▲ | Terr_ a day ago | |
> And 2 years old EV is not twice as bad as current one The new-vs-used price difference in equipment comes from multiple factors, of which "better features" is one part. Consider what would happen if you gave someone this choice: 1. Keep your 10-year-old car. (No major upgrades from stock.) 2. Pay $X to trade it for its identical factory-sibling which was made the same day but was stored in a timeless stasis-bubble until today, so that it still has its original new-car smell. I can't imagine anyone saying: "Well, there are zero new features, so I'll swap them for $0." P.S.: The issues are even more obvious if the person is choosing between buying someone else's 10-year-old car versus paying an extra premium for the time-warp one, because there's uncertainty about the first vehicle's history and maintenance. | ||
▲ | apelapan a day ago | parent [-] | |
Yeah, because a car has tens of thousands of parts that age with both time and usage. The core drivetrain is just a tiny bit of that. Everything is falling apart and that makes and old, used car... Used and old. Now queue the people who show up to say they haven't changed a tire or wind screen wiper blade on their 2012 Model S/Camry and can't perceive a single difference to when they were new from factory. |