With 400 miles of range on $6 of electricity who wouldn't love it! But my old Promaster with a Colorado camper van now must go. Cheap.
Hi RJ,The RAV4 hybrid is one of the longest range vehicles on the road. I think the only EV that will touch its 500 miles is the lucid air dream which will cost you $170k. Supposedly the REV will also do it. I expect that will also be north of $100k.
I know EV fans like to think that range is overrated, but consumer sentiment begs to differ. The refueling time differences make range more of a priority with EV's not less and your range ceiling only ever goes downhill. It's an easier trade-off to accept if you believe you're saving the planet, but for everyone else, people just don't want to wait that long for stops on road trips.
One thing that never gets discussed in the economics of it all is what will happen to the cost of gasoline as demand presumably drops from more and more EVs on the road. I'm sure that money grubbing politicians will try to tax the savings away. On the other hand, national gasoline taxes haven't been hiked in 30 years. It's just not a popular thing to do.
In todays regulatory climate, they giveth and they take it away. At whim. Notice a return on the investment last month, next month they may be charging you to steal the power your investment has produced.Right now, probably so.
Arguably, even after the introduction of the Model T, ICE vehicles were a luxury. They are still a luxury to some significant part of the world population, and even in the "rich" US, we have population segments that can't afford a car at all - ICE or EV.
Current ICE cars go from cheap to insane. EVs are generally more expensive, they generally require home chargers to be economically effective. This, by extension, require homes and that is not a given in today's world.
Additionally, the public charging infrastructure is not there yet. We are hugely behind here in Eastern Washington compared to California and even Western Washington.
So, yes, just like when ICE vehicles came out, EV early adopters will tend to be willing to spend more on the new technology vehicle.
Eventually, ICE cars, trucks, and tractors replaced all their horse powered predecessors. It was not necessarily because people became fanboys if the new tech (although there were certainly some), it was simply because the gasoline versions were cheaper.
Economics will eventually be what powers the change to widespread EV adoption. Some people will jump on EV at the first chance, some people will hang onto ICE to their last.
As EV matures, becomes cheaper and approaches the same ease of use as ICE, the largest number of consumers will choose the cheaper route and get an EV.
Yes, governments will likely tilt the scales in the direction that aligns with whatever the current policy is.
For me, it is fun seeing the wave coming and to enjoy the ride.
Concerning solar, as lucky as I am here to have cheap hydropower, that same cheap electricity makes solar economically unfeasable. Two different times I have seriously looked into installing solar, an the math just doesn't work. For instance, the interest on the money needed to make about 1/4 of our power was more than the entire electric bill. On the other hand, in the sunnier southwest with it's more expensive power, solar is everywhere.
Like it or not, economics is what will drive the change.
Also, @RV8R, what is with the triple commas?
@CarKeys I know it isn't much power, but I build some small "disaster relief power systems" that are packaged into a suitcase.
If you are in they area, I can loan one to you. It is enough for running a home refrigerator and light cooking.
It is a product that I developed after the hurricane wiped out the grid in Puerto Rico.
It is your basic 1 kW van power system packaged into a suitcase.
Harry
Harry Niedecken
re25.square.site
HarryN@CarKeys I know it isn't much power, but I build some small "disaster relief power systems" that are packaged into a suitcase.
If you are in they area, I can loan one to you. It is enough for running a home refrigerator and light cooking.
It is a product that I developed after the hurricane wiped out the grid in Puerto Rico.
It is your basic 1 kW van power system packaged into a suitcase.
Harry
Harry Niedecken
re25.square.site
Usually about 200 miles. My longest was 299. The world record for vans is 311 miles.So have you actually driven these distances? Based on your data, it looks like you're estimating what the total would be based on your battery size. How far did you actually drive to get your averages?
My best 5 legs (miles/kWh) X 177kWh capacity
2.66 X 177kWh = 470 miles
2.48 X 177kWh 438 miles
2.42 X 177kWh 428 miles
2.35 X 177kWh 415 miles
2.32 X 177kWh 410 miles
Usually about 200 miles. My longest was 299. The world record for vans is 311 miles.
Sure. You could say estimates. These are extrapolations of rate (mi/kWh) times volume (177 kWh in my battery).Could you please clear up the discrepancy between these two claims about the Brightdrop? Are we correct in assuming the longer distances are simply estimates of what you think is possible? The difference between 299 miles and 477 miles on single charge is fairly substantial.
That sounds pretty cool. I'd love to see how you come up with something.. . . fold out aerodynamic tail fairing . . .
I’ve never heard anyone say they couldn’t buy an EV because there aren’t any SUV’s available - maybe if they were talking about the size of a suburban or expedition. The other two points flagged as misinformation are really just information.An interesting article FYI
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3 examples of Electric Vehicle misinformation
BBC has an article out now titled ‘Three big reasons Americans haven’t rapidly adopted EVs’. All three reasons included false and misleading information. Affordability The article asserts that “the average price of an EV is going up, not down”. This is...www.dailykos.com
it has an onboard gasoline generator to charge battery pack for additional range. its designed to help the segment of vehicle owners where EV only won't work. the lines keep getting more blurry on what is eco- conscious. crawling back into my hole now until the future warrants viewing.Range anxiety, RAM has it solved in 2025 with unlimited ev range.
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2025 Ram 1500 Ramcharger Has 'Unlimited' Battery Electric Range, Requires No Public Charging
"With unlimited battery-electric range, the Ram 1500 Ramcharger is the pinnacle of the light-duty pickup truck segment and the ultimate electric truck," says Ram's CEO.insideevs.com
squarely pointed at disappointed F150 Lightning owners or those sitting on the fence, I thinkit has an onboard gasoline generator to charge battery pack for additional range. its designed to help the segment of vehicle owners where EV only won't work.