Remix.run Logo
Yizahi 14 hours ago

EVs are fine and dandy, but it is a luxury class of cars for now and it shows really. Most other countries are far far away from mass deployment of EVs or restricting ICE cars. EVs can win if either a) the car is cheaper than the same class ICE, or b) operational expenses of using EV car would be cheaper. Neither of which is happening yet. And the car do need to have some advantage, since EVs already come with inherent disadvantage of long and inconvenient charging, small batteries, limited locations for charging with buggy and broken stations, not working apps or cards etc.

margalabargala 13 hours ago | parent | next [-]

What's silly is that the reality you describe is a choice that's been made, not something fundamental to EVs. Cars like the Nissan Leaf and the Chevy Bolt are supremely inexpensive. China's BYD cars are extremely cheap for what they are.

American/European car makers realized there is a large class of people who are wealthy and will buy a high end EV for status reasons, and started chasing that market instead.

Yizahi 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Which Leaf? Leaf 1st gen with 150km range in summer and 100km in winter and which are already decade old? Those yeah, cheap, but also useless. Leaf 2 are nothing like that. Even base model with small-ish 40kWh battery is 30k euro, and 60kWh model is starting close to 40k euro. And for that price it's a small c-class hatchback, competing with way better cars, like large and packed d-class sedans or SUVs. And charging EV on a commercial station is currently more expensive than filling up a tank of a similar ICE with 95 petrol, per km of range. The only way to charge EV on a cheap, which is possible, is to own a house and charge it on a home line at domestic rates. And owning a house in EU is an expensive luxury.

Unfortunately, infrastructure need to improve a lot before the switch may happen.

hedora 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Even the Ford Lightning (by far the best work truck on the market) was modestly priced compared to other Fords.

Ford claims there’s no market for “expensive” $60-70K trucks in the US, but go to any Ford dealership in the bay area, and they’ll have used ICE Ford trucks that cost that much.

(And I don’t mean the giant specialty super duty trucks — these are tricked out suburban kid transporters that look like they’ve never seen a camp ground, let alone a Home Depot).

Anyway, the Lightning was a fantastic model line. I hope someone else builds quarter ton EV trucks moving forward. I’m rooting for Rivian and Slate.

margalabargala 7 hours ago | parent [-]

I would argue the EV Silverado goes toe to toe with the F150 lightning and wins. Similar price, better range, better features.

joe_mamba 14 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yeah, visiting my ex-Gf family in Norway, I realized how much richer Norwegians are that it's not even funny. It's not really a market representative of the average buyer. Same how neither Switzerland, Luxembourg or Monaco are.

I am living in a working class neighborhood of apartment buildings in West-central Europe with average to below average earners, and there's zero EVs parked here on the streets, basically 90% of people have old diesel cars. Only when you go towards the suburbs with rich(inherited wealth) people living in single family homes you see everyone has an EV.

The distinction is quite clear, do you live in a house or have your own parking space and possibility to install your own charger? Then EV 100% no brainer. Otherwise people stick to ICE.

jacquesm 13 hours ago | parent [-]

I do live in a house, could easily afford an EV and have plenty of solar to keep it charged. And I still don't have one because all of these EVs feel like the worst of the computer world applied to automotive. The last thing I need is a computer on wheels and I'm old enough that I know my current car is likely my last. For my kids it is different, and I'm sure that they'll go electric at some point but I hope that they'll be able to do so without buying a mobile privacy violation instrument.

GuB-42 12 hours ago | parent | next [-]

The Dacia Spring proves that it doesn't have to be the case. The base version doesn't even have a touchscreen, let alone internet connectivity. It is a cheap car, in every sense of the word, but is shows that not every EV has to be like Tesla.

joe_mamba 3 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

The issue is the small actual range on the Dacia Spring. Great for grocery shopping and going to work in a city setting, bad for long journeys in the winter time. Basically what people want is exactly that type of barebones EV, but with more battery.

jacquesm 12 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Good for them, and thank you for the tip!

blub 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

That’s genuinely nice that it doesn’t have the multimedia crap. They do also have an “extreme” model with touchscreen and connected services. At ~220km range it probably has about 100km in winter though. :-/

rcMgD2BwE72F 10 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>they'll be able to do so without buying a mobile privacy violation instrument.

Tell me you don't bring any mobile device when you ride/drive a car.

jacquesm 10 hours ago | parent [-]

There is a slight difference between my mobile phone/carrier and the manufacturer of my vehicle, especially when the latter includes cameras, all kinds of telemetry and of course the near certainty over the longer term of compromise of all the data they hoover up.

seanmcdirmid 10 hours ago | parent [-]

Did you mean the former?

jacquesm 9 hours ago | parent [-]

No, I meant the latter. Onboard cameras and telemetry are fairly commonplace on newer vehicles.

seanmcdirmid 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Phones have those also, and you are comparing cars to phones, so I thought you meant that phones had all those things...but I guess they both do?

jacquesm 3 hours ago | parent [-]

There are more kinds of phones.

swolios 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Not just commonplace, required by law.

vachina 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Ironically society would benefit tremendously from “computer on wheels” because when you inevitably have a heart attack on the road your car won’t swerve onto oncoming traffic or crash into people.

jacquesm 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Why is me having a heart attack inevitable?

cyberax 11 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> the car is cheaper than the same class ICE,

To give you some perspective, the most popular EV in China costs $6000 (Wuling Mini). New. The second most popular costs $10000 (Geely Xingyuan). I tried both, and they are far less crappy than they have the right to be. They are cheap cars for sure, but they're perfectly adequate for regular use.

And Geely Xingyuan has a 40kWh battery in the basic configuration! This is utterly ridiculous for a car that is _that_ cheap.

So China basically murdered the global ICE market. It's gone. There's no going back. Once China figures out the logistics and sales, ICE vehicles will be dead in all of the less affluent countries. Especially because EVs combine almost too perfectly with solar generation.

hedora 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Out of curiosity, do they support one pedal driving correctly (i.e., let you set it and forget it, and never unexpectedly accelerate from a stop unless you turn it off explicitly).

BMW used to, but broke it on the i4, and presumably all the newer ones. Kia’s implementation is completely broken.

I ask, because that’s the number one thing I’ll check for with future EV purchases, and it’s purely software.

cyberax 9 hours ago | parent [-]

I have not driven the Wuling myself, only traveled as a passenger. On Xingguan it's "normal", just like on Tesla or anywhere else.

The Geely did not come to a complete stop on regen braking, I had to use the brake pedal for the final ~5 km/h. Perhaps there was a setting to override this, but I did not check.

hedora 9 hours ago | parent [-]

Tesla seems OK. I’m really spoiled by the “complete stop” feature.

The worst (which is what most brands are moving to in the US) is when it’s completely unpredictable. Basically, half the time, the car unexpectedly accelerates from a stop, or fails to engage regen.

On some cars, they even tie regen to a camera, so regen works well unless you are on a curve or cresting a hill. In those situations, the car accelerates or fails to slow down.

yalvhe2009 9 hours ago | parent [-]

[dead]

dalyons 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

yes, there a lot of outdated perspectives in these threads. The world has changed, EVs are the cheaper option now, its just going to take awhile for some places to catch up.

dzhiurgis 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

In NZ cheapest EV right now (I think it is clearance) is 15.8K USD.