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Challenging Tesla, Volkswagen Announces Electric SUV, Mass Production of Electric Vehicles (apnews.com)

An anonymous reader quotes the AP: Volkswagen is planning to release a fully-electric SUV in China which could compete with Tesla's Model X. The German automaker said Sunday the ID. ROOMZZ will be unveiled at the upcoming Shanghai Auto Show and will be available in 2021. Volkswagen says the zero-emission vehicle can go approximately 450 kilometers (280 miles) before the battery has to be recharged.
Volkswagen also claims it will have "level 4 autonomous driving," Reuters reports, adding that this electric SUV "is the latest move in Volkswagen's aggressive growth strategy in China, where electric cars are given preferential treatment by authorities..." In fact, the company's chief executive says nearly half of VW's engineers are working on products for the China market, though the electric SUV will eventually be shipped to other markets. "We plan to produce more than 22 million electric cars in the next 10 years."

VW's head of e-mobility also tells Reuters that Volkswagen will convert eight of their factories to mass produce electric Volkswagens, and eight more factories to to mass-produce electric cars under a different brand.

37 of 228 comments (clear)

  1. Success! by dehachel12 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Congratulations, Tesla/Elon Musk! Mission success !

    1. Re:Success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Using fossil fuels directly for transport creates more CO2 than using electric vehicles, thus it's a win. Batteries are recycled now, and there is more incentive in a mass market. Fossil fueled cards cause localised pollution. Batteries in cars are a way to store energy overnight, so if solar is putting out plenty during the day and your car is at work, hello charging. So electric cars help. In terms of the replacement cost, Nissan, Renault and others charge a monthly fee which funds battery replacements, so the battery replacement cost issue is not a problem. Biofuels are not the way of the future as they don't scale. E.g. for the UK you'd need an additional UK to grow nothing but biofuels.

    2. Re:Success! by ctilsie242 · · Score: 2

      What we really need are advances in battery energy storage. If we can get the energy per unit volume within an order of magnitude of gasoline, propane, or other fossil fuels, transportation would be radically changed. No more IC engines, and cars can be redesigned from the ground up better using space that the engine, fuel delivery, and exhaust systems once took up.

      What electric cars allow is for them to be fueled from anything. For example, in Canada, it is mainly hydro. In Texas, solar/wind, perhaps biomass. Other places, geothermal. This means that if there is an oil crisis (which will be a matter of when, not if), you will still be able to get to work without a drain on your wallet.

      Plus, electric cars use relatively little energy when stopped, while IC engines have to idle. This by itself will cut pollution by a significant amount.

    3. Re:Success! by RoccamOccam · · Score: 2

      Remember when VW was fined for scamming the EPA emissions? Remember their fine to the US government was to invest in electric cars? So their success is due to the US government.

      Pepperidge Farm remembers.

    4. Re:Success! by apoc.famine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apparently you missed why Musk built Tesla?

      Musk said that Tesla has the ability to accelerate the auto industry’s progress toward the adoption of electric vehicles by 5 to 10 years. Lighting even that small fire could be very important if you consider what a decade of delay can do for climate change, he said.

      So as much as you hate Musk and Tesla, give some credit where credit is due.

      His plan all along was to push the major automotive companies to go electric. It looks like he succeeded.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    5. Re:Success! by houghi · · Score: 2

      When looking at tradewars: also with Europe. But then, have we not always been at war with Eur-Asia?

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    6. Re:Success! by someoneOtherThanMe · · Score: 2

      300 miles at 80 mph? Is there a Tesla that can do it? Certainly no other mass-produced BEV can, 200 is about max at those speeds for Hyundai Kona, Audi e-tron etc. Then, at least outside the Tesla-world, you need extreme luck to find a quick charger (which is really about 200 mph/70 kW charging for Hyundai Kona, if you aren't limited by the charger to 50 kW), have to start charging at around 10 % battery remaining (so if the charger is occupied/out-of-order/whatever, you only have 20 miles left to find the next one), and end at 70 % (charging speed drops a lot when close to full). So you'll fill up for the next 120 miles in half an hour.

    7. Re:Success! by ahodgson · · Score: 2

      Biofuels are an ecological disaster, and can't scale to any appreciable fraction of fuel usage.

      What we should be doing is turning atmospheric carbon into ammonia, and burning it in our existing engines.

  2. Re:Polestar 2 by LostMyAccount · · Score: 2

    It's hard to see a Volvo brand as less expensive than a VW-branded vehicle, unless they're trying to strip it of Volvo-like (near) luxury in an attempt to cut costs so that it's not more expensive than an actual Volvo.

    It's always amazing to me that the company that gave us the 240DL, the official vehicle of democratic socialism, is now mostly a luxury car company.

  3. Marketing hand jobs by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Volkswagen is planning to release a fully-electric SUV in China which could compete with Tesla's Model X.

    Let's see. No pictures, no specs, no prototypes, going to announce it and have it for sale within 18 months but not in any of the mature car markets against ICE competition. But we're supposed to believe it will be a direct competitor to the Model X. Riiiiight... Sounds like vaporware and marketing bullshit to me.

    The German automaker said Sunday the ID. ROOMZZ will be unveiled at the upcoming Shanghai Auto Show and will be available in 2021.

    Seriously? They named it "ROOMZZ"? That sounds like a cell phone from 15 years ago or a sound my daughter would make to imitate a car noise.

    Volkswagen also claims it will have "level 4 autonomous driving," Reuters reports, adding that this electric SUV "is the latest move in Volkswagen's aggressive growth strategy in China, where electric cars are given preferential treatment by authorities...

    Yeah yeah, talk is cheap. Tesla is selling very good EVs today. VW isn't - their current offerings are unimpressive. Their Audi and Porsche subsidiaries are promising cars with promising specs but I can't buy them today. All I'm hearing from the traditional automakers is a bunch of weasel word promises that rarely seem to result in a car I can buy. When they do make one it's almost always a pathetic compliance car which won't appeal to the general public.

    I own a Chevy Bolt EV which is a good car but it came out 3 years ago and GM hasn't meaningfully updated it or come out with another EV of note since and that doesn't look likely to change any time soon. Ford hasn't sold an EV of any description. Toyota is busy with the delusion that hydrogen fuel cells are the future. Nissan has the Leaf which isn't as good as the Bolt EV much less any Tesla and nothing else. BMW has the remarkably ugly and overpriced i3. Most of the EVs you can buy are little ugly hatchbacks with pathetic range and poor performance. (see Nissan Leaf, Honda Fit EV, BMW i3, VW Golf EV, etc)

    VW is talking a lot of shit about EVs after getting their hand slapped over lying about their diesel products. Two questions come to mind. 1) since they lied about the diesel products, why should I believe anything they claim about electric ones? 2) Where are the vehicles they keep promising? They say they are investing all these billions of dollars with no cars to sell and yet Telsa has been selling cars to the public for about a decade now. If I was a shareholder I'd be pissed. Say what you want about Tesla and all their faults, at least they are actually making cars that people want to buy and not just a marketing hand job to pretend like they care about EVs.

    1. Re:Marketing hand jobs by froggyjojodaddy · · Score: 2

      They say they are investing all these billions of dollars with no cars to sell

      What does it mean when a major company has invested billions of dollars, yet the only the thing they have to show for it is a shiny marketing blurb? Someone, somewhere is getting very rich off VW's smoke and mirrors campaign

    2. Re:Marketing hand jobs by Aviation+Pete · · Score: 2

      Guess why the i3 is ugly - its margins are MUCH lower than those on IC cars, so they subtly do what they can to keep sales down. The existing fleet is enough to gain practical experience, and any electric car more sold at the artificially low price (I know, low in their eyes!) means less profit.

      --
      You know it's time for the next revolution when your rulers' names end with roman numerals.
  4. Annotated version by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

    Volkswagen is planning to release

    Immediately contradicted by the subsequent line that says "concept car". I'm sure they'll release "something" eventually.

    a fully-electric SUV in China which could compete with Tesla’s Model X

    Place your bets that like every single other "electric SUV" apart from the Model X, it's simply a moderate-sized 5-seater with "SUV styling".

    The German automaker said Sunday the ID. ROOMZZ

    I too name vehicles after letters that I draw in Scrabble.

    will be unveiled at the upcoming Shanghai Auto Show and will be available in 2021

    Don't strain yourself with the rush there, VW.

    Volkswagen says the zero-emission vehicle can go approximately 450 kilometers (280 miles) before the battery has to be recharged.

    Ignoring the constant stream of "actual range being vastly less than the promised concept range" vehicles that we've been getting from European automakers, China measures ranges on the laughably lax NEDC cycle that gives grossly inflated range figures.

    The concept car includes a fully-automatic driving mode

    A technology which VW is a clear leader in ;) (/snark)

    The announcement comes one month after Volkswagen’s former CEO Martin Winterkorn was charged by U.S. regulators with defrauding investors during its massive diesel emissions scandal.

    Speaking of that, they're already back to their old ways, trying to cheat the new WLTP standards. This time, the cheat is just the opposite - trying to make their emissions look bad, so that their reductions targets over the coming years will be less stringent. So they've been doing things like testing cars with depleted batteries and disabled engine start-stop systems to make the cars burn more and emit more.

    Volkswagen has said it will boost electric vehicle production to 22 million over the next decade. It made fewer than 50,000 battery-only vehicles last year.

    Please try harder than you've tried previously.

    --
    Anchor: "We take you now to our Chief Meteorologist, Paris Hilton." Paris: "It's hot." Anchor: "Thank you."
    1. Re:Annotated version by Rei · · Score: 3, Informative

      2008 just called. They want you to write for TTAC's "Tesla Deathwatch".

      --
      Anchor: "We take you now to our Chief Meteorologist, Paris Hilton." Paris: "It's hot." Anchor: "Thank you."
    2. Re:Annotated version by OneHundredAndTen · · Score: 2

      Tesla's death is a bit like Linux in the desktop, or the Second Coming: they are events to supposed to happen "any time now" every year.

    3. Re:Annotated version by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      I too name vehicles after letters that I draw in Scrabble.

      So you're the idiot that named the Ford "Ka" ?

  5. Re:towing? by Smidge204 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not a VW of course, but tow-rated EVs do exist: Rivian is the example that comes to mind;

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    5-ton towing capacity, 400+ miles non-towing so depending on *what* you're towing and where, at least 200+ miles. Pretty respectable TBH. Estimated base price ~$68K (without EV rebates) which is pretty competitive given the performance numbers.
    =Smidge=

  6. Re:Polestar 2 by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Volvo V40 is only £23.5k, well under their target price. In fact it's similar to the Kia Niro or Hyundai Kona fossil versions, so add in a similar size battery and ~35k seems perfectly possible.

    Also remember that Volvo is owned by Geely and probably has access to Chinese manufacturing for battery packs at very competitive prices. Chinese and Korean battery packs have already overtaken Nissan and Tesla on cost and warranty.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  7. good luck to them by sad_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    are these real 450km or is that they wishful thinking again?
    we all know VAG is a bit generous with numbers...

    --
    On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.
    1. Re:good luck to them by mentil · · Score: 4, Funny

      Driven by a spherical car in a vacuum.
      The numbers would be flaccid if VAG didn't tend to elongate when properly stimulated.

      --
      Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
  8. Re:Price? by umghhh · · Score: 2

    Germany which is officially a rich marxists' paradise can make you buy stuff if you want to drive anywhere. They are already banning vehicles on basis of models not actual data (see Stuttgart and other cities diesel bans) . VW is partially owned by the state of Niedersachsen (North Saxony) so chances are that VW enforcing laws will come into place. Particularly interesting in this context will be the tearing apart their electricity producing infrastructure - while at the same time getting all transport electric. But hey we do not all have to drive. Neither we all have to have access to electricity all the time and smart grid can switch off on basis of payments and possibly party allegiance. Heil Greta!

  9. Re:towing? by The-Ixian · · Score: 2

    Nobody tows anything with an SUV

    And China only, so it'll be a small SUV

    Maybe you were wondering about the Rivian pickup truck.

    Oh, so this is an "SV" then....

    --
    My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
  10. Electrogate ahead... by ElitistWhiner · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Their diesel NOX scandal took years off people's lives. NOW they have the perfect combo of large population base, thriving market and regime in which VW are most comfortable to exploit. The VW solution doesn't make a dent in pollution, smog or improve China's air quality but they need a life line.

    Glad its not our turn again.

    1. Re:Electrogate ahead... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 2

      Exaggeration -- the countries where Dieselgate cars were sold most (Western Europe) tend to have the longest life expectencies in the world.

  11. Ford by sjbe · · Score: 5, Informative

    For a smaller manufacturer focusing mainly on the cheaper half of the market, like Ford, it is hard to justify large investments in EVs not (yet) bought by their typical customer that won't be profitable for some years.

    Are you seriously describing Ford as a small manufacturer? Ford is one of the 5 biggest automakers on the planet. They are huge by any reasonable description.

    Ford make their money selling affordable B and C segment cars and margins are razor thin.

    What are you talking about? Ford makes their money selling large pickups and SUVs. You clearly haven't looked at their financials statements. They lose money (and lots of it) on smaller passenger cars which is why they recently announced they were getting out of that market segment.

    They have also lost a lot of market share because of uncompetitive products and questionable reliability and now Brexit is threatening the one market where they are reasonably successful, so I can imagine large investments in EVs are not the top priority at Ford.

    The UK market is NOT a big market for Ford and Brexit only really matters to them insofar as it affects the global economy. Ford only sold about 375K vehicles in Britain in 2018 versus about 6 million vehicles sold worldwide. Any company that is not investing heavily in EVs already is playing a very dangerous game where they are basically hoping the technology will fail.

    They will get to it when the EV market is more mature.

    Any company that waits that long will almost certainly lose massive market share. They won't be able to get batteries at a competitive price and their technology will be one or more generations behind the curve. Playing wait and see is a huge risk when it comes to a technology shift like we are seeing with EVs.

  12. Re:towing? by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

    I don't have time for videos... people take a long time to explain things that I could read in a few seconds. I don't understand why they have to make the fronts of these vehicles so goofy

    Yes I agree that this is the kind of vehicle we need. I'd be interested in seeing how it actually works for offroad use against ICE SUVs.

    This kind of vehicle would make EVs more mainstream. Kind of disappointing it is so expensive; I couldn't afford a $70K vehicle and they have no plans to come to Canada.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  13. Falling behind by sjbe · · Score: 5, Informative

    found the guy that paid too much for tesla stock.

    Cute. Of course I'm on record multiple times here on slashdot saying that I wouldn't touch TSLA with a barge pole. WAY overvalued. The company is a good company but the stock price lost any tether to reality some time ago. That has nothing at all to do with the quality, capabilities, and popularity of their cars. They are already the top selling luxury car maker in the US, outselling BMW, Mercedes, Lexus and Audi. In fact they sell as many cars as BMW and Mercedes combined in the US. That doesn't happen by accident.

    stock that will nosedive with traditional automakers getting into the game, hardcore... with their massively larger manufacturing capacity and a century of automotive manufacturing experience over their upstart competition that's still operating like a 'start up' instead of a legitimate contender, and run by a buffoon that can't keep his fucking mouth shut.

    I work in the auto industry making wiring for both ICE and EV automobiles. While the big auto companies are quite capable in many ways as you say, they also by and large have no idea what to do about EVs and they aren't taking them very seriously to date. We make parts for the Chevy Bolt EV and I've seen first hand their project management and it's not impressive. They are trying very hard not to cannibalize their current car sales and in the process they are failing to invest in the future of cars which increasingly appears to be EVs. They haven't invested seriously in battery tech, they aren't making big investments in EV infrastructure, most of the EVs they have made have been half-assed compliance cars with shitty range and poor features. Explain to me how you think they are going to suddenly magically figure out the formula for making a good EV without actually making any. How are they going to compete with Tesla or other companies that invested early when they have a substantial advantage in battery cost and supply and performance?

    It's not too late yet for the big auto companies to get in the game but they had better do so fairly soon. (soon meaning serious products within the next 5-10 years with big investment starting NOW) If they wait much longer than that, they'll have basically ceded big market share to Tesla and any other car maker that does take EVs seriously. When EVs reach a tipping point there will be some big auto companies that take the train to bankruptcy-ville if they aren't working hard on EVs now.

    the changes that happened in the fallout of the 'emissions scandal' is the best thing to happen to the industry since the assembly line.

    I hope you are right but I doubt it. VW is run by some seriously ethically challenged people. They knew what they were doing was wrong and did it anyway. Same people who green-lit the diesel scandal are in charge today. No reason to believe they have suddenly learned how to be ethical or that they seriously care about EVs. I'd be happy to be wrong but there is little evidence to suggest I am to date.

  14. EVs versus ICEs by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Right. I'm apparently a Tesla fanatic despite buying an EV from a direct competitor. [/sarcasm] You are an idiot and missing the big picture. Evidently you have a raging hate boner for Elon Musk which is bizarre but ultimately unimportant.

    I don't care if you like Tesla or not. I don't care if you like Musk or not. I don't own a Tesla and have no plans to get one. I don't own the stock either. Tesla is merely an example. The simple fact is that Tesla is the ONLY significant car company taking EVs truly seriously, selling actually good vehicles in big numbers. They have proven the demand is there for a good quality EV. All the announcements from the big auto companies to date are merely sound and fury signifying nothing. They have close to no products worth mentioning on the market despite their claims of investing billions in electrification.

    Now that I own an EV (again, not a Tesla) I understand why they are better in so many ways than ICE vehicles. EVs have plenty of room to get better as battery tech progresses. ICE vehicles are about as good as they are ever going to get. That fact alone should be keeping any CEO of a company that makes their money primarily on ICE vehicles up at night because the future very clearly seems to be in EVs. EVs can get better. ICEs cannot. The EV technology is already just better. They accelerate better, have more torque, are quieter, are FAR more fuel efficient, require FAR less maintenance, they are cheaper and easier to refuel for most use cases. Given a choice I'm never going to buy a non electrified car again.

  15. Re:towing? by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

    It has some significant disadvantages for an expensive vehicle. The pickup you can't put an 8x4 sheet of something in. There isn't that much cargo space for such a large vehicle. The only spec I could find was the 330L compartment which is tiny. The explorer by comparison is 21/43.9/81.7 cubic feet, this doesn't look as big.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  16. Re: Polestar?!?! So an "exotic dancer"? by Zitchas · · Score: 2

    Only going to happen if you can convince companies to forgo their prime directive: Make money.

    It is the biggest market in the world, most companies would happily sacrifice their entire market share of the North American market if it meant they got a share half the size (in percentage terms) of the Chinese market.

    On the same token, corporations only care about human rights records if it affects their bottom line. If someone can connect those human rights records to the corporate profits somehow, then they'll start caring. Until then, however, they won't.

    Unlike western nations, the Chinese market isn't really afraid of having big corporations cut them off. What's the worst that'll happen? That China ends up with another company like Huawei or tencent except in automobiles? Sounds like a plus to them. And we've already seen how worried Huawei is about the US government sanctions. Which is to say, it appears to rank about the level of a minor inconvenience.

    --
    Z
  17. Re:towing? by fluffernutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Slashdot I'm in and done with in minutes. A video you have to watch the whole thing, at the speed they want to go not you.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  18. Re: Price? by Type44Q · · Score: 2

    Reliability may also be a strong incentive to choose a more expensive option over a Tesla.

    So basically anything other than a VW or a Volvo...

  19. Battery tech is advancing by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What we really need are advances in battery energy storage.

    They'll happen but it's going to take time. The good news is that batteries are already more than good enough that we could switch many/most cars from ICEs to EVs today with only modest changes to habits and infrastructure. Basically if you have a garage and don't need to routinely travel longer than 200 miles in a single trip, you can switch to an EV today.

    No more IC engines, and cars can be redesigned from the ground up better using space that the engine, fuel delivery, and exhaust systems once took up.

    I don't think ICEs will ever go away completely but I can see a day when they are a rarity or at least a minority. That's going to take a few decades to get to however. There are some use cases where ICEs just make more sense than pure EVs. But even the ICEs that remain I think will mostly be electrified because it will make economic sense to do so.

    If we can get the energy per unit volume within an order of magnitude of gasoline, propane, or other fossil fuels, transportation would be radically changed.

    You are measuring the wrong thing. What matters is usable energy/power per kilogram for the whole drivetrain. You are making the mistake of comparing the energy content of a volume of gasoline with the energy content volume of a battery but that's a flawed comparison. Gasoline is useless without a very large and very heavy engine to turn it into useful work. Just using the volumetric energy content of gasoline doesn't tell you anything really useful because the liquid does nothing by itself. You need to know how much the whole system weighs, how efficient it is at turning that energy into useful work, and how much it costs to do that. While there are some limitations and caveats, existing EVs today already have substantially better fuel economy for a given power and weight output for a wide variety of use cases. My Chevy Bolt EV has more torque than my pickup truck, vastly better fuel economy, comparable range (about 238 vs 275-320 miles) and only weighs about 300kg less. A Telsa Model X actually weighs more than my pickup and has more power, more torque, FAR better fuel economy, comparable range, etc.

    And the good news is that battery technology is going to continue to get better. ICE technology is close to as good as it will ever get. An ICE produces more heat than it does useful work and there is no way to change that. Given that EVs are already matching or exceeding ICE performance in many cases and have lots of room to improve as battery tech improves, the future seems dim for ICEs in the long run.

  20. VW is not (yet) in the EV market by sjbe · · Score: 2

    VW makes cars, too. EV and ICE. By the millions. And they tend to have a much better track record of launching vehicles on-time, and in all promised configurations, unlike Tesla.

    Name one EV that VW currently sells to the general public that is remotely competitive with anything Tesla sells. Or name one that sells in numbers competitive with Tesla. I'll wait....

    ...Crickets...

    That's what I thought.

    Yes VW makes cars. VW has made a handful of shitty, short range, compliance car EVs that almost nobody wants to buy. They've promised a lot and delivered approximately nothing to date. Maybe that will change but until it actually does I'll take Tesla's (admittedly spotty) record on EVs over VWs any day of the week.

  21. A concept? by Socguy · · Score: 2

    Common' VW, stop hyping concepts and start delivering cars...

  22. Luxury is many things by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Indeed, it happens only by redefining 'luxury' to equal 'expensive to buy' and by only looking at the country where Tesla happens to be from and where it is much more popular than elsewhere.

    I didn't define the term luxury car and Tesla's sell well around the world, not just in the US. If you think Tesla's aren't luxury cars then you have no idea what the term means. Luxury comes in many forms but only two factors are universal. Cost and brand. Tesla has both - ergo it is a luxury brand. Your personal opinion of the products is irrelevant. Quality, reliability, comfort, and other factors can contribute but do not necessarily define luxury. A Lamborghini is obviously a luxury car but if you had ever been in one you would know that the quality sucks, the reliability is abysmal, the fit and finish aren't great, and the comfort is non-existent. They are flashy, expensive, fast and fun. Tesla obviously focuses their cars on good looks, fast acceleration, and tech. If you prefer a sort of luxury that comes in the form of overpriced moving leather furniture (think Cadillac) that is fine but it's not what defines the category.

    Ultimately what defines a luxury car or any luxury good is exclusivity. It is the fact that it is priced out of the reach of most buyers. Hence it is a luxury instead of a necessity. Any other definition is bullshit.

    Nobody with the faintest knowledge about cars would call a Tesla a luxury car.

    Oh really? You are aware that pretty much every automotive magazine and every major media outlet that deals with cars considers Tesla to be a competitor in the luxury car market. Gotta love the snob argument. It's such a great way to move the goal posts to make "luxury" mean whatever you want it to mean.

    Riddle me this. If Tesla isn't a luxury car then why are Audi, Porsche, Volvo, Lamborghini, and other luxury brands tripping over themselves to copy what Tesla is doing?

    The interior and the fit and finish are apalling even to American standards.

    Cute. So you think interior fit and finish is all that defines a luxury car? Evidently you've never examined a Lamborghini (or Alfa or almost any other Italian car) very closely if you think fit and finish are what defines luxury. Drive a supercar sometime. Clearly luxury and they are mostly made like shit. They only last because nobody drives them very much.

  23. Yes short ranges are a problem by sjbe · · Score: 2

    This reads like someone who doesn't understand just how different the European and US car markets are. The European market sells gazillions of hatchbacks, and while US consumers may find them ugly, European consumers love them.

    I'm well aware of the differences and I make car parts for both markets. However there are attractive hatchbacks and there are ugly ones. Most EVs made so far fall into the ugly category. Have you actually seen the BMW i3 or the first gen Nissan Leaf? Wow are they ugly. If you think otherwise then I think you need new glasses.

    Ranges of under 200 miles work particularly well in Europe, where hatchbacks are often used almost exclusively as city runabouts, driven for well under 20 miles a day.

    Ranges under 200 miles work fine in the US too but nobody wants a car with less range that that anyway. People in Europe buy cars that go quite a lot further than 100 miles too. Good luck finding a gas powered car with that sort of range. Trying to convince people that they really only need 80 miles of range is just companies trying to find a way to pretend it isn't actually a problem so they can sell a second rate vehicle.

    You also come across as naive about car platforms.

    Well my day job is as an automotive engineer so I'm pretty confident I know more about them than most people reading this.

    VW has been investing billions in MEB. It's routinely discussed in the professional press.

    Yes I've seen the press. And guess what? They don't have any products I can buy today so until they do then it is nothing more than marketing bullshit. They can spend all the money they want but until it results in a real product that you or I can buy it is meaningless. Tesla made popular EVs years ago on a much smaller budget so VW really has no excuse.