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- Dec 21, 2012
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We have to be inspected almost every year. I pay for two at a time, though, whenever possible.So you have to let the state inspect your vehicle annually?
We have to be inspected almost every year. I pay for two at a time, though, whenever possible.So you have to let the state inspect your vehicle annually?
My wife's battery SUV averages about 3.7 mi/kWH. With public fast chargers @ $0.50/kWH, that works out to ~$0.135/mi. With gas @$3.00/gal and 25 mi/gal the cost/mile is $0.12/mi. If gas is $4.00/gal then it's $0.16/mi. If you only get 20 mi/gal then it works out to $0.15/mi and $0.20/mi.Renting for a road trip seems like more trouble than it’s worth. Fast charging and highway driving means it’s not cheaper than gas, and you have the stress of trying to find chargers but it’s not your car that you know well.
Also hate to burst the bubble, but Musk is far from a genius. He doesn’t know how to code, Tesla and SpaceX have said they had handlers for him to keep him distracted and away from the engineers that do the work. His destroying of twitter’s value, insane hours “playing” Diablo 4, and 200 tweets a day shows he doesn’t do anything else but troll the net. Tesla would be so much better without him honestly. His cyberdumpster is on its 6th recall in a year.
Comparison was about relative range degradation with very low temperatures vs. "normal" temperature range. Not absolute economy of one vs. the other. Taken at face value, the Chinese vehicle did not lose as much of its normal range performance as did the Tesla at low temps. Would be interesting to know what about the technologies used account for the difference.Tesla M3 LR: 5.88 km/kw vs HiPhi Z: 4.35 km/kw
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Heated battery?Comparison was about relative range degradation with very low temperatures vs. "normal" temperature range. Not absolute economy of one vs. the other. Taken at face value, the Chinese vehicle did not lose as much of its normal range performance as did the Tesla at low temps. Would be interesting to know what about the technologies used account for the difference.
Brew on![]()
check the weight...that other car is almost twice as heavy, so quite impressive on it's economy at cold temperatureI get all that, but the Tesla seems to be waay more efficient in the cold just the same which makes me wonder what weight the article's point actually carries IRL...
Inceltruk?check the weight...that other car is almost twice as heavy, so quite impressive on it's economy at cold temperature
Tesla has gotten a lot worse with their newer cars, not to mention the abomination that is thecybertruckfailblazer
It seems odd that in the face of, what appears to be, an empirical study you are more inclined to share that it "seems" to be waay more efficient.I get all that, but the Tesla seems to be waay more efficient in the cold just the same which makes me wonder what weight the article's point actually carries IRL...
Allegedly. Though I don’t recall any women actually claiming to have had ‘relations’ with Elmo.Don't that man have like 15 kids?
11... but, still... allegedly he's in some weird "populate the world" cultDon't that man have like 15 kids?
11... but, still... allegedly he's in some weird "populate the world" cult
Yep... hijack over...I'll omit my rant about how most of us, myself included, are probably descended from jerks with enough money to have a dozen kids, maybe even some mistresses. It would be off topic.
So, electric cars are now "chick magnets?"maybe even some mistresses
It seems odd that in the face of, what appears to be, an empirical study you are more inclined to share that it "seems" to be waay more efficient.![]()
It wasn't an efficiency discussion. It was about what percentage of their "normal" temperature range is lost at "cold" temperatures. If the Chinese vehicle maintains a greater percentage of its range than a Tesla, then apparently the Chinese car has some more advanced technology than the Tesla. Eventually whatever this "cold resistant" technology is will spread across the rest of the industry. It's interesting mostly because of the anti-EV folks' talking point about how badly EVs perform when it gets cold.Tesla M3 LR: 5.88 km/kw vs HiPhi Z: 4.35 km/kw
With respect to getting from Point A to Point B the most efficiently, what part of that aren't you getting?
I don't care if the HiPhi Z is dragging the Titanic in it's wake - that's on their design choices, and I'm not referring to "pound feet" as a performance metric in this case...
Cheers! ("Ah, well, the pig is three times the weight, so it's more efficient!")
Of course it actually matters. If your EV or mine maintained its summer battery performance year round, that would be splendid. I'm hoping my next EV will benefit from this or, preferably, even better battery price/performance improvement. This doesn't mean either of us ought to wish for that particular Chinese car, of course.questioned if that actually mattered
I think it matters when you're trying to get from point A to point B in cold weather. Depending of course on how cold it is, how far apart point A and point B are, and what the nominal range of the vehicle is in warm weather. I kinda wish this kind of data was more readily available for more EVs.questioned if that actually mattered
Reading comprehension is hard nowadays.Comparison was about relative range degradation with very low temperatures vs. "normal" temperature range. Not absolute economy of one vs. the other. Taken at face value, the Chinese vehicle did not lose as much of its normal range performance as did the Tesla at low temps. Would be interesting to know what about the technologies used account for the difference.
Brew on![]()
It’s simple. If your car normally gets 300mi and in the cold it drops to 200 mi, vs if you car gets 250mi and in the cold it drops to 230mi it’s way easier to plan distances in the 2nd case. Less variability is a good thing and also impressive.holy cow, I literally acknowledged the temperature thing, but questioned if that actually mattered considering the Tesla is still more efficient...
According to the link, 93.6% of new car purchases in Norway for Nov. 2024 were EVs!fwiw, my Chevy Bolt definitely loses range bigtime in winter: around 25%, maybe more. And Portland winters aren't severe. Of course, the degradation may mostly "bottom out" at some temperature. Intuitively more likely, it keeps worsening as temps drop. But there's super-heavy EV adoption in Norway
Yes, to the first question.So, is it inappropriate to inquire (outside the debate forum) what folks think about EV purchase incentives? Battery plant construction incentives? These seem integral - or closely related - to this "poll"? If so, then just delete this paragraph.
Alternatively: have EV incentives shaped your purchase decisions?
So, is it inappropriate to inquire (outside the debate forum) what folks think about EV purchase incentives? Battery plant construction incentives? These seem integral - or closely related - to this "poll"?
But not to the second?Yes, to the first question.
Agree with Doug that the first question is for the debate forum.Alternatively: have EV incentives shaped your purchase decisions?
I'm not really sure how much impact the tax credits are actually having on final cost of the vehicles to consumers. Many EVs that don't qualify seem to be getting discounted by quite a bit more than EVs that do qualify, at least in my neck of the woods. About $7500 more as it happens.I'll say that if EV incentives are still around when I look at my next vehicle purchase, they would certainly factor in to my decision.
My son-in-law just purchased a Lucid. What a sweet ride. Incentives played no role in the decision-making process, I guarantee!Agree with Doug that the first question is for the debate forum.
As for the second question, I'll say that if EV incentives are still around when I look at my next vehicle purchase, they would certainly factor in to my decision. I've said previously that I'm not committed to an ICEV or a BEV next time 'round. At the time of my last purchase (2017), the BEV infrastructure just wasn't mature enough for me, and there were no BEVs on the market that met my needs and price targets even remotely competitive with ICEV, so I went ICEV. By the next time I purchase (no sooner than late 2026, barring an accident/etc forcing my hand), my needs will have changed as kids start heading off to college, the competitiveness of BEVs has certainly changed, and the infrastructure will be mature enough to consider BEV.
It will depend on a lot of variables, some of which might be preferential (i.e. the acceleration of a BEV, the ability to charge at home and never worry about "filling up"). But with a large expensive purchase like this, some variables are just straight up economics. That's purchase price, operating costs, resale value projections, used market (I generally buy used vehicles), and of course incentives. If it's close economically with or without incentives, I might lean BEV anyway. If it's not quite close enough without incentives but EV incentives tip the economic scale considerably to BEV, to ignore that in my decision would be silly.
Do you happen to own an EV by chance? Because I do and roadtrips with fast charging are still less than half the cost of gas, typically about a 1/3rd. As for the Elon thing well I’m sure he does his share of goofing off but his companies keep plowing along making money. Also tell me you don’t understand how over the air software update recalls work without telling me.Renting for a road trip seems like more trouble than it’s worth. Fast charging and highway driving means it’s not cheaper than gas, and you have the stress of trying to find chargers but it’s not your car that you know well.
Also hate to burst the bubble, but Musk is far from a genius. He doesn’t know how to code, Tesla and SpaceX have said they had handlers for him to keep him distracted and away from the engineers that do the work. His destroying of twitter’s value, insane hours “playing” Diablo 4, and 200 tweets a day shows he doesn’t do anything else but troll the net. Tesla would be so much better without him honestly. His cyberdumpster is on its 6th recall in a year.