round trip with margin and you will sell them a car. The next design disaster is when they try to simulate a real gas car by putting a piston engine in as in the volt. The best solution would be to have a low power gas turbine (5-10hp) that can charge the car's battery slowly. This way you eliminate range anxiety by allowing the person to realize that they don't have enough juice to complete the journey so they kick in the turbine (or automatically when they set a destination that is beyond the battery's range) which will buy more range. If the turbine doesn't provide enough immediate range the driver could pull over and get a coffee while the turbine adds a mile of range every minute or two.

    Then you roof the car in solar so that the battery is charging during sunny days. For a commuter this would be great as they might use 30% of their charge getting to work and come out having recovered 10%. Then when they get home they would get an hour or two more charging not quite topping them up but reducing their electrical bill.

    For an occasional user like me a solar roof might mean that my battery is nearly always charged as it should get topped off most sunny days.

    Lastly there are all kinds of engineering gaps in these cars. One interesting one is heating in colder climates. In the winter around here a smaller battery would be eaten just keeping me warm, especially if I am waiting in the car. One simple solution would be to have an alcohol heater which would be simple and single purposed for keeping me warm. This would be great if you could turn it on 10 minutes before you get into the car and it would warm up the car and maybe even the batteries.

    Then the last and most important bit which is battery life. That is how many years will these batteries run the car. We all have laptops where the batteries have cacked after a year or two; often fairly suddenly, one moment we had a battery life and then the battery is complaining seconds after unplugging the laptop. So the car companies need to either warranty the batteries and maybe even set an eventual replacement price in stone. This way you know that in 8 years they will sell you a new set of cells for $2,000 or something. This might be a bit of a risk for the car companies but I would think that the odds are in favor of better cheaper batteries being generally available in less than 8 years.

    Lastly there is nearly zero customer education. Most people don't know that most of these cars can be charged slowly with a normal outlet and that the "advanced" outlet is basically a higher amperage dryer plug. The slower charging is important as they know that they can do things such as go to the cottage and charge the car overnight.

    The stupid thing is that without fixing the above they are

    1. Re:Terribly engineered for actual customers by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      On top of all that there are a few bad design decisions. First is they keep trying to put too big a battery in the cars; this is just stupid until batteries get cheaper and better. Just meet the average commuter's needs for a round trip with margin and you will sell them a car.

      With the exception of the Tesla, none of the EVs today meet the average commuter's needs with a reasonable margin. The worst-case round-trip for a Leaf is only about 47 miles, which is barely over the 32 mile round-trip U.S. commute average with a reasonable margin when the car is new. When the car is ten years old and it only goes 22 miles, it won't even make one round trip without charging at work. They're not trying to put too big a battery in the cars. The batteries are not big enough for most drivers' average commute. They certainly are not too big unless you're in that 2% whose commute is measured in blocks.

      Then you roof the car in solar so that the battery is charging during sunny days...

      Tell me you're kidding. A Nissan Leaf is less than 85 square feet on top, including the hood and the trunk (computed by multiplying height * width, so this is an overestimate by most of the size of the front and rear windshields). At full sun, modern solar panels only produce about 10-15 watts per square foot when in full sun, for a total of only about 850–1275 watts. To charge its 24 kWh battery, it would take 19–28 hours of full sun. Most of the U.S. gets only about 5 full sun equivalent hours per day, and some parts get even less. Doing the math, then, even if it never rains where you live, you might be able to charge it with a car-sized set of solar panels, but only if you drive your car no more than once per week. For a typical driver, though, the numbers just don't work. Not even close. And that's ignoring the added weight and the extra battery capacity required to move those solar panels around.

      One simple solution would be to have an alcohol heater which would be simple and single purposed for keeping me warm. This would be great if you could turn it on 10 minutes before you get into the car and it would warm up the car and maybe even the batteries.

      Or you could just use a battery pack that isn't hopelessly undersized.

      This way you know that in 8 years they will sell you a new set of cells for $2,000 or something.

      I'd believe $20,000.... :-)

      The slower charging is important as they know that they can do things such as go to the cottage and charge the car overnight.

      Not overnight, you won't. Not unless you started out mostly full. The current-generation RAV4 EV takes 52 hours to charge from a 110VAC, 10A outlet. Even the Nissan Leaf, with its much smaller battery, takes 20 hours to fully charge from a normal outlet. The reality of the matter is that the 110V chargers are basically useless except as a means to get an emergency quick charge to get you a couple of miles to somewhere that has a real charging station if you run just slightly short. They're not an overnight charging solution by any stretch of the imagination unless you own a plug-in hybrid with a very, very short all-electric range.

      --

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

    2. Re:Terribly engineered for actual customers by SIGBUS · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On top of all that there are a few bad design decisions. First is they keep trying to put too big a battery in the cars; this is just stupid until batteries get cheaper and better. Just meet the average commuter's needs for a round trip with margin and you will sell them a car. The next design disaster is when they try to simulate a real gas car by putting a piston engine in as in the volt. The best solution would be to have a low power gas turbine (5-10hp) that can charge the car's battery slowly. This way you eliminate range anxiety by allowing the person to realize that they don't have enough juice to complete the journey so they kick in the turbine (or automatically when they set a destination that is beyond the battery's range) which will buy more range. If the turbine doesn't provide enough immediate range the driver could pull over and get a coffee while the turbine adds a mile of range every minute or two.

      Gas turbines have been tried in cars, but the problem is that a large mass spinning at extremely high speeds doesn't work out well in a car environment. The sudden changes in direction (both turns and especially bumps) are horrible for large turbine bearings. Something the size of a turbocharger can handle it, but the equivalent of an even a small aircraft APU is a different beast.

      Lastly there are all kinds of engineering gaps in these cars. One interesting one is heating in colder climates. In the winter around here a smaller battery would be eaten just keeping me warm, especially if I am waiting in the car. One simple solution would be to have an alcohol heater which would be simple and single purposed for keeping me warm. This would be great if you could turn it on 10 minutes before you get into the car and it would warm up the car and maybe even the batteries.

      Note that resistance heaters have given way to far-more-efficient heat pumps, so it's no worse a range hit than using air conditioning in summer. The HVAC on even a Leaf can be remotely fired up while still hooked to the charger.

      Then the last and most important bit which is battery life. That is how many years will these batteries run the car. We all have laptops where the batteries have cacked after a year or two; often fairly suddenly, one moment we had a battery life and then the battery is complaining seconds after unplugging the laptop. So the car companies need to either warranty the batteries and maybe even set an eventual replacement price in stone.

      Setting the price in stone might be a bit of a problem, but they are putting warranties on batteries. The Leaf's battery warranty is 5 years/60,000 miles, Tesla's 60 kWh pack is 8 years/125,000 miles, and their 85 kWh pack is 8 years, unlimited mileage.

      Even with all that, an electric still isn't workable for my own use case, though it comes close. It's still the whole road trip issue for me. A Leaf would fit 90% of my driving, but it's that last 10% that's the deal-breaker. Sure, I could rent something for the long trips, but that can get expensive.

      --
      Oh, no! You have walked into the slavering fangs of a lurking grue!
    3. Re:Terribly engineered for actual customers by RandyOo · · Score: 1

      The best solution would be to have a low power gas turbine (5-10hp) that can charge the car's battery slowly. This way you eliminate range anxiety by allowing the person to realize that they don't have enough juice to complete the journey so they kick in the turbine (or automatically when they set a destination that is beyond the battery's range) which will buy more range.

      (snip)

      And a 5hp turbine charger would be like living in the future.

      It looks like you're not the first person to think of this, and you may not have to wait all that long...

    4. Re:Terribly engineered for actual customers by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

      I agree but the key mistake is that they are trying to build electric cars that replace cars. My theory is to build an electric car for weirdos; people who don't drive much or when they do drive are driving a very very predictable pattern that falls well within a cheaper electric. You mention that a road trip would be a 10% problem. But for a two car house with one car electric and commuting and the other for more "normal" driving this would not be a problem.

      The gas turbine bump thing is a problem with larger gas turbines. Smaller ones can take advantage of things such as air bearings that are exceptional at taking bumps. But again this is where they are building normal cars with an electric twist. Jag tested a car with a 90hp turbine that was enough to sustain highway speeds. I don't want that big a thing but a turbine to get me out of trouble; hence 5hp or so. I am perfectly happy to discover that my car won't get me home unless I pull over and recharge for an hour. So I pull over and read a book. This would happen infrequently but it would be less costly than a tow and take about the same time.

  58. It's obviously COST by musixman · · Score: 1

    They cost more upfront & most people don't think past the now.

    For web based services imo, more people choose "month-to-month" versus a yearly package. Even though yearly is much cheaper & the retention is over 12 months.

    1. Re:It's obviously COST by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      They cost more upfront & most people don't think past the now.

      Many people can't afford to. They buy whatever they can barely afford, so they aren't going to have extra room for EV technologies.
      It's easier to pay a large bill when it's spread over a length of time -- total cost of ownership for a car is the same way.

  59. Re:Range. That's #1. by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2
    Frankly, I think you're on the outside of "normal" when it comes to range. Study after study shows the average person drives between 15 and 30 miles a day, 100+ miles a day is rare.

    Frankly, I drive even less, just a few miles here and a few miles there. An EV would be perfect for me, if the price were similar to the gas version and if they offered a full-size SUV EV.

    I do need one gas car because we do take family road trips, but I'd also consider a "volt" EV type truck with a range extender as the second "gas" car. I'd pay $5K more over the gas only version for that truck.

    When that comes out, I'm a customer, I personally think EV is the future, the cost just needs to come down.

  60. Supply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The few times great deals were made, they were not available in my state! My 35 mile one way commute fits an EV well. Why do you have to live in CA to buy one at a reasonable cost?

  61. it's the price, stupid. by markhahn · · Score: 2

    My daily commute is less than 10km, and I would love to have and affordable, safe, less-consumptive/polluting vehicle. I would be very tempted by a car-like EV that was very small and light with range 50km if it cost something like $5-7k. (for $10k I can get a small used ICE that burns absurdly little gas.) It has to be able to take me up a decent-sized hill at 50 kph, though. An in-town EV could make a lot of sense, market-wise, but I think it should be purposed-designed, not just an ICE vehicle with a the engine swapped out.

    Otherwise, the problem is that EV or hybrids try to deliver long range and highway performance and wind up simply being too expensive. Hybrids in particular wind up carrying so much extra weight that you can usually do better pure EV *xor* ICE. It doesn't make sense to pretend that the technology supports non-premium EVs yet (Tesla is great, but it's a sports car at sports car prices.) In some sense, the problem is that petroleum ICE sets a high bar of energy density. I often wonder if there's a place for an EV that has an optional IDE add-in module for range (maybe fuel cell some day, maybe petroleum+turbine today or just a conventional diesel.)

    1. Re:it's the price, stupid. by romiz · · Score: 1

      For a reference point, the Bluecars used in a car-sharing service in Paris are for sale at about €12k, after a €7k subvention, but you need to pay an additional €80 a month for battery rental + battery exchange at 400,000 km. And it's a very spartan car, with 4 places but no trunk, clearly designed for city-only use.

    2. Re:it's the price, stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10km? Is that it? You should be on a bike.

    3. Re:it's the price, stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      less than 10km commute? You could take a bike. My ride is 3 miles each way. It's easy.

    4. Re:it's the price, stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10km, bicycle.

  62. It only meets 98% of my needs by tji · · Score: 1

    98% of the driving I do work great with a basic EV. My daily commute is no problem. The vast majority of other common trips fit comfortably in its range. But, the other 2%.. a round of golf two hours away or a weekend ski trip are dealbreakers. Keeping an EV plus a basic gasoline vehicle is an option, but creates a lot of logistical issues for parking, storage, insurance, etc.

    1. Re:It only meets 98% of my needs by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      There is a solution to this. It is called car rental. Also there is the concept of car sharing. If you live in a city there might already be such infrastructure available.

  63. General Motors streetcar conspiracy by tepples · · Score: 1

    They dumped electric cars almost immediately when internal combustion engines became viable

    Are you sure it wasn't anticompetitive maneuvering by GM?

  64. Hydrogen Fuel Cell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Electric cars are a stop gap until fuel cell cars are released

  65. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I also have a Leaf. My round trip is 17 miles, most of it at less than 60 miles an hour. I generally recharge every three days and I use the plain old outlet overnight.

    According to the manual, yup I read it, the best way to maintain your battery is to use the nice slow recharger. Musk commented that heat management is the key to battery longevity and Nissan seems to agree. It doesn't really matter to me because I only have a two year lease.

    I do really like this car. I was never much of a fan of hanging out at gas stations. I have my suspicious that having a lot fewer parts makes for a more reliable vehicle. With my commute I would not pay much for gas, but I also am not spending money on oil changes or any fluids beyond wiper fluid. I like how quiet it is. I like the acceleration (up to about 35).

    I really hate the EULA I have to commit to every time I turn on the car. Every time. I also think it is a real ugly car. I wish they would make a cute little two-seater without the bug eyes.

    Earlier this year I was approached about a job in another state. I couldn't easily get out of the lease so I decided to see if I could live close enough to have about the same kind of commute. There was a charger at work, but charging at work is a distraction and a hassle. There were two outlets and pretty quickly you could end up in line -- for four hours. Looking for a place to live started to have restrictions too. Can't live in a multi-unit building because they don't have chargers. Can't live with on-street parking. Decided I didn't want to live over the very significant hill between work and cheap housing because I knew my battery would go south really fast climbing a steep hill for miles at 60 miles an hour.

    Right now this car works great. Change where I live or where I work and it could pretty quickly be a problem.

    Range is a big limiting factor. It is something that will likely prevent me from getting a similar electric car when my lease expires. I don't see putting down all the money I would need to invest for a Tesla. That means I am probably going to be hanging out at gas stations again with a smelly, oily, noisy, internal combustion engine based car.

  66. Battery tech by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    My decade old saying was 'There's nothing wrong with EV's that a battery that costs half as much for double the capacity wouldn't fix'.

    At the time they were using lead-acid, the switch to LiIon gave us the double, but at double the cost. We haven't reached the 'half the price' yet though.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  67. Range by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While they may work well for compact cities they don't do all that well in less traditional urban sprawl. Consider where I live: South Florida. Things are highly spread out. Even a trip to visit a close friend is likely to exhaust my range. Never mind that you simply have to run the A/C (sometimes even in the winter) and that reduces the effective range even more.

    Even if I can plug it in while at a friends' house (which isn't really practical to begin with) it takes a few hours to charge up. So then I'm stuck there. Never mind what if we wanted to grab a bite to eat or something.

    This whole argument makes no sense though. The people who are saying "EV's are fun to drive" are the ones who buy them after doing lots of research and are genuinely interested in EVs. I would *love* to drive an EV. But it simply isn't practical. I looked into the Nissan Leaf. Sure it drove nice. But they weren't even sure the breaker panel in my house had enough remaining capacity for the charger. So I may not even be able to get an EV if I were willing to live with the limitations. Such a small (and specialized) sample set of drivers doesn't really mean anything. You need some people driving EVs who aren't excited about driving an EV.

    Or do what I do: Buy a VW diesel and run it off biodiesel.

  68. Energy source suited for purpose by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    I've seen a number of hybrids up here in Alaska, gas is expensive.

    My idea is to use the fuel source best suited for purpose - in the extreme north install a small hydrocarbon heater - probably propane, but you have your choice of fuels otherwise. That way you have the energy density and 90%+ efficiency for producing heat(not a high penalty over the 100% efficiency of electric resistance, and it's cold enough to really limit the effectiveness of heat pump style heating), and the efficiency of electric for moving, where it's 90% efficient(over ~30% for gasoline).

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  69. fixed cost vs incremental cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought about this a while ago. Presuming a basic, new gasoline car has a cost of $15K, and a basic, new electric car has a cost of $30K, gasoline car gets 33 mpg, and electric car 3 miles per kwh. Gas $4/gallon. Electricity $0.10/kwh. Energy cost of gasoline-mile: $0.12, Energy cost of electricity-mile: $0.033, or electric is $0.09/mile cheaper. ~167,000 miles needed to make that $15K back. The question is HOW LONG will it take a given driver to drive 167,000 miles? A taxi could do it in a few years. someone that drives ~10,000 miles a year, 17 years. There is also the cost of replacing a worn out battery. However, there are ways of getting more out of a gallon of gasoline. We could see the rise of narrow vehicles, like the Elio, which are designed specifically for cruising on the highway (if you get in a crash at 75 mph, you're pretty much screwed.)

    1. Re:fixed cost vs incremental cost by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      you didn't take into account servicing, oil changes, replacement of various moving parts that wear out like clutches, oil filters, exhausts, catalytic converters etc in gas cars

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  70. I live in an apartment by Tong+Fei+Kasamatsu · · Score: 1

    I'd buy a Nissan Leaf tomorrow if I could. But they won't sell it to me as I don't have a plave to instsll the required hardware for charging.

  71. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Non-slashdotters would definitely notice the complete change in the amount of pussy you get when you start driving a Prius. It will only take a few seconds to go to 0.

  72. Practicality by kimvette · · Score: 1

    > Electric Cars: Drivers Love 'Em, So Why Are Sales Still Low?

    Why? Because they are impractical for a lot of people. It would turn a lot of my driving into day tips, and day trips into multiple-day trips. Until we have ultracapacitors that fully charge as fast as filling a gas tank and "portable" reserve capacitors that we can trade in to services like AAA or walk to a "gas" station to exchange one and carry back to your car to get you to the station when you've run one flat two miles away, they simply won't work for people who live in outlying suburb or rural areas. For me, a drive to work is just under 100 miles, and driving between clients and meetings can cost 200 additional miles during a day. I often drive to western PA - that takes me six to eight hours sometimes not even having to stop to fill (if I don't need AC or the windows open), but with current battery tech it would turn into a multi-day trip. Even if I had a tesla and could use the rapid-charge stations, it would be a multi-day trip because in the Boston-DC corridor there are several public rapid-charge stations (which still takes a couple hours for a full charge), it would work if I stick to I-95, but anywhere else for long drives I'd be screwed. Also, using heat and AC, lights, wipers, etc. totally kills electric vehicle range to the point that you cannot rely on the trip computer for range. Finally, if you park the car and go on an extended vacation, the car can be bricked when the battery goes flat.

    I like ICE - they give me freedom, and besides, driving conservatively my Saab gets >40mpg on long highway drives if I don't hit traffic, 35-36mpg if I hit traffic, and 29 mpg combined when I drive through Boston or NYC and catch rush hour. Likewise, even my ZR1 gets > 30mpg on the highway driven conservatively (it hits peak mpg at 93mph - about 30-31mpg at 66mph) and 27mpg combined driven conservatively. Of course that car is a pig in city driving - 18-19mpg on a good day. I love it when self-righteous people criticize me for driving a "gas guzzler" when I ask them what they get for MPG in their family sedan on the highway and I tell them what I get. I get the weirdest looks. And, I verify mpg by math when I fill up, and the trip computer is nearly always within a few tenths, and the Saab's computer within 1 mpg (but my scangage on the saab is nearly always within a tenth or two, and when I fill, it's within .1 gallon of what I actually put in).

    I wish more cars came out in hybrid form; I would absolutely spring for another 'Vette if it had electric-powered front wheels, then I could get AWD and great efficiency when just commuting, but unfortunately vocal "purists" fear changing the car's layout. As it is there is an outcry against the rumored new LT5 V6 for the upcoming ZR1 Stingray ("ZOMG it's not a V8"), let alone a hybrid. Hell, even mid-engine rumors gets them whining but what most Corvette fans don't realize is that the Corvette is already mid-engine - it's a front-mid-engine layout. Putting the engine in the back would only further improve handling dynamics and would likely improve maneuverability. I don't get why so many fans are so resistant to changes in that car.

    IMHO all vehicles should come with a hybrid option, preferably AWD. I like hybrid tech because it is practical and efficient, and doesn't leave you stranded when the battery goes flat.

    Another tech I'd love to see is gas turbine generators in cars. Turbines are extremely lightweight for a given power output, waste heat is easily scavenged and can be used for peltier junction generators, heat, and even AC, and at highway speeds the exhaust could even add a little thrust so that power doesn't go to waste.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  73. Not buying anytime soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rented one of those EVs for a week. You paint a golf cart metallic blue -- it is still a golf cart. I'll consider buying one when I turn 85.

  74. Tesla Pickup timeline by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Not per various sources - puts the truck 5 years out - making 2018/9 closer than 2015.

    As for towing - you have my attention at "100% torque at 0 RPM".

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  75. Tesla! by louarnkoz · · Score: 1

    I really love the Model S. Beats the BMW every day, and actually not more expensive than a series 7...

  76. Revealed preference by tsotha · · Score: 1

    ...or maybe people don't really like electric cars as much as they say they do.

    1. Re:Revealed preference by hyades1 · · Score: 0

      Fuck off, troll.

      --
      I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    2. Re:Revealed preference by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Hit a little too close to home? For all but a tiny fraction, environmentalism is all about moral preening. It melts away when sacrifices (well, sacrifices to one's own standard of living) are in the offing.

  77. illegal to sell by Xicor · · Score: 1

    in texas it is illegal for tesla to sell their cars because the dealerships lobbied the government to stop them from cutting out the middle man.

    1. Re:illegal to sell by Yosho · · Score: 1

      It's a bit disingenuous to say "It's illegal to sell Teslas in Texas." It's more accurate to say "Tesla refuses to follow the law in Texas."

      The purpose of the law is to prevent car manufacturers from being able to own vertical monopolies, which is exactly what Tesla wants to do, and it's been around since long before Tesla existed. There is no reason why they can't follow the same rules as everybody else.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
    2. Re:illegal to sell by Xicor · · Score: 1

      no, the purpose is to get everyone to go through the car dealerships instead of just selling it themselves. it has nothing to do with a monopoly, the texas dealerships just want to be rich as fuck, so they lobby government into forcing car manufacturers to sell through them. All this ends up doing is making cars 20% more expensive for the buyers than they would be if they were sold directly to the end user.

  78. "though more to buy in the first place" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    though more to buy in the first place

    Did you not see yourself answer your own fucking question?

    It's pure greed and profiteering that gets electric car companies to set their prices so high. Who the fuck are they to complain when not enough people are stuffing their wallets full of cash?

    For years we hear the line about "once people start buying them, the price will go down." This line is bullshit and garbage. Prices don't go down, buyers are just expected to cough up more money. News flash: In America, workers haven't actually had wages keep up with production for decades — because greed.

    The goal of corporations who spout that excuse is really that "once people start buying them, they will think this high price point is normal for this product, and continue to buy whether we drop the price or not."

  79. Cost of electric vs gas, and range by billstewart · · Score: 2

    If your car gets x mpg in the US, your cost of gasoline over the lifetime of the car is about $1M / x. ($5 per gallon * 200,000 miles / mpg) So a 20mpg SUV will cost you $50K in gas, or a 50mpg Prius will cost you $20K. (Pro-rate if you're just keeping the car a few years, of course.) If the price per mile for electric is equivalent to 100 mpg, then it's going to save you only $10K over a Prius, but $40K over an SUV.

    I live in the San Francisco Bay Area. A lot of the driving I do is less than 10 miles each way, but there are a lot of 40-50 mile trips that I make frequently (one is to work, on the days I don't telecommute), also between Silicon Valley and SF or Berkeley. I'd need a car with at least 200-mile range that I can charge at home in 6 hours to feel really comfortable driving that. If I could afford to maintain three cars (I don't have parking for them, and would rather not pay for the insurance and registration), I'd be fine with the current electric cars, which would get used for most non-commute driving, but my wife and I would still have full-range cars if we needed them, though I'd rather wait a few years.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re: Cost of electric vs gas, and range by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 1

      Well, most people don't buy SUVs to commute in, they typically do so to have a vehicle that can do things that the Prius can't (haul heavy loads, tow stuff, get out of its own way). Besides that, many small, more car-like SUVs get well over 25 MPG and some get over 30 MPG highway.

      Factor in that gas isn't $5/gallon, it has been $3.15-3.75 for years now, and that math isn't so attractive. Really, there are very few reasons to buy the Prius at all, given that many TDIs get nearly the same gas mileage at 2/3 the price, and no need for replacing expensive battery arrays.

      --
      while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    2. Re:Cost of electric vs gas, and range by Locutus · · Score: 1

      As more and more EV's hit the roads, watch the car rental business start expanding as they offer quick and easy rental plans for EV owners. Right now, their primary businesses is travelers but their is nothing stopping them from leveraging their parking lots to charge EV's and rent out vehicles for the occasional "long" distance trip.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    3. Re: Cost of electric vs gas, and range by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      The TDI gets nothing like the mileage of a hybrid in city driving. And here in the US, the prices are pretty close. Jetta TDI: $23,195, mileage 30 city, 42 highway. Prius: $24,200, mileage 51 city, 48 highway. And don't forget that diesel costs more at the pump, reducing your savings. Urban dwellers who are VW fans are likely to be much happier with the Jetta Hybrid: $25,195, mileage 42 city, 48 highway.

      If you step down to the Prius C at $19,080 you have a car that's cheaper than any available TDI in the US.

  80. As a guy who just needs a car by Salgat · · Score: 1

    I'd love an electric vehicle but as of now the two limitations for me is price (almost triple what I paid for my Chevy Spark) and range (I'm limited to about 200 miles on a charge so I cannot travel to visit family without renting a car).

  81. Price by whistlingtony · · Score: 1

    I don't care about range. It's a 5 mile drive to work. I'm fine. My household can easily have a gas car for long trips (seriously, why are people so hung up on range? A LOT of households have more than one car). My big thing is price. I'll buy when it's $15,000, in a heartbeat. Perhaps my first electric will be used. Works for me.

    1. Re:Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Seriously? You live only 5 miles from work and you *DRIVE*???

      Ever hear of something called a bicycle? Crap, if I lived that close to where I worked, I'd be cycling in every single day (and would probably end up in better shape for it too). At only 5 miles, I'd be at work in maybe 10 to 15 minutes. Also, bicycles don't have as much hassles with rush-hour traffic.

    2. Re:Price by clarkn0va · · Score: 2

      At only 5 miles, I'd be at work in maybe 10 to 15 minutes.

      I live 4.4 km from work. I can bike there in maybe 10 minutes (I've biked there lots but never actually timed it), but then I have to either stand around for 15 minutes to cool down, or hop in the shower before I can go to the office. Realistically, my 10-minute bicycle commute takes a minimum of 30 minutes.

      Then there's winter. Last night we got 30 cm of snow. Last week we got 20 cm of snow. Two weeks ago we got 20 cm of snow. I have studded tires on the bike, but you just can't keep those things rolling in more than about 5 or 6 cm of soft snow. Even on packed snow or ice, you're looking again at double commute time, plus snow pants, goggles, etc. Add to this the time it takes to clean and maintain your drivetrain on a daily basis due to slush and sand.

      So yeah, biking to work is an option, and one that I have used, but to say that it's basically equivalent to driving for any commute over about 1 km is not being realistic in my experience.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
    3. Re:Price by xaxa · · Score: 2

      I cycle 5.6km to work, but don't need time to cool down or change clothes. It's not a race! It takes a bit under half an hour.

      (Except sometimes on the way home, when I feel like going as fast as I can.)

      I can't solve winter for you, and it's not unlikely that your summer is hotter than mine. I might see ~3cm of snow, in which case I'll either take the bus (~40m), or, if all the car drivers have been scared away from the roads again, cycle down the main road, which will be nicely gritted and salted.

    4. Re:Price by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      My household can easily have a gas car for long trips (seriously, why are people so hung up on range? A LOT of households have more than one car).

      How often do you need that, and how much is it to rent a car?

  82. It's The Batteries, Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There is only one real issue impeding electric cars, there is no cost-effective quick charging battery technology available. The military can spend $100,000 for a nano-tube battery (Made in Cambridge, MA.) that can be fully charged in one minute, but I can't. When low-cost, quick-charging batteries are made, and I can drive into a service station anywhere and drive up to the Blue electric "pump", swipe my card and change my car in 5 minutes, I will have no desire to return to internal combustion.

      Mass production brings down the prices, and lack of pollutants encourages subsidies. Electricity created at environmentally sophisticated carbon-sequestering generation stations are already on-line. We do not need to wait for a future of super-efficient solar cells, nor endless seas of bird-killing wind farms. All we need is a fast-charging battery at low cost. When we can drive from San Diego, California to Halifax Nova Scotia, we will instantly prefer electric.

  83. They Cost Too Much.... by Ferretman · · Score: 1

    ...and frankly I can't charge them where I need to be able to charge them.

    My house is off grid and solar-powered so you'd think that would be ideal. The problem is that when the sun is out I'm not at the house, I'm at work....where there aren't any places to charge something like this (military base). And of course when I'm home the sun isn't up--I'd have to pull down my batteries (which supply all the power to said house) to charge the car.

    I could easily be sold on an electric car, but not until the price comes down and I've got some way to charge it up at work.

    Ferret

    --
    Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc
  84. 3rd word is more important by pablo_max · · Score: 1

    Costs.
    Electric cars are terribly expensive relative to a comparable gas or diesel car. Plus, with that money, you get a far less usable product.

    I think electric is the future. I just do not thing the current battery model is the answer.

  85. Easy answer by Endo13 · · Score: 2

    Not enough range, refueling takes too long.

    Gotta fix one or the other.

    --
    There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    1. Re:Easy answer by BobSoper · · Score: 1

      another problem, now that Nissan is leasing a LOT of new Leafs in places like Portland, Seattle and the Bay Area: lack of public DC fast-charging infrastructure. a year ago this wasn't so bad, but the number of Leafs on the street has quadrupled since then... or it sure seems like it. There doesn't seem to be ANY effort to deal with this... I haven't seen ONE new DC fast charger go online in Portland during the past 10 months. Almost half of all vehicles in the US don't have regular access to a home carport, garage or driveway. I for one will not renew my lease in 2015, because to rely on public charging infrastructure is just getting to be more and more of a headache.

  86. They're just UGLY by spectro · · Score: 1

    My personal opinion is EVs are just ugly... awfully ugly. The Tesla Model S is the only exception, but it's at least twice as expensive than any of the others.

    After years of driving sweet looking sedans i just can't see myself driving an ugly little hatchback EVs every car manufacturer is spawning for some reason. Heck, even BMW is making it's EV as ugly as you could possibly design it.

    I'll tell you what I would buy:

    • A Nissan Sentra, Altima or Maxima with the Leaf's powertrain
    • A Chevy Cruze (or Malibu) with the Volt's powertrain, or better with the Spark EV's one (400 lbs/ft OMGtorque)
    --
    HTML is obsolete. It's time for a new, simpler and richer markup language.
  87. ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    while one part of Obamanomics was to double (or more if possible) the cost of gas to nudge the ignorant masses into solar/wind etc, another part was to save the planet by reducing carbon emissions in the US (not even offsetting the increased emissions by China, where so many of our middle-class manufacturing jobs went...) and this part of Obamanomics has caused electricity rates in the US to rise by over 40% since he took office. Now that the war on coal is in full-swing and the current administration is returning to the anti-nuke position of its political base, many coal plants are closing, and some of the utilities that were going back to nuclear are instead retreating from the idea of new plants; the price of electricity is going to jump.

    Electric cars only benefit from "cheap" electricity while electricity is truly cheap, and the states which helped trick people into electric cars by pointing at that "cheap" electricity are now getting frustrated that electric car operators are not paying their "fair share" because they are not paying the gas tax (which is actually a larger portion of the price of a gallon of gas than the profit margin of "big oil") As a result, you guys with electric cars are gonna see some new taxes/fees at some point (a miles-driven tax?)

  88. Ferraris: Drivers Love 'Em, So Why Are Sales Low? by stenvar · · Score: 1

    Hope that clears that up.

  89. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come live in mid Missouri for a little while and you'll quickly find that 150 miles won't get you to the nearest decent sized city and back, much less give you any room to do anything while you're there.

  90. Let's start with the title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drivers Love 'Em

    Shouldn't this be "Drivers of electric vehicles Love 'Em?"

    (People who drive EVs) != (All drivers)

  91. Or even Condos by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Even if you have a place you own, like a condo, that doesn't mean it's simple to add electrical outlet. If you own a house, that has a garage and everything, then share the only issue is money. So long as you can afford to have the outlet hooked up, and possibly more power to your house run, you are good. However there are many situations where that isn't what you have, even when you own property.

    I live in a condo, it's mine I am an owner have a mortgage all that kind of stuff. However it is an attached unit so there is a common area that I am a partial owner of that I have a "undivided interest" in. In that area, is my parking space. Well, I can't just go and make modifications to that. That has to be approved by the Board of Directors, and for something like this probably a full vote of owners. I can bring it up, I can try to get people to vote on it, but it's not something as simple as me just doing it.

    Even were I to, there's the issue that all are parking spaces are out in the open and so is it really a good idea to have a bunch of electrical outlets there.

    So anyone that rents as an issue, and more than a few people that own have issues. It isn't a situation where just anyone that wants to can install plug and go. I would really like an electric car, where I live it would work really well. However it really isn't that easy for me to get a charging station set up. I think it would be a very hard sell to have them installed.

  92. 2 Industries 1 Oligopoly by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    "two words":

    Oil

    Auto

    They've been colluding against electric cars for a century.

    Any...and I mean any...discussion about "What are electric cars not X?" must acknowledge that the technology has been surpressed by the oil industry w/ the Big 3's help. How could we not still be feeling the effects? With all the legacy tech and wasted R&D (cupholders people? seriously?) it'll be another 50 years maybe before electric technology has recovered.

    Gas prices.

    No single factor is in any way more important to car owners in general. If you understand that truth then the suppression of electric car technology becomes painfully evident.

    In open competition, electric cars would have beaten out gasoline decades ago...

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re: 2 Industries 1 Oligopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Decades ago? Complete nonsense. Battery technology decades ago was nowhere near what it is today. And it still isn't good enough.

      Trust that if there is a profitable market someone will fill it.

    2. Re:2 Industries 1 Oligopoly by pellik · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Every manufacturer out there would LOVE to make EVs. They aren't bad people taking kickbacks from big oil. EVs have a ton of issues with legality (disposal) and logistics (shipping old batteries that are flamable if not discharged properly and leak hazardous waste) that make it almost impossible for manufacturers to sell them. Plus the laws say the manufacturer is responsible for all that disposal.

      If any manufacturer can figure out how to make money on EVs they all will jump on the bandwagon within a year or two.

      Savor the irony that it's environmental protection laws that are holding up EVs for all this time.

  93. Upon reading the other primary reasons, I must say by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    This isn't the "duh" we're looking for...

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  94. Because they are crap ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    O.K. a couple of months ago, I got bored. Drove 600km, had lunch, checked the time, drove 400km home again (faster, but less scenic). Less than 12 hours.

    Same scenario with electric car, drive 100k's, two hours recharge, repeat. Which turns a long day into a four day trip.

    Even if the range increases, they'll STILL suck for a long time, so - really, they only work for people who can afford a second (very expensive) car, or who never leave their home town.

    Thats why sales are low.

  95. Re:Upon reading the other primary reasons, I must by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Upon reading the other primary reasons, I must say...

    This isn't the "duh" we're looking for...

    Yeah, just have Congress pass a law/Act, or have Obama issue an EO to mandate that EV/energy storage technology must by law advance a decade or three. Meantime, make sure gas prices skyrocket so those dirty gas cars and trucks become too expensive to use.

    That'll do 'er.

    What?

    It's worked SO well for health care, right?

    Right???

  96. Article asks a stupid question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tl;dr version - Too expensive, crap range.

    I have a diesel Yaris - It is small, cost me ~£4000 2nd hand and can go 600-700 miles on a single tank of fuel.If I only drive around town or thrash the nuts off it, it'll do 450-500 miles on a single tank.

    The take up won't start improving for at least 3-4 years when we'll see them becoming more affordable on the 2nd hand market, but battery scares will have a chilling effect unless the car mfgs are willing to back their claims up with guarantees.

    Range needs to be improved too; Right now, only one EV I know of can get me to my brother's house and back without an overnight stay and, and that one is ruinously expensive!

    At the moment, the vaguely affordable EVs are only got for a very limited use, i.e. pootling around cities and charging overnight, and they can't justify the cost for such a limited use when a 10 year old derv costing a fraction of the cost has no such limitations!

  97. Target audience by prefec2 · · Score: 1

    There are huge difference between the types of car buyers. People who buy trucks and use them for work, people who buy trucks and use them as ego compensation device, people living in cities who think they need small cars, people who think they need big family cars, like vans, etc. Not all of them would go for an electric car. I assume that electric car buyers (beside Teslas) live in cities, they are rather liberal, they reflect their behavior, at least sometimes, and they like to be trendsetters. However, the same people have also access to other means of transportation, because they live in cities. Cities come with buses, trams, underground and local trains, taxis, and lately rent a bike facilities. So these people have alternatives and they use it. If the self-owned electric car shall become the norm among typical car buyers, they have to address all buyer types, but that would require to improve the technology in many ways. The more people must chance to use a new product the higher is the risk that they do not buy it.

  98. 5 year battery life is normal by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 1

    For a gasoline car, a 5 year battery life is normal. However, a battery only costs $50-150 to replace on those. If you have a 5 year battery life on your EV and you have to replace $5000-$15000 of batteries, you get worried. That's the point. More so, EV batteries use chemicals that are common in our laptops and portable devices. Most don't last 5 year there, especially if you want at least 80% of the "range" you get from a new battery.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  99. People love Ferraris as well by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 1

    People love Ferraris even more than EVs, but almost nobody is driving them. Why? Because they are costly and unreliable if you don't give them the costly maintenance. They have limited range and limited luggage space, you can't pull trailers and hitches with them, etc. etc. Or maybe it is about the fact that the people that currently drive them love them, but the rest doesn't? Ask anybody not driving a pickup truck if they love them and why they're not driving them. You'll probably get the same line of answers you'll get about EVs. Just loving a car isn't enough, people tend to be rather practical about their purchases when it comes to cars, apart from a small list of arguments that varies from person to person.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  100. In Europe: taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the US, the tesla S competed with the 5 series BMW. Here there's a 20,000â price gap.

  101. Different measures of affordability by bazorg · · Score: 1

    You know, the total cost of ownership may make a lot of sense but there are differences in terms of affording a better car, be it EV or not.

    If I take the starting price of the EV car and compare with he starting price of my used Peugeot + fuel, they break even after a few years. The difference is that if I lose my job or if there is any other significant change, I can just stop paying for more fuel for the Peugeot, keep it off the road and stop the insurance until I'm back on my feet. The Nissan Leaf I compared with still has a monthly price for the battery rental and/or for financing the initial purchase.

    I can't make considerations about the compared maintenance costs, other than there's plenty of mechanics out there who deal with Peugeot 206, while the alleged low maintenance costs of the EVs are based on the reduction of the number of moving parts. Who can maintain them and at what price when something does go wrong?

    As of 2013 I think that the EVs are like many other high tech devices, good for those who have enough money to be early adopters. For me, maybe my next car will be a used hybrid. It will take me more than 1 car lifetime (mine are 5 because I buy old cars for £2500) before I can take the plunge and go a bit more upmarket.

  102. Simple: One word: trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People do not trust that electric cars will be reliable for years and years of usage. They are afraid that after a few years the battery brakes down and has to be replaced resulting in enormous additional costs. They learned this from what they see from all their portable devices that rely on battery power. The difference is that with these smaller devices to battery replacement costs are on a much smaller scale.

  103. EV cars best selling cars in Norway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Norway, EV cars (specifically Nissan Leaf and Tesla S) are currently the best-selling car models overall. The incentives used by the government are:
    * No sales tax (25%) or green taxes.
    * Negligible road use tax.
    * Free use of toll roads and local ferries.
    * Permitted in commuter lanes
    * Free use of strategically placed high current (20 min charging time) charging stations.
    These incentives are guaranteed for 4 years or until 40,000 EV cars have been registered.
    Norwegian petrol prices are high (~8$/gal), while electricity is fairly cheap (0.08$/kwH), so this reduces energy costs for the driver by ~90%. Even when factoring in the cost of a battery replacement after 10 years, this represents a saving.
    Power generation is almost entirely hydro-electric, so the effect on national C0 emissions is significant. Also, given the mountainous terrain, smog can be a problem even in moderately sized towns in winter; this is also alleviated.
    Battery efficiency certainly is lower with lower temperatures, against this must be considered that it has a positive affect on battery longevity.
    Car dealers also try to deal with range anxiety in potential buyers:
    * 13 days “ordinary“ car rental per year for five years included.
    * Free, no-questions-asked car retrieval in case of flat battery. (Though mild sarcastic comments must be expected after fifth time)

    1. Re:EV cars best selling cars in Norway by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      How well do you think they would be selling if the taxpayers were not footing the bill?

  104. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A fast charge battery will end the debate since every service station can put in an electric pump. They exist in the lab and within a decade they will appear in cars. (Or an ultracapacitor) Then good-bye internal combustion. With volume, car prices will go down. Charge in 5 min and drive another 250 miles. I'll buy it.

  105. It's because they don't solve the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EVs aren't catching on because they don't solve the transportation problems of 99.999% of the population.

  106. 11.6 miles by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    I live 11.6 miles from my company out in rural America. An EV would be great for my commute, except when I look at the $30,000-$50,000 price tag of an EV versus the $2500 price tag of my reasonably middle range carbon fiber road bike, which burns neither gas nor uses electricity, the EV just can't win.

    For short commutes, the bicycle solution is orders of magnitude greener than an EV, and far far far cheaper, especially when health benefits and lower cost of medical care are taken into consideration.

  107. So ... by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    ... people who are motivated to buy them, love them.

    Maybe the (much larger number of) people who aren't buying them, uh, don't?

  108. Free-Choice Paradigm of Cognitive Dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone who spends a lot of money on something is only going to lean towards reinforcing that spending decision with a glowing opinion of whatever it was that they bought. This is especially true of people who are weak-willed and/or herd-followers.

  109. Redundant but... by multimediavt · · Score: 1

    1. Nowhere to plug in at home. (Live in apartment in rural town)

    2. Charging infrastructure. (Of the dozen gas stations within a five minute drive one has a charging station)

    3. Initial vehicle cost for one with adequate range to compete with gasoline powered vehicles.

    4. Battery lifespan.

    Having battery swap stations and standardized battery technology would eliminate all but the cost issue from above. Just producing the cars is not enough, and plug-in chargers work for leisurely drives but not work commutes nor the average American's hurried lifestyle. Then there is the 30% - 40% of Americans (like myself) that don't own a home with a garage, or an older existing home and can't afford to add a 220v line to the garage. It will be difficult for the masses to own electric cars until a ubiquitous infrastructure, like that existing for gasoline cars for decades, is built up and can support more than leisure driving or the more affluent owners that can afford electric cars today.

  110. One of those: Bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Infrastructure, fair enough. Range is bullshit.

    1. Re:One of those: Bullshit. by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      No, range is not bullshit. The fact remains that there is not even a Tesla would let me drive from where I live to visit friends that live on the other side of the state without stopping to recharge for 8 hours or so at least once, and that's assuming I could find a place that would let me do it. The various hybrids would of course allow it, but that rather defeats the purpose of driving an EV since hybrid mileage figures aren't competitive enough with gas-only right now IMO.

      Don't get me wrong - I'd *love* to get an EV, but the price/performance ratio is just not there yet.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    2. Re:One of those: Bullshit. by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The various hybrids would of course allow it, but that rather defeats the purpose of driving an EV since hybrid mileage figures aren't competitive enough with gas-only right now IMO.

      Of course plug in hybrids do answer this. You do the daily commute mostly on battery, but have the gas available for those occasions when you have to drive long distance. Overall the fuel costs (and emissions) are far lower with the hybrid in that scenario.

  111. "Experts" also like Vampire Weekend along with by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Death Cab for Cutie.... regardless of the fact that they are the two most retarded bands in history.

    Be wary of listening to "experts."

  112. Not practical and expensive by qaz123 · · Score: 1

    Not practical and expensive

  113. Re: by kurkosdr · · Score: 1

    Maybe because electric cars are freaking expensive? If you want an electric car which isn't a glorified grocery getter, aka one which does more than 100km range, the prices are ridiculous. Most people can't spend more than 20000 on a car. The only electric car worth buying is the Volt, which might pay off in gas costs eventually. And only if you live in the US where it carries lots of incentives.

  114. LEAF Multiple Battery Size Options by 12WTF$ · · Score: 1

    A common complaint about the all-electric Nissan LEAF has been its short range, officially 75 miles on a full charge according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. To address that challenge, Nissan could add options for consumers to purchase bigger battery packs to boost the LEAF’s all-electric range, Pierre Loing, vice president of product and advanced planning and strategy told PluginCars.com. “The packaging easiness (of the battery) makes it easier to put more batteries in the car, and you will see this,” Loing said during an interview this week at the 2013 Los Angeles Auto Show.

    EV range is such a hard problem, unless you think about it.

    --
    Cryonics - Keep cool and carry on.
  115. plugin hybrid solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been actively shopping for electric cars after reviewing some climate data. C-max gets 20+ miles on a charge and has the hybrid engine plant to keep going from there. This seems to be a practical transition solution for now. My commute one way is 12 miles and I can then charge up. Even with battery range sagging over time I should get many years of very pollution reduced travel. I think the plugin hybrid combination is a solution that can work well. The C-Max energi is a very nice vehicle with interesting tech. It can warm up the cabin in my garage using power off the plug for my cold morning drives when leather seats can get chilly. This can be controlled with program setups or a smart phone app. For my uses these features and capabilities look like they will work well. I will be going from a 10 year old car getting about 23 mpg combined to a new safer car capable of more than 100 mpge. I will lose some storage space but not much more. Reliability is a question but I also have some increased flexibility that may compensate.

    Ford is presently offering 3k in rebate incentives and state & fed tax rebates seem to be another 4k here in PA, USA.

  116. What works for you by Kjella · · Score: 1

    "The electric car challenge is what insiders call "getting butts in seats" â" and a lot of butts today still belong to humans who are not yet buying electric cars. The big question is: Why? Surveys show drivers are interested in electric cars--and that they love them once they drive them.

    Perhaps simply because people buy what works for them and won't buy what won't work for them? It's silly to extrapolate that because your current users are happy that everybody would be happy with it.

    For a one person, single car household you'd either have to keep two cars or go pure EV. The first is very expensive (depreciation, parking spot - very expensive in inner city, insurance, maintenance) and environmentally questionable anyway because of all the resources that go into production even if you drive cleaner. The other alternative is to go pure EV, which means I'd almost certainly push the limits and end up in "Can I get home with 2km of range, I really don't want to wait half an hour at a charging station" situations because the threshold to rent a ICE car would be rather high. And I couldn't go on a weekend cabin trip without buying a Tesla. Which is an excellent car I'm sure, if you're looking to spend that much money on a car but I don't.

    For a two person, two car household a mixed pair works better because you have an ICE car for when one or both need it, unless you both happen to need it at the same time going to different things. Here I think it's more about people being possessive, it usually ends up being "his" and "her" car. One gets the big, comfy road trip car and the other the small commute EV and they don't like having to borrow or lending it away. They'd rather get two ICEs, one each and that's that unless one is in for repairs or if they need to swap for other reasons it feels like a more equal trade. Not to mention there's a ton of competition for small, cheap cars for inner city driving.

    Hybrids are somewhat interesting but they're often the worst of both worlds as you get far more complexity, much less electric range and a tiny ICE for when you run out. Jack of all trades, king of none. And even my new apartment building (2013) doesn't have chargers for hybrids/EVs, so I'd have to go out of my way to get a charger at home. Meanwhile I pass three gas stations on the way to work, it's simple, it's flexible and it works. But give me a Tesla at half the price and I'd buy that, no problem.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  117. Because dead batteries suck by elkto · · Score: 1

    Because sitting on the side of the road with dead batteries sucks. Paying five times the amount for the privilege sucks even more (Ok, I embellished a LITTLE). Who is vetting these articles?

    I know, it sounds brash, but the statements pretty much sum up the situation. I would love a solution, just come back with one. At present, EV's present more problems than they solve (Economical, Infrastructure, Engineering, Safety....).

  118. One word: broke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a19 year old Chevy and $48, 000 in student loans. I am not buying a new car until the drive train goes. And then I have retirement to build up. So, I will not be buying anything for many many years.

  119. Re:2 Words ^H^H^H 3 words by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    Price

    And anyone claiming that erectric cars are lower cost to maintain is either naive or a salesman. On what basis is the claim made? One or two years of availability? Show me your maintenance bills after 5, 7, 10 years of regular dailiy use. Show me the effects of location (ie, climate) on maintenance. Then we can have a legitimate discussion of upkeep and repair costs.

  120. No one has given this reason... by Snard · · Score: 1

    My wife won't let me.

    --
    - Mike
  121. Logistics by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    I'd like to take a moment to introduce you to a fledgling little company known as Hertz.

    Oh Hertz? You mean the car rental company stuck in the airport about 45 minutes drive away that charges an arm and a leg to rent a minivan (or anything larger than a basic car) if they even have one available? They are good for car rentals from the airport, not so good if you want something bigger than a car for a family trip and you don't live anywhere near the airport or downtown. We used to do this when all we had was a rather old compact car and a growing family. Taking everyone on a 1.5 hour roundtrip to the airport (because someone has to drive our car back unless you want to add expense airport parking to the cost as well) twice is a huge pain. That, and the expense, is why we bought a minivan.

  122. Marketers believing their bullshit by argStyopa · · Score: 2

    "Surveys show drivers are interested in electric cars--and that they love them once they drive them. "

    Yeah, except the real-world has considerations outside the scope a 30-second commercial or magazine ad, or that marketers are 'uncomfortable' to address (and we're not *quite* to the point of Idiocracy where we simply do what the market-wonks tell us we should):
    - range: most people seem to drive 20-30 miles to work, with commutes of approximately 20-45 minutes. Can I drive this (to AND from), plus run and get groceries, and maybe go out to a movie without being nervous about being UTTERLY out of power
    - where am I supposed to charge the stupid thing? The 'spin' notwithstanding, nobody has the time to dawdle while these recharge on 220v plugs, much less the 110v-overnight-option.
    - cost: contrary to popular belief, a lot of people can't afford a $30k car, particularly one that smells like it might need a new $10k battery pack after 100k miles.

    --
    -Styopa
  123. The real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real problem with most electric cars are 3:

    1. Range sucks (with the possible exception of the over-priced Tesla Model S).
    2. Charging time is way too long.
    3. Home charging units are way too expensive.

    These make electrics only suitable for local commutes, and since many of us commute 40-50 miles each way these days in major metropolitan areas, until there are free (or really cheap) and ubiquitous chargers widely available, even that (using EVs for commuting) isn't an option either.

  124. Mileage per charge STILL not good enough. by Rhurazz12 · · Score: 1

    Yea, it may work in city commute to and from work and that's fine, but maintanence of these cars is only for those who can afford it, ie.,middle-class singles/families. As far mileage, we have seen tech were cars can go 300-400 miles on a single charge, but electric cars are 125 miles at best and still take half-hour at best, and that's assuming that there's top-of-theline electric station around, which is very few and in between. The oil industry won't let go of exec's tits until there's a realization that their other alternatives and stop the greediness...

  125. Cost less to maintain? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try again- the costs of the battery banks being replaced render that statement a FLAT OUT LIE.

  126. Economic break even point. by gelfling · · Score: 1

    translated into dollars per mile over the entire time one owns one.

  127. Why Are Sales Still Low? by YoungManKlaus · · Score: 1

    uuuhm ... you did check the price, right?
    Because for many people it is easier to spend some 20k on a regular car and then 60k in gasoline over x years instead of 80k at once...

  128. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you have teen-age kids, you're probably a more-than-one-car family anyway. I would love to have one of my cars be electric.

    We had a minivan until the kids started getting driving privileges. Then we just got two cars. When we take the entire family anywhere, it's not very much more expensive to take two cars than it was for one minivan. And the flexibility of being able to split up is always worth it. Plus, if one car has problems, we can use the other one for fetching gas, hauling the flat tire, being on the other end of the jumper cables, pulling it out of the snow, or whatever.

  129. your all wrong, nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys are a bunch of nerds that have long ago unplugged yourself from the social pipeline and are happy arguing about the reasons why your particular class of people wont get one (revolving around technology limitations like range and infrastructure). However you are a minority. In the real world energy efficient cars have a geek, nerd, gay, smug stereotype associated with them, constantly reinforced by hollywood. I love my prius, but after owning it for four years, you really realize how ignorant people are. I laugh it off but it is really a big deal. I'm constantly asked "will you get another prius" and i say "i love my prius, the only problem with my prius, is that it is a prius". My family is a typical blue collar family (firefighting etc) and they don't take my car seriously. They look at it as some "computer gadget". When purchasing a car, unfortunately most people want to be "represented" by the car. Normal, work minded people do not want to be represented "going green", it has a puke factor when forced upon, let alone people who grow up in inner city conditions which create even more socially complexities when buying a car. Believe it or not, people want to be represented by other factors, such as bling, cool, SMATV (soccer mom all terrain vehicle), conservative, etc etc.
     

  130. A Whole Host of Challenges by rally2xs · · Score: 1

    There's of course the range of an electric, and then there's how long it takes to "refuel." If you buy one, you have to have a 2nd regular gas car if you want to go on a driving vacation like I did earlier this year - Virginia -> Arizona -> Colorado -> Missouri -> Virginia. There just wasn't time to stop every 300 miles for 8 hours to recharge a battery.

    We need someone to invent the "magic battery" that will let a car drive 300 miles and then recharge in a couple minutes and be cheap and not to big or heavy. Someone does that, we'll have 18 wheelers running on electricity.

    But then we'll have a new problem. The electrical grid and generating capacity will have to be wildly expanded. Nuclear is probably the only choice to provide that much power, enough to move every car and truck and locomotive and ship using electricity instead of fossil fuels. It'll be incredibly expensive but still cheaper than fossil fuels due to the inherent efficiency of electricity vs. the heat engines burning fossil fuel.

  131. the cold weather problem is real by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    Nobody seems to know what the heck anyone means by the cold weather problem. First, you run a heater that's probably at least a 1000W ceramic and there goes your range. Second, we have a golf cart at my landscaping company. In the winter, it runs slowly and runs out quicker and doesn't charge all the way. That's because when batteries that size get cold, they drop about a half volt to a volt. So that effectively limits the "range" of our electric golf cart. The gasoline cart goes faster because it's fuel injected and the oxygen density is higher so it sends in more fuel to compensate. It's like a mini-turbo or RAM air.

  132. needs one bit of legislation by PJ6 · · Score: 1

    There will need to be a law that all gas stations must have at least one universal electric charging system by 201X.

    Not only will that get the whole market going, that may be the only thing that will do it.

  133. re-fueling / re-charging by gerardrj · · Score: 1

    Whatever you want to call it, with pure electric vehicles it takes too long. The ratio of charge time to miles driven is off kilter.

    I drive a VW Golf TDI. I can run it on #2 diesel, #2 heating oil, soybean oil, used fryer oil, basically any medium oil from any source as long as I can filter it and get in the tank spout.
    The longest a re-fill takes me (from 6gal carry tanks) is about 10 minutes. At an average station pump fueling takes about 3 minutes.
    On a full tank I can travel 720 miles of regular (non-babying) driving and up to 800 miles if I am very conservative.
    That means about 13 hours of driving for every 3 minutes of fueling (assuming 55mph average speed between highway/city)
    My car can carry 1000lbs of people or cargo
    My car tows 1200lbs on a small trailer (at freeway speeds)
    My car has killer air-conditioning so I can tolerate the 120F days here in Phoenix, AZ

    When electric cars get an infrastructure that allows me to pull in to a refueling station and get a full charge in less that 5 minutes, I'll consider it. The stations need to be ubiquitous so I don't have to plan special stops or routes.
    I don't care if the charging and battery technology improve to meet my charge rate requirements or if the entire battery pack is swapped out by a robot, charged then swapped in to someone else's car later that day.

    My next vehicle will be either pure diesel or a diesel/electric hybrid and that will continue to be the case until an all-electric vehicle gets even close to those operational parameters above. And yes, I know my use profile is atypical. EVs make perfect sense for a person who commutes a regular route every day and has no other needs for a car and who has an employer adjacent compatible charging station.

    Ring, ring. Hi honey, can you stop by the butcher and pick up some steaks for dinner?
    Sorry, the car only has 30 miles of charge left, going to the butcher would take 42 miles to get there and home. We'll have to make another trip.
    Get home... charge car for 2 hours, drive to butcher, drive home, charge car for 2 hours.

    Yea, none of that sounds appealing to me.

    --
    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    1. Re:re-fueling / re-charging by Yosho · · Score: 1

      Sorry, the car only has 30 miles of charge left, going to the butcher would take 42 miles to get there and home.

      Where do you live that the nearest butcher is 21 miles away? For what matter, does your wife regularly have you drive an hour (assuming your drive to the butcher is not a straight shot with a >=60 mph speed limit and no traffic) just to go pick up an ingredient for dinner? You'll be spending more money on fuel that it costs to actually get a decent steak. It sounds to me like you need to optimize your grocery shopping habits a bit.

      What I think a lot of people don't realize is, as long as an electric car's maximum range is far enough to get where you need to go and back, the charge time doesn't matter. It's not like a gasoline engine where you drain the tank gradually over the course of a week and then have to go to a refueling station; it's always plugged in when you're at home, and if you're not constantly going in-and-out, it will always be full when you leave.

      The 85 kWh Tesla Model S, for example, has a 300 mile range. How often do you drive more than 300 miles in a row without stopping for a few hours at some point? For some people that's an issue, but most people do not make trips that long on a regular basis.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
    2. Re:re-fueling / re-charging by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      In a row isn't really the argument that reflects reality. The question is: how often to you drive more than 300 miles without being able to stop for a few hours at an out-of-the-way re-charging station that is compatible with your car. The answer to that (when you look at the slow re-charge rates) for me is: quite often. And that "few hours" could actually be a few days.

      I don't know where you get the 300 mile range number, Tesla's own literature states up to 265 miles" EPA Certified", which if anything like EPA MPG then the way most American's drive means more like 200 miles of actual range. When you don't have access to your high current charger at home it takes an hour to get 3 miles of charge from a standard wall outlet. Every time I have a discussion with someone about these cars they produce these great sounding numbers, then you read the actual information and things have a much more grim look to them.

      As for your specific question about why I drive 21 miles to the butcher: because I prefer buying locally sourced food whenever possible. The only butcher I know of in the Phoenix area that sells local meats is about 21 miles out of my way between work and home. I also travel out of my way to purchase locally roasted coffee and locally produced milk, eggs, veg. Generally the lower prices of the items I purchase offset the minor amount of diesel I run through my engine getting to those places in a consolidated trip. 21 miles for me is less than 1/2 gallon.

      When I go visit my friends in northern AZ, that's a 140 mile one-way trip in mountains and I don't think the Tesla would make it that far on a cargo and there are no exits or services for the majority of the trip.

      There are MANY use cases where pure electric just falls flat. So many that I think most people would encounter them fairly regularly or at least fret they would. That means that for most, or at least many, people an electric has to be an additional vehicle they use for specific tasks.

      But that aside: why are you condemning someone's life choices just because they don't align with the marketing pitch of an all-electric car?

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  134. Puh, it's obvious. by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

    Sales are bad because none of them are pickup trucks. Supposedly Tesla is working on one, then we'll see sales take off.

  135. Many reasons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My main reason, range. I'd halfway consider one if I knew that if I could actually drive and use it without worrying about running out of juice. Hybrids make no sense to me, with it main benefit being under 35 MPH. Most commuters say, 'oh it's perfect for my city commute'. Then wouldn't public transit be better? With pure EV, you lose range.

    Price. 35K for a Chevy Volt. Umm, no. I can get a 'better' used, or even new, car for much cheaper. Not to mention maintenance.

    Tire safety. Low resistance tires, and rain do not mix well.

  136. Transitional door stop - EV by ElitistWhiner · · Score: 1

    That's right. EV, electric vehicles, are an industry solution to meeting NHTSA and EPA regulations that cars meet standards for GHG. Manufacturer's cars don't pass the standard, states close the door on their market. Its a bright, shiny doorstop. GM's EV-1 is the EV gold standard which the world deserves but obsoletes an entire petroleum industry in the process. So they had to crush every single example for posterity sake.

    Hydrogen the technology wasn't ready, economically or infrastructure-wise for the 21st century. The zero emissions platform for the future is evolving slowly, infrastructure first. In the meantime, EV and HEV, keep the doors open for the manufacturers.

  137. Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it comes to a $2000 cost point, I will consider it.

  138. Price Point by Phoenix666 · · Score: 1

    I test-drove a Leaf in Michigan this summer and the car was awesome. It accelerated faster than my Honda Fit and was totally quiet. If I lived in the suburbs and commuted the average distance to work everyday, I would spring for one in a second. But we live in Brooklyn, and the lack of charging space, limited range, and higher price point are still sticking points for us. If I could afford a Tesla Model S I could get around the first thanks to its high range. So we're waiting until we can either afford a Model S or Tesla puts out a mass-market model we can afford now. After the gas shortages after Hurricane Sandy I am itching to ditch the ICE.

    --
    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
  139. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by NeoMorphy · · Score: 1

    OMG, you're killing me! It's amazing how many women have caught on to what an over-sized pickup truck with a dozen lights and super lift kit means. Since getting a Prius I noticed that some men(especially non-techies) looked down on them and women approved of them. I still don't understand the Prius hate, maybe if I bought a BMW or Humvee I would see the same thing.

  140. Real Indicator: Retention by jerel · · Score: 1

    I haven't seen the numbers in a year or so, but the last I heard, most people that bought an EV do not buy another one when it comes time to replace it for whatever reason. In other words, people who could afford one and were on board with buying one do not love it enough to replace it with another EV when the time comes. I'd bet a huge percentage of those who say they love it feel compelled by societal pressure, plus the accolades and oohs and ahhs from their friends. Once the long-term limitations begin to chafe, they quietly move back into gasoline powered vehicles. NOTE: These statistics were collected before the Tesla was around, so maybe it's just the carsof a few years ago (Prius, I'm looking at you!) were not there yet.

    --
    Some days it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.
  141. "Incentives" by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    In Claifornia the utility companies have a pretty streamlined process for it, complete with incentives.

    So the business is not paying the thousands of dollars it takes to install the equipment, all of us are to benefit the 0.001% of drivers that have electric cars.

    How awesome.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:"Incentives" by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      No. The utility company wants it in place in order to sell more electricity and make more money. Making electric cars viable is more valuable than the profit off a single station.

  142. Stupid, stupid question. by goodmanj · · Score: 1

    Pythons: Python owners love 'em, so why are sales still low?
    Erotic fursuits: Furries love 'em, so why are sales still low?

    Because the enthusiasm of enthusiasts has nothing to do with appeal to the public.

  143. Because you need a second car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Range
    Biggest problem with electric cars is range. They're great for getting around town whole day, and then charge up at night. But when you need to go 500-1000km in one day, you simply need another car. At least in Europe, where we don't have Superchargers. Tesla's advertised range is 500km. But that is at ~70km/h. When you get on the motorway, going 160km/h your range will be 200-250km. So it can do a 100km trip and back. That's not enough.

    Price
    They are more expensive to buy, but the TCO is much less. No oil changes, no fuel/oil/air filters to replace, much less moving parts to break, electricity is 5-10 times cheaper than gasoline. Brake pads wear much less because you decelerate using motor.

    Driving
    Electrics are great to drive. There's no delay between pressing the accelerator and acceleration. They deliver max torque from 0 RPM, which feels just great. They're also nice to drive in cold weather. The cabin heats up much quicker, because there's no engine block to heat first.

  144. Price and selection by mschuyler · · Score: 1

    They're fine of you are a Metro sexual who feels all tingly about saving the planet when driving a Prius around. You can afford a Tesla just by cutting back on the cologne. But for a real soccer Mom it works like this:

    Two youngsters in OSHA-approved car seats (nice and bulky), plus two teenagers who have reached adult size, two huge duffel bags full of equipment and clothing, a couple of D-sticks plus Goalie sticks for lacrosse. At least one diaper bag, a stroller, folding chairs, the portable tent for the sidelines, snacks for the kids, water bottles (big ones), and the inevitable snacks for the big kids. Plus Mom & Dad.

    That's a full-scale SUV which is absolutely stuffed to the gills or take two cars. Suck it up. Not everyone leads the Yuppie lifestyle and in these cases, a Tesla is not going to cut it.

    The electric market isn't taking off because the consumer has few choices. And just because a tiny electric can get good "mileage" does not solve the problem above where the advantage disappears just on weight alone. Make an electric that can actually do the job plus not have a range that is across town, but not back without recharging, and you'd have a winner. The market is not going to blossom until the manufacturers produce what consumers want to buy. And that's not the consumers' fault.

    --
    How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
  145. Solvable Problems by lpp · · Score: 1

    Cost and Infrastructure and Recharge time.

    The problems with range are actually problems with infrastructure. You can get pretty good range on one fillup. The problem is that when you do reach a point when you want to recharge you are going to want to easily find a recharging station. In the US at least there are not many regions where they can easily be found. Moreover when you do want to recharge you will have a wait on your hands.

    Furthermore as an apartment dweller my options to recharge overnight are very limited.

    The good thing is these are solvable issues.

  146. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Howcome nobodys figured out how to put a small gas generator on a trailer for these rare long trips?

    Doesnt seem that complicated.

  147. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

  148. Long purchasing cycle for autos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Typically, autos have long replacement cycles (3-7 years). Viable mainstream electric cars have been sold for less than 3 years, and awareness of the option is only beginning to resonate. It makes sense that adoption will be gradual.

    I have owned a Nissan Leaf for 18 months. While my family owns another gasoline fueled wagon, we drive the Leaf more, particularly favoring it on the weekends, and place about 50% more miles on it than our Subaru. While I believe strongly in the ethical choice to drive an electric car, the convenience of fueling and maintenance of my Leaf is noticeably better than any gasoline car I have owned. For some commuters, or drivers who make frequent inter-city trips, an electric car is not a suitable primary vehicle choice. But for my daily commute (20 miles round trip) it isn't necessary to charge my Leaf each night. The direct drive motor provides excellent acceleration and is much more responsive than many comparably priced gasoline cars. We would even consider purchasing a second all-electric car in the future.

  149. Because the drivers don't love them. Propaganda do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love driving and my experience with electric cars has been terrible. The only people that I know who love their hybrids don't care about the driving experience or care more about the gas expense and have a very specific use case for their cars.

    Here in the mountains I literally get better cost per mile in my FRS sports car than in a prius. And the experience is better too.

  150. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the Prius says "I'm a smug person who thinks I'm saving the environment even though had I done proper research I would find that the pollution of manufacturing a Prius makes it as environmentally friendly as a Hummer." says the author of the parent and driver of a diesel Jetta.

    Not everything is "Prius" or "over-sized pickup with lights" both cars say "I need a special vehicle to show off beliefs."

  151. So? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    So what? I said the hottest selling EV, not the hottest selling car. I'm fully aware it's still an insignificant amount of the market. If Tesla can get the cost of the car down to about half of where it is now they'd easily be able to sell a couple OOM more of them- which would be a significant portion of world sales, not just US.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:So? by gutnor · · Score: 1

      Dude, you asked for the sales figures, the best I had without telling you to go google it yourself.

      I added the total sale just because it is interesting to keep things in perspective, especially on /. where people have a tendency to think the most difficult thing in selling cars is choosing the javascript framework for the website. It got you though, "Tesla just need to find a way to cut the price in half and they will sell 2 million cars a years." which is the physical world equivalent of "if they just made Windows opensource, the Linux kernel team will be able to remove all the bugs in no time"

      Anyway, the point of the thread is not if electric is good or not, considering that this is /. and you do not really need to sell the idea of electric cars. The question was why is there only 45K electric cars sold in 2013 and not more. The answer seems to be either they are expensive (Tesla) or their range sucks (all others).

    2. Re:So? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Dude, you asked for the sales figures, the best I had without telling you to go google it yourself.

      Uh... Even after rereading my post I never asked for the sales figures. Taking the 'I think' seriously, you'd have been looking at sales for the leaf, not total car sales.

      Googling it, it looks like the leaf actually has it beat - 22k in 2011, increasing to 32k in 2013. Tesla doesn't expect to hit 30k until 2014, it seems to be about a 'year' behind in total sales. Oops, I was wrong, the 'hottest' selling EV, defined as 'most sales', would be the $30k/75mile leaf, not the $80k/265mile Model S. Which is why I didn't state it as outright fact, sticking "I think" in there.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  152. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by NeoMorphy · · Score: 1

    Double check that research, that was an obvious BS work that has been debunked. In "Dust to Dust" they reference nickel mining techniques that were over 30 years out of date. They also based the energy cost on the lifetime of vehicle with the Prius having a lifetime of 109,000 miles and the Humvee 379,000, total BS. The same company revisited their biased article and reversed their views a year later, I'm guessing they were trying to save face.

    Considering this all happened over 5 years ago, anyone still referencing that article obviously isn't very good at doing research. Environmental benefit was tertiary in my decision process, but I can't stand it when people reference ridiculously inaccurate articles in an attempt to make themselves look "smug".

    Jetta drivers have been accused of being "smug". Do you feel you deserved that or did you buy a car that you liked and was happy with your purchase without thinking even once that you were superior. And when people stated that pickup trucks were more environmentally friendly than a diesel Jetta didn't you think it was frustrating that people could be so ignorant? And why the sudden need to compare suv/pickup trucks to high mpg cars? I suspect that whenever the gas prices increase, they get upset every time they go to the pump and they take out their frustrations on high mpg cars. Maybe they should stop trying to look bigger through their cars and instead consider getting a more frugal car like a Yaris, it's cheap, reliable, and gets good milage. I needed a bigger car, so I went with the Prius.

  153. Because wages have stagnated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The people who can afford to drop $40-$50k on a car are becoming harder to find; of all my friends, who are in the late 20's, college educated, mostly IT fields, I can think of one who could afford those payments.

  154. Externalities? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it my imagination or would a discussion of externalities be too sophisticated for the current post?

    It seems like many people poo-poo-ing EVs are Americans assuming that $4/gal gas is "normal". Please, take into account the oil company subsidies, the cost of pollution, and the cost of military entanglements to protect "American" interests. A gas (petrol) car can't be powered by anything other than flammable hydrocarbons. The EV can use whatever "fuel" is cheapest.

  155. Re:Limited - High price - Via Trux 'Burban Viable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see two primary issues...

    First, we are a 2 truck family, so we could easily replace 1 of them with an EV, leaving 1 gas truck for long trips (or a "volt" technology version with plenty of range).

    Selection is a problem. All of the current EVs are little cars, which are only useful for people who want little cars. There are no big vehicles in EV trim.

    Price is also a problem. The EV version of all the cars is much more expensive than the gas powered version. The price needs to be the same, then you'll find customer interest.

    Give me a EV version of my 2012 GMC Yukon XL Denali and sell it to me for about the same price as I paid for this one ($58K) and I'm seriously interested. Even better, put Volt technology into it, give it a small engine for generator duty for long trips, batteries for all the small around town trips, and I'd pay about $5K more for it than I did for the gas only version.

    I suspect that the true cost would have to be $20K more, which I won't pay, which is why there isn't a "volt" version of the Suburban/Yukon/Escalade line of full size SUVs.

    HI, I have a friend who owns a business and drives a late model Suburban. I've even driven it once, it's pretty nice! I'm thinking of trying to get him to look into the Via Trux Suburban, to see if it could work for his business ( local indie garage). You mention you would be interested in a Volt tech based version of your Yukon, if the price was close to $60K. Via Motors claims that " In addition, you can qualify for up to $20,000 in incentives from state and federal governments, depending on where you live." http://www.viamotors.com/category/blog/

    That might bring the $80K price down to where it might, possibly over a 5-6 year time frame, make sense for a business.
    Can you provide any real world operational running costs, for your Yukon,even if either estimates or guesstimates, of year-to-year numbers for your Yukon? Maybe such actual numbers might help in helping make a decision.
    This business owner also has 3 kids...and tows a boat...there has been cases where he has needed to load a generator into the Burb...but that wouldn't be a selling feature, just a convenience.

  156. Metrosexual anyone... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're a sissy for driving a minivan what the hell does driving a "chicken little" car do your you?
    The sky is falling! The sky is falling...

    The electrical power grid can't support them today or for the next 50 years. Electrical power grids are a joke
    when the waste of energy is looked at. You need fuel cell technology in the home to even begin to address
    EV - assuming you can keep the fossil fuel sissies from whining about natural gas.

    The ONLY redeeming value of EV is that you are BURNING COAL!!!

  157. Ferrari's: Drivers Love 'Em, So Why Are Sales Stil by Askmum · · Score: 1

    Ferrari's: Drivers Love 'Em, So Why Are Sales Still Low?

    'Nuff said.

  158. Re:Disruptive technologies have long adoption cycl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It has nothing to do with this. When you can get a gas powered car for half the price of the cheapest EV and quadruple your range at the same time people aren't going to even consider the EV. EVs are for people who can afford the luxury of owning more than one car.

  159. interested but waiting by SebNukem · · Score: 1

    I'll buy the first car that offers 300 miles of range at a reasonable price (i.e. 35k). So basically waiting for that battery commercial breakthrough (i.e. 400Wh/kg density).

  160. Because they're freaking expensive by neminem · · Score: 1

    I went to buy a car a few years ago. I had a choice between regular, gas-consuming cards for ~18 grand new, or hybrids, for about 10 grand more. That is just not worth it!

    Though, I also wouldn't buy an *all* electric car, anyway, until electric cars were as ubiquitous as gas cars, and it was just as quick and easy to recharge your electric car at a stop on the side of the road while driving hundreds of miles, as it is to stop at a gas station now. This might happen eventually, but it certainly isn't true now. A hybrid, though, I would totally love to have, if it weren't way crazy expensive.

  161. EVs don't need to make 50% of sales by stomv · · Score: 1

    EVs don't need to be half the cars on the road yet. Not even 1/4.

    It's true -- if the median is near the mean, the 47 mile range leaf won't work for a big chunk of commuters (who can't charge at work, and have sufficiently large commutes). But even the most popular car on the road only makes up a few percent of the cars on the road. If EVs only work for half the commuters, and if each two-car-household would only buy one EV (so they can drive to grandmas this week), that's still 1/4 of all cars on the road. Sure, that's an upper bound since not every household is a two-car-household, but surely 1-in-10 could easily incorporate an EV with the leaf's range into their two-car-household.

    If 10% of cars were EVs, that would be a substantial number, and it would result in dramatically improved infrastructure, lower prices, and improved R&D. That they don't work for everyone doesn't mean there's not a sizable market. See: SUVs, sports cars, minivans, economy cars, etc.

  162. Invalid premise by vanyel · · Score: 1

    The question implies that EVs aren't successful, yet no one argues that hybrids aren't successful and EV sales are ahead of where hybrids were at a comparable point in their adoption. It takes a while to get people convinced to adopt something new.

  163. Several Factors by jonadab · · Score: 1

    There are several factors.

    Lousy marketing, mentioned in the article summary, is one. Traditional vehicles are marketed
    extremely aggressively, with the result that people often have a significant emotional investment
    in the vehicle before they even find out how much it costs. I've yet to see or hear anything
    about electrical vehicle marketing that would make me think it compares.

    Up-front price is another. When making a "big purchase", and especially when buying an item
    that will no longer be available in the same makes and models by the time they go to buy
    another one, people almost always take the nominal pricetag MUCH more heavily into
    consideration than later maintenance costs. If you want to see the extreme end of
    this, you only have to look at the market for printers. Inkjets *own* the market, despite
    the undisputed fact that the TCO of laser printers is FAR lower if you print anywhere
    near the median household quantity of pages per month. But new laser printers cost
    quite a bit more than new inkjets, so everybody buys inkjets. I think they outnumber
    laser printers by something like twenty to one in domestic deployments. (In business
    environments, the margin is somewhat narrower, admittedly.)

    Another factor is that electric vehicles were initially brought to market and heavily
    publicized significantly too early, when the technology was clearly not really ready
    for prime-time yet, resulting in a lot of rather unfavorable reviews and press. This
    kind of thing sticks in people's minds, and while the newer models are significantly
    improved, a lot of people still have the overall impression that electric vehicles
    are not very good, for reasons that, while they still have some truth to them,
    were undeniably much MORE true ten or fifteen years ago. (One of the best
    examples of this is the impression most people have that electric vehicles are
    impractical if you have to drive more than a few miles per day. The range is
    still not practical for long trips such as going on vacation, nor will it be soon;
    but many folks are under the impression that electric vehicles are impractical
    even for moderate commutes, which was true in the early nineties but not so
    much now.)

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  164. Re:Range. That's #1. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "My daily round trip (+lunch) comes in at just under 50 miles"

  165. Re:Range. That's #1. by JynxMe · · Score: 1

    My wife's 2 month old LEAF gets 110 miles on a single charge with her driving solo and 90 with me driving (with her riding along). If you really like the car it might make sense to stick with it and just get the newer model.