Wow, that's way more involved than a speaker and probably uses even more juice, which makes it even dumber.
Yeah so you put on extra parts and complexity to just make noises when you drive? Seems silly.
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Wow, that's way more involved than a speaker and probably uses even more juice, which makes it even dumber.
16 year olds with fart cans on their cars would think it's dope as **** though.Yeah so you put on extra parts and complexity to just make noises when you drive? Seems silly.
You can get it turned off but you have to take it in to the dealer for them to do it. I think it's dumb myself but so are most people.They must have research that shows this is something that consumers want, but I don't get it at all. I hate noisy vehicles. The quieter the better. Play some music if you've got to have noise.
You do know there are EVs that have 300+ miles of range on a full charge, right? Yes, dead of winter cold greatly impacts range with cold-soak of the battery and usage of resistive heat, but I wouldn't be nervous at all about making it 175 miles in the coldest of winter nights in my 300 mile range EV. Then I would plug it in overnight and be at full charge in the morning, ready to do it again the next day.
I may be wrong, but aren't those ranges based driving on a flat surface with no head wind or creature comforts (radio, heater, lights) being used?
A 30 mph head wind with the temp at 0 probably changes your range a bit I would think.
Cold does make a big difference in range. Those batteries want to be about 60F or warmer to work right so they use some energy to heat the battery pack and some energy to heat the interior. You'll lose about half your range in cold weather.I may be wrong, but aren't those ranges based driving on a flat surface with no head wind or creature comforts (radio, heater, lights) being used?
A 30 mph head wind with the temp at 0 probably changes your range a bit I would think.
...or I just build in a half hour to charge and get some El Azteca while my car charges...Hard to get your vehicle charged if its in the parking lot for tailgating.
...or I just build in a half hour to charge and get some El Azteca while my car charges...
Little less convenient? Yes. I'm cool with the $10 it costs me to take our Mach E to Ames vs the $80ish in gas to take my F150.
There are apps which tell you where all the chargers are/if they're active/if they're being used/etc. The most minimal amount of planning takes care of most of the issues. I'm traveling with our Mach E next weekend. I'll plug it in Thursday night so it's ready for me whenever I decide to leave Friday morning. I'll take about 1 minute to check and see if/where I need to charge and how to work that into my trip. I've charged at hotels, restaurants, gas stations, etc.And if the charging station/s aren't working.........or are taken?
I have driven to many a cyclone event forgetting I needed get gas, get on the road an "oh no".
Just needed to pull over a few miles up the road at the next station to spend 5 minutes and I'm on my way. Does it cost more......yes. Am I willing to pay for that convenience......absolutely. Because your $70 difference is dirt cheap insurance that I'll get from point A to point B with no worries regardless of temp, road conditions, traffic and/or availability/condition of charging station.
I've driven more than 300 miles to a destination exactly one time in my own vehicle in like the last 4 years.
I think I've driven over 300 miles one way to a destination at least 6-10 times per year for as long as I can remember.
This summer we drove 17hrs one way to go backpacking for a week in Colorado. Adding more than "a few minutes" to fill up my vehicle to that trip, to charge instead...assuming I can find a station in BFE Kansas or Nebraska or Colorado...that's a deal breaker every time.
Do you own two cars? If so, is there a reason why one of them couldn't be an ICE for those 6-10 times?
A lot of people have an expensive/larger car for road trips and then a cheaper one that they use for shorter drives. What sucks about the One ICE/One EV method is that they both end up being expensive.Do you own two cars? If so, is there a reason why one of them couldn't be an ICE for those 6-10 times?
A lot of people have an expensive/larger car for road trips and then a cheaper one that they use for shorter drives. What sucks about the One ICE/One EV method is that they both end up being expensive.
With the exception of the daily operation one, if it's an EV, is a lot cheaper to operate. But I see your point.
If you are only considering daily operation costs, that may be true. If you aren't willing to purchase a brand new vehicle at a premium to a ICE vehicle, the economics are less conclusive.
I own one. Des Moines KIA wanted $5k and dealers in TX, CA, and the northeast are asking 7-10k over sticker. I paid sticker back in 2021 but I had to wait 6 months and drive to Minneapolis to get it. The Telluride thing pre dates covid, they just can't keep up.Every brand new vehicle right now comes at a premium. Try buying a Kia Telluride. They want to charge 3,000 over MSRP to get you in one.
There are apps which tell you where all the chargers are/if they're active/if they're being used/etc. The most minimal amount of planning takes care of most of the issues. I'm traveling with our Mach E next weekend. I'll plug it in Thursday night so it's ready for me whenever I decide to leave Friday morning. I'll take about 1 minute to check and see if/where I need to charge and how to work that into my trip. I've charged at hotels, restaurants, gas stations, etc.
The people who crap on EVs crack me up because they have absolutely no idea about the EV experience. Then they get all pissed off about the people who don't have issues because they read on the internet such and such is a HUGE problem. Are EVs perfect? Nope. For 90+% of the population however they'd work juuuust fine in 99% of cases.
Every brand new vehicle right now comes at a premium. Try buying a Kia Telluride. They want to charge 3,000 over MSRP to get you in one.