Blainestang
Well-known member
Truck Shopper: I need 250+ miles of rangeCar Shopper: I need 250+ miles of range
Car Salesman: for an extra $10k you can have an additional 100 miles of range
Car Shopper: I'll take it
Car Shopper: drives less than 50 miles per day
Seriously, people need to realize that 120-150 miles of range is more than adequate.
Ford Salesman: for an extra $20k you can have an additional 70 miles of range
Truck Shopper: I'll take it
Truck Shopper: drives less than 50 miles per day, but they might tow something someday maybe
Jokes aside, some people will buy EVs with 120-150 miles of range and/or slow charging, BUT they're going to expect a huge discount compared to a car that's seen as a legitimate primary gas replacement covering trips and such.
The Leaf or Bolt or MINI are good cars, but they're just not going to sell in substantial numbers when they aren't seen by buyers as cars that can do anything the buyer asks them to do... and all of them are somewhere between bad and worse for long trips compared to a gas car or EV with long range AND fast charging.
Cars like that are, at least for the next several years, going to be seen as secondary cars, and therefore will be expected to be substantially cheaper than other EVs that are seen as primary vehicles... even if both will only ever be used as secondary vehicles.
I expect that short range or slow-charging vehicles will soon be relatively uncommon because the drop in sales price in order to sell them might be higher than the cost difference to the manufacturer to just make them longer range and faster charging.
For instance, if Chevy gave the Bolt faster charging so it wasn't a hilariously pathetic for 2022 50kW, that might cost a couple thousand per unit, but they could probably sell it for $5k more with substantially more demand because it's now a legitimate mainstream trip-capable vehicle instead of being seen as relegated to a second car.
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