Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you only charge at home it’s cheaper though cars start off more expensive
And doubt you can keep Tesla running 15 years like my Honda.
We bought our 2019 Bolt in early 2021 for $19k. It wasn’t much more expensive than similar ICE vehicles.
Why wouldn’t a Tesla be running after 15 years?
Sure a Bolt is probably similar to a Civic, but you are comparing a Chevy to a Honda and paying a premium? Lots of things can fail besides engine/batteries — those are the bits to worry about. Honestly my parents had GM, and anything electrical (windows, alternator, power seat) were always failing — and now the DRIVETRAIN is electrical?
It's not really a drivetrain, it's just a motor. Pretty uncomplicated, electrically and mechanically.
So is a window motor, but GM has trouble with those. I think if you factor in the price of a new battery and you still come out on top, then go electric
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you only charge at home it’s cheaper though cars start off more expensive
And doubt you can keep Tesla running 15 years like my Honda.
We bought our 2019 Bolt in early 2021 for $19k. It wasn’t much more expensive than similar ICE vehicles.
Why wouldn’t a Tesla be running after 15 years?
Sure a Bolt is probably similar to a Civic, but you are comparing a Chevy to a Honda and paying a premium? Lots of things can fail besides engine/batteries — those are the bits to worry about. Honestly my parents had GM, and anything electrical (windows, alternator, power seat) were always failing — and now the DRIVETRAIN is electrical?
It's not really a drivetrain, it's just a motor. Pretty uncomplicated, electrically and mechanically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you only charge at home it’s cheaper though cars start off more expensive
And doubt you can keep Tesla running 15 years like my Honda.
We bought our 2019 Bolt in early 2021 for $19k. It wasn’t much more expensive than similar ICE vehicles.
Why wouldn’t a Tesla be running after 15 years?
Sure a Bolt is probably similar to a Civic, but you are comparing a Chevy to a Honda and paying a premium? Lots of things can fail besides engine/batteries — those are the bits to worry about. Honestly my parents had GM, and anything electrical (windows, alternator, power seat) were always failing — and now the DRIVETRAIN is electrical?
In Washington state, with prices around $4.98 per gallon of gas, it costs about $115 to fill up an F-150 which delivers 483 miles of range.
By contrast, recharging the electric F-150 Lightning (or Rivian R1T) to cover an equivalent distance costs about $34 — an $80 savings. This assumes, as the Energy Department estimates, drivers recharge at home 80 percent of the time, along with other methodological assumptions at the end of this article.
But what about the other extreme? In the Southeast, which has low gas prices and electricity rates, savings are lower but still significant. In Mississippi, for example, a conventional pickup costs about $30 more to refuel than its electric counterpart. For smaller, more efficient SUVs and sedans, EVs save roughly $20 to $25 per fill-up to cover the same number of miles.
An American driving the average 14,000 miles per year would see annual savings of roughly $700 for an electric SUV or sedan up to $1,000 for a pickup, according to Energy Innovation.
Ultimately, we may never agree on what it costs to refuel an electric vehicle. That may not matter. For the everyday driver in the United States, it’s already cheaper to refuel an EV most of the time, and it’s expected to get cheaper as renewable capacity expands and vehicle efficiency improves.
The sticker price for some EVs is expected to fall below comparable gasoline cars as soon as this year, and estimates of the total cost of ownership — maintenance, fuel and other costs over a vehicle’s lifetime — suggest EVs are already cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you only charge at home it’s cheaper though cars start off more expensive
And doubt you can keep Tesla running 15 years like my Honda.
We bought our 2019 Bolt in early 2021 for $19k. It wasn’t much more expensive than similar ICE vehicles.
Why wouldn’t a Tesla be running after 15 years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you only charge at home it’s cheaper though cars start off more expensive
And doubt you can keep Tesla running 15 years like my Honda.
We bought our 2019 Bolt in early 2021 for $19k. It wasn’t much more expensive than similar ICE vehicles.
Why wouldn’t a Tesla be running after 15 years?
Anonymous wrote:As long as you only charge at home it’s cheaper though cars start off more expensive
And doubt you can keep Tesla running 15 years like my Honda.