mattb
Well-known member
what did you end up getting?As someone in the same boat in Wave 1, with the pick of the litter for trims, I'm now leaning towards Lariat with ER.
- The Chevy announcement today proves we're just under about 2 YEARS out from getting a non-launch edition Silverado (Fall 2023 estimate), with unknown pricing on what the 400 mile trims (definitely not the 40k one)
- $105k for the top trim, but 400 miles. No federal tax, lower Colorado state tax credit
- The Lariat ER comes out to 70k for me in Colorado, pre-tax ($7500 + $2500 state). This is $3k more than an ICE identical equipped Lariat premium PB
- If you go pro, you're stuck with that for at least 2 years, assuming you'd even want the Chevy. I think the Lightning is way nicer looking
- People are hallucinating if they think car prices are going down, or even that the 400 mile work truck will be anywhere near 50k. The 40k figure from Chevy is from a yet-undisclosed work truck trim with unknown standard range miles, at a future delivery date (2024+)
So if you're going to USE the thing, get the trim you want to live in, and with the tax breaks + the timeline of competitors + not even all Lightning orders will be fulfilled in 2 years, and you'll STILL likely get good resale value then.
Lastly, this is my 3rd EV (Leaf --> Model 3 --> Lightning). I just drove 140 miles (75 each way) new year's eve, leaving with 100% trip charge, I got to my destination with 55% battery. I then got stuck 2 miles away for 3 hours after someone wrecked, and it drained my battery to like 48%.
My point is if you're doing the math, I lost roughly HALF my range going up the mountain from the foothills in Colorado at roughly 30 degrees, and the Tesla is more efficient. If you're going to NEVER drive more than 100 miles in the winter, then the standard range is fine
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