I might be the first person to buy an ev under protest. Story time.
I like tech, i have made all sorts of neat things. My house is off grid solar powered by a system that I built myself. So I thought, an EV may make sense.
But when I look at ev's, they were all awful. I should mention I'm also a car enthusiast. The chevy bolt, the prius, even tesla, they look terrible and for the most part, perform terrible. Their interiors are abysmal.
Being a car enthusiast, I'm pretty fluent in rare cars or ones that sort of break the mold. You know hybrids? Those horrible things that are unnecessarily complicated, and perform terribly in virtually every category? I've been saying (to myself) that if they were serious about making a quality hybrid that had a chance at lasting a good while, they would take a page out of the train book.
Specifically, their drivetrains. A fair amount of trains operate via diesel-electric. That is, a diesel generator generating electricty to drive electric motors, which make the train move. So why wouldn't you do that in a car, instead of having a complicated transmission that takes both a gas driveshaft and an electric driveshaft and, in many complicated ways, uses them to drive the wheels.
Then someone did. In 2012 Henrich Fisker, a former car designer for Aston Martin, created the fisker karma, a true hybrid driven by a gas generator which produced electricity and sent it to electric motors with a battery buffer system, which could drive up to 50 miles on battery alone. Once the battery was low, the generator kicked on and made power.
And, being a car designer, he made his "hybrid" car to not look like sad if sad was a car. And gave it 400hp.
Unfortunately it was overpriced and not a lot were sold. The company soon went under.
10 years later, Henrich was at it again, with the all electric Fisker Ocean. This time in a midsize suv, that also doesn't look terrible. Especially considering the 360 mile range and 574hp, luxury interior, 22" wheels, and a solar panel for the roof.
However, disaster struck again. With some delays due to covid, supply chain issues, and having made an enemy of elon (henrich designed some tesla's too), there were hit pieces after hit pieces put out about the ocean. When the cars finally made it to the states from their assembly plant in austria by Magna (builders of jaguars and mercedes), the demand was way down.
With the bills piling up and loans coming to term, Fisker had to do something, and fast. So they decided on a firesale, where their $80k luxury electric SUV's were slashed to $35-37k, paid options became free, and free delivery.
At that point, I decided that I should see what all the EV fuss is about. So I bought one. It was delivered May 5th, 2024 to my house by a man in a diesel f250 towing a car trailer. He unloaded my car, I tipped the man, and he drove away.
I got in and the interior was truly incredible. I went for a test drive, and the ride was unlike anything I've ever been in. I currently have 2 jaguars, hummer h2, mini cooper s, and vw beetle. I've recently parted ways with a couple of corvettes, which I regret deeply for personal reasons.
Despite being a great car, it's still electric, and that comes with some major drawbacks. My house is solar powered, but it's battery is 113kwh, compared to my house's 90kwh battery. To charge it to full from empty it would completely drain my house. Another thing is the battery's state of charge. I didn't realize it when I bought it, but you don't just fill up ev batteries. Or run them dry. For the best battery life (10-12 years), you keep the battery between 20-80%. That's basically 60% of usable battery, so that 360 mile range just became 180 miles.
Now, I can live with that, because I don't drive more than 180 miles a day, and i charge it overnight every day in my garage. So I would keep the battery at 80%, drive around a bit and come back around 60%, then stick it on the charger and the next day when I want to drive, it would be at 80% again.
Then, there was another big issue: winter. So you can't just charge the battery, it has to be at an optimal temperature. Which requires heating. It gets cold here. At one point, it was in the single digits. I put my car on the charger and pumped 20kwh of battery in, but only 4kwh made it to the car's battery. That is an 80% loss of energy. If you power your house by solar, the winter days are short and largely overcast. you can't afford to just waste 16kwh of battery. And even if I wasn't off grid, that would be the equivalent of paying about $15/gal for gas at the pump.
I took it to the fast charger and charged it up in 45min, brought it home, parked it, and really haven't' driven it much the past few months because of the massive losses when charging in cold weather.
Oh and you lose about 0.75% of battery a day, regardless of if you drive it or not. So a month of not driving is a 22% loss of battery.
Now, the company is officially done, you can buy a new ocean for 20-24k. Knowing all I know now, if I wreck my ocean, I'll go out and buy another, because it's a really good car. It just can't be your only car.
And that's my EV story.