Serious question, have you driven an electric car?
It's so smooth and full of torque. I have a 2nd gen Chevy volt, I've also owned a BMW i3. Both were used in great condition for under 16k. My brake pads and rotors still look brand new at 72,000 miles. My odometer reads 72000 but the engine barely has 30,000. Plugs into 110v outlet, charges overnight.
What I'm trying to say is it's like western digital saying we are going to quit making platter drives by 2025. Not because they don't want you to have 16TB Drives for $250 but because the cheap SSD will be that good by then.
By 2035, the cheapest best car will be electric because electric cars are better in every way except range, they'll fix that.
The only gas car I would consider is the new mid engine Corvette, if I won the lottery. Mainly for historical purposes.
Serious question, have you driven an electric car?
Yep. They're nice. But they don't fit my use model. I'm very big on range, backups, and hauling heavy shit; three things that electric vehicles are shit at. Any country folk (those of us who actually use our trucks) are not going to want an electric vehicle... it simply won't do what we need it to do.
I certainly agree we aren't anywhere close to having a good electric pickup but they are actually great at hauling stuff, it's just the battery range issue
Surprisingly, they really suck at hauling stuff. EVs have the physical capability to move heavy loads, but doing so drains the battery so fast that the already smaller range drops to miniscule.
This article talks about the "nice slow pace" you can get towing an RV (2 hours driving, 1 hour charging). Admittedly, that might be nice for RV people, but that sucks balls for people who's truck has a job. If I've gotta go 200 mi with a load, that's 5 hours (assuming my destination has a supercharger I'm using while loading/unloading) instead of less than 3. Something I could get done in a long afternoon now becomes an 11 hour job.
Serious question, have you driven an electric car?
It's so smooth and full of torque. I have a 2nd gen Chevy volt, I've also owned a BMW i3. Both were used in great condition for under 16k. My brake pads and rotors still look brand new at 72,000 miles. My odometer reads 72000 but the engine barely has 30,000. Plugs into 110v outlet, charges overnight.
What I'm trying to say is it's like western digital saying we are going to quit making platter drives by 2025. Not because they don't want you to have 16TB Drives for $250 but because the cheap SSD will be that good by then.
By 2035, the cheapest best car will be electric because electric cars are better in every way except range, they'll fix that.
The only gas car I would consider is the new mid engine Corvette, if I won the lottery. Mainly for historical purposes.
Yep. They're nice. But they don't fit my use model. I'm very big on range, backups, and hauling heavy shit; three things that electric vehicles are shit at. Any country folk (those of us who actually use our trucks) are not going to want an electric vehicle... it simply won't do what we need it to do.
I certainly agree we aren't anywhere close to having a good electric pickup but they are actually great at hauling stuff, it's just the battery range issue
Surprisingly, they really suck at hauling stuff. EVs have the physical capability to move heavy loads, but doing so drains the battery so fast that the already smaller range drops to miniscule.
This article talks about the "nice slow pace" you can get towing an RV (2 hours driving, 1 hour charging). Admittedly, that might be nice for RV people, but that sucks balls for people who's truck has a job. If I've gotta go 200 mi with a load, that's 5 hours (assuming my destination has a supercharger I'm using while loading/unloading) instead of less than 3. Something I could get done in a long afternoon now becomes an 11 hour job.
Like I said, hopefully they fix the range issue if not, they won't start selling trucks nobody can use. I'm agreeing with you.
I'm all for a diesel plug in hybrid. It would still have all the benefits of electric and of the diesel, and will use less diesel.
If you have time, research the 2nd gen volt drivetrain