Haven't done the research but recall reading on another thread that the premium price on a PHEVs is unwarranted. Not sure how true that is. Also, what happens if down the road the battery dies. Can I operate the car with just the gasoline component or would it shut down altogether? |
Volt PP here. So, from what I understand-no, not if the hybrid battery dies completely. I'm not really sure because, from what I've read on forums and online, it's pretty rare. I don't know how rare or not that is in regards to other PHEV's. You CAN drive it if the battery degrades over time (all will at some point). From the Prius and the Volt having both been around for some time-the batteries seem to last way longer than anyone thought they would in the beginning. |
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Don't have Tesla and no plans to get one, but amused at the histrionics over Musk because he dared buy Twitter and allowed more free speech and less censorship on it. Your antipathy says a great deal more about you as a hyperpartisan progressive who embraces censorship and stiffling freedom of speech of those you disagree with (yes, you do. Just admit it).
As it is, keeping an eye out at other electric vehicles as more are being rolled out by all the brands. |
That's not how tax credits work. Tax credits work on your income taxes, not the price of the vehicle. It is not lowering the price of the vehicle. You still pay the same amount as everyone else (more if you finance). |
Who friggin cares? Big whoop, take the difference in income tax and pay a lump sum towards the car. Such pointless minutae over semantics. |
It's not semantics when you are telling people that you can buy a Tesla for 23k. Or even 32k. The price of the car does not change. |
Yes, he is obviously a real liberty advocate who would never “stiffle” free speech, not him. https://www.thefire.org/news/twitter-no-free-speech-haven-under-elon-musk Trump is a poor man’s conception of a rich man, and Musk is a stupid person’s conception of a genius. |
I think everyone knows that (including me, the pp you are responding to). The *effective cost* to me (and everyone else that qualifies) would be about $32,500 regardless of whether I pay that to Tesla or I pay Tesla full price and someone else (the IRS) cuts me a check for $7,500. My point was simply that the Tesla was NOT $23K for everyone who qualified. It is $32,500. A few people in specific states may get additional tax credits. The exception here is leasing where the tax credit IS baked into the price on which the lease payments are based. |
I bought my Model Y 1.5yrs ago so it was slightly higher but not drastically so. I don't know that I feel I overpaid because I bought it at at time I didn't have to wait based on inventory. Everything has a trade off. I love my car and I think Musk is a lunatic. Both things can be true. I'm more pissed about my Tesla stock fluctuation which I've had much longer than the car itself. |
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Only easily fooled and unintelligent dolts own Teslas. A Tesla is – hands down – the penultimate display of virtue signaling American greed, save only for the innate and so easily chastised stupidity of those that might choose to acquire them.
Teslas arguably possess the greatest [metropolitan] blind spot of any production vehicle in existence. Owners so smugly strut about with unjustified form, while remaining totally oblivious to the true impacts of their obesemobiles to both the climate and to society. |
Why are those evil rich people upset about a tax break that is less than 1% of their income? Do you really not have other worries |
OK, I bought an ID.4, but this seems unhinged. What's all this about a blind spot? What's all this about the impact on climate? |
Wait until you learn about bmw drivers. |