When do you think you will buy a 100% pure electric vehicle?

When will you buy a 100% pure electric vehicle?

  • Already Own One

    Votes: 39 5.5%
  • In the next year

    Votes: 7 1.0%
  • Between 1-5 years

    Votes: 128 18.1%
  • 6-10 years

    Votes: 169 23.9%
  • 10+ years or never

    Votes: 363 51.4%

  • Total voters
    706
Went and did a test drive on Saturday of a model Y. My wife wants a new small SUV so we thought we'd check it out. After 1/2 hour drive, we were sold. We just put an order in for one and it should be here in the next 60 days.

I've had sports cars my whole life including 500hp BB muscle cars and this is just completely different. For the last decade I've heard how fast the Teslas are but the torque is freaking mind blowing.

I'm not doing this for the environment. I'm doing this because I liked driving the car, I liked the simplicity of the interior, I like the technology, I loved the one pedal driving, etc.
Thanks for doing your part!
 
EV's are bad for the environment but a good status symbol I suppose

Why is it a status symbol to pay $1.30 for 90% renewable fuel instead of $5.50 for gas?

A Bolt EUV is a status symbol? You’re thinking of a fully loaded full size SUV to take a kid to soccer.
 
Why is it a status symbol to pay $1.30 for 90% renewable fuel instead of $5.50 for gas?

A Bolt EUV is a status symbol? You’re thinking of a fully loaded full size SUV to take a kid to soccer.
$1.30 vs $5.50 sounds great if you don't factor in the environmental impact of the battery powering that Rube Goldberg EV contraption
 
The battery issues need to be resolved before I pay the high initial upfront cost of new. I would buy a used model capable of an update with a superior replacement battery when they become available. It would be a secondary vehicle for local short trips and overnight home charging. The problems of charging on longer overnight road trips need to disappear before I consider a new EV: limited distance between recharge, limited availability of charging stations and length of time to recharge. The Motel chains that install charging stations will be winners.
 
The battery issues need to be resolved before I pay the high initial upfront cost of new. I would buy a used model capable of an update with a superior replacement battery when they become available. It would be a secondary vehicle for local short trips and overnight home charging. The problems of charging on longer overnight road trips need to disappear before I consider a new EV: limited distance between recharge, limited availability of charging stations and length of time to recharge. The Motel chains that install charging stations will be winners.
We have two cars. For the 3 times a year we drive over 250+ miles, we'll probably take my Kia, which is a more comfortable highway cruiser anyway. Or if for some reason we don't use that method, we'll stop for lunch and charge. When I buy cars, I usually buy for the 99% use case not the 1%. For other people that drive 250+ miles a lot over the course of a year, yeah maybe stick with an ICE vehicle.
 
$1.30 vs $5.50 sounds great if you don't factor in the environmental impact of the battery powering that Rube Goldberg EV contraption

I mean this sincerely I think you're grossly overstating this. It's at best a push, environmentally with ICE vehicles.

For the record my top two reasons for wanting them is price of operation and I want to stop relying on foreign entities for our energy that I find to be abhorrent, such as Russia and OPEC countries.


 
So in Toyotas opinion its going to be a while before a whole bunch of us are driving BEV.
 
So in Toyotas opinion its going to be a while before a whole bunch of us are driving BEV.
I have little doubt that it's going to take a long time. The cell phone was introduced in the 70's and there are still people that insist on a LAN line in their home.
 
So in Toyotas opinion its going to be a while before a whole bunch of us are driving BEV.
So, according to Toyota, the best thing we can do, for us and the environment, is buy a hybrid now. With China being the new OPEC with the needed elements coming from them, wonder if the leadership will crack down on them and squash memos like this.
 
The battery issues need to be resolved before I pay the high initial upfront cost of new. I would buy a used model capable of an update with a superior replacement battery when they become available. It would be a secondary vehicle for local short trips and overnight home charging. The problems of charging on longer overnight road trips need to disappear before I consider a new EV: limited distance between recharge, limited availability of charging stations and length of time to recharge. The Motel chains that install charging stations will be winners.

What battery issues are you referencing?

Longer road trips are plenty doable with Tesla's Supercharger network. 300+ miles between charges and Superchargers along all the major routes that take less than 30 minutes to get you the charge you need.

But....I'd never try to road trip with an EV other than a Tesla. The other EV charging networks have a long way to go.
 
I mean this sincerely I think you're grossly overstating this. It's at best a push, environmentally with ICE vehicles.

For the record my top two reasons for wanting them is price of operation and I want to stop relying on foreign entities for our energy that I find to be abhorrent, such as Russia and OPEC countries.



Where do you think the batteries come from? And before you say they're assembled in the US, where do the battery components come from? I'll give you a 2 word hint: "China" and "coal-powered".
 
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Stumbled on to classic Motorweek on the YouTube.

The 1982 Pontiac 1000.

0-60 in THIRTY seconds, but at least you average 25 MPG.

Suck on that, Tesla!

 
Yes, because ICE cars have no 'environmental impact' in production or oil usage. :rolleyes:
I didn't say they have no environmental impact. I said EV's sound great if you don't factor in the environmental cost of their batteries.

And that's not even mentioning the cost of creating more electricity to charge them
 
I didn't say they have no environmental impact. I said EV's sound great if you don't factor in the environmental cost of their batteries.

And that's not even mentioning the cost of creating more electricity to charge them

They still sound great even when you factor that in, because every type of energy production creates waste. I find the waste created by EV's to be better.

Where do you think the batteries come from? And before you say they're assembled in the US, where do the battery components come from? I'll give you a 2 word hint: "China" and "coal-powered".

No offense but I don't consider China to be in the same realm as Russia and the OPEC nations. You might but we differ there.
 
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They still sound great even when you factor that in, because every type of energy production creates waste. I find the waste created by EV's to be better.



No offense but I don't consider China to be in the same realm as Russia and the OPEC nations. You might but we differ there.
And more efficient. The biggest gain will be when(if) we get to mostly renewable energy sources that are running our factories where all these products are getting built (including and especially batteries).
 
The battery issues need to be resolved before I pay the high initial upfront cost of new. I would buy a used model capable of an update with a superior replacement battery when they become available. It would be a secondary vehicle for local short trips and overnight home charging. The problems of charging on longer overnight road trips need to disappear before I consider a new EV: limited distance between recharge, limited availability of charging stations and length of time to recharge. The Motel chains that install charging stations will be winners.

Isn’t some of that for a long term owner leveled out with lack of a transmission and just much simpler engine with far less maintenance in lots of ways? In the 90s a reason GM fought so hard to kill their own EV1 was that they’d lose out on their maintenance industry.

I think back on all the costs I’ve hat w cat converters and now people are stealing them even.
 

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