• jmiller@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Nissan Sakura and Mitsubishi eK X EV are $14-16k, but are only for sale in Japan. Nissan closed orders for the Sakura because they already had more orders than capacity to make them. We need vehicles like that everywhere! That would drive EV adoption far, far more than another “affordable” $45k SUV.

      • rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I’m always curious about what I understand to be the kei cars. We don’t have many in the US bc they supposedly do not meet safety rules. But we had some - what is the hold up, just sales expectations? A used one of these would possibly be in my price range.

        • jmiller@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I believe they are kei cars. I looked up the safety ratings on them when I heard about them, and the D.O.T. equivalent board that rated them gave them 5 stars. But it could be that was a kei car specific rating. It did show diagrams with front and side air bags, and all the electronic crash avoidance systems. It’s bigger and seems like it would be safer than a smart car. I honestly think the hold up is that if we had options like that in the US fewer bigger, more expensive, cars would be sold. Maybe not a lot fewer, but enough fewer that it is overall more profitable not to offer them.

      • JeffKerman1999@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Sure, I’m eyeing a nice cargo bike for a year now. But that also is still tool expensive: I bought my second hand car 5 years for 6k€ and a cargo bike now is around 4k€

        • bassad@jlai.lu
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          1 year ago

          Yeah it is still expensive “for a bike” but you save on gas, insurance, maintenance, and health!

      • Bye@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        What about the winter? A bike isn’t going to get me to the ski hill, or even across town when it’s snowing or the roads are icy.

        Even in the summer, I can’t put my mountain bike on a bike (yes I know). I can’t put my kayak on a bike.

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      I wouldn’t purchase one myself that was more than a hybrid until Honda and Toyota (they’re currently closest) square out making solid state batteries that can last a long time. They should be smaller, lighter, cheaper to make, and charge much, much, faster if need be.

      Right now if an all electrics battery goes bad it’s costs a massive amount of money to replace and for many vehicles it’s really hard to take out of a vehicle. Toyota is claiming a production vehicle should be 2027-2028 and that company doesn’t generally blow smoke up people’s ass about something only 4 years out. They should be able to get a car with a 300 mile range that can charge in a few minutes in a battery compact enough to easily be removed if it goes bad. That’s what electric vehicles really need. Something that won’t cost $60,000 and end up in a scrap yard after 15 years.

      • zurohki@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        Your belief that EVs aren’t ready yet is the entire point of Toyota’s constant news articles about solid state batteries. Toyota also says EVs are toys and hydrogen is the future, but I’m sure they’re totally serious about EVs.

        They’ve been saying solid state batteries are coming in a year or two for years already and still don’t have a prototype to show off.

        • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          They haven’t been saying a release window for years.

          They aren’t currently the only company saying around 2028 because it has multiple companies involved.

          Hydrogen would be the better option, but delivery is much more complicated than electricity.

          Lithium batteries still suck and are a poor choice for all electric vehicles no matter if solid state batts come out or not. They don’t last long enough, can’t be replaced easily enough, weigh too much, and cost too much to replace.

          It’s also not a nail in the coffin to end needing oil or pollution. It will help a lot, but passenger vehicles use about 1/4 of all oil used and are far, far less than that for pollution created. So even if every single passenger car, suv, mini van, and pick up truck was all electric with batteries that never sent bad, you’re looking at like 5% less pollution and 25% less oil consumption, and that’s before you add some pollution back into the mix for what it will take to create all the extra electricity that would be needed, since we haven’t gotten all of that switched over yet to solar, wind, hydro, and nuclear.

          I’d love not needing to rely on gas for my vehicles, but at this time today it only minorly helps pollution and will make overpriced paperweights 15 or so years after purchase.

          • zurohki@aussie.zone
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            1 year ago

            Hydrogen means throwing away 2/3 of the energy we generate. Driving on hydrogen can never be less than three times the cost of driving a battery EV, even if someone waves a magic wand and gives you a trillion dollars worth of hydrogen infrastructure for free. It’s not the better option.

            We’ve got batteries now that will outlast the vehicles they’re in. You don’t care that the engine in a gas vehicle will only last 30 years or that it’s really heavy and expensive.

            EVs also don’t cure cancer. Nobody’s really expecting them to solve problems that aren’t related to vehicles in the first place.

            • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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              1 year ago

              Batteries now absolutely do not last longer than the vehicles. The batteries are generally 15 years before they need replaced and no more than 20, or as few as 10. They’re also large and very heavy and cost over $10,000 or in some cases $20,000 to replace.

              Hydrogen wastes a lot of electricity to make, but we’re currently on the fast track to wind and solar, so wasting some electricity can become an acceptable loss in a future of renewable energy. Aside from that there’s getting enough lithium in the first place in order to have everything go all electric.

              That said, hydrogen will likely get skipped over. It is a waste of electricity right now, since we don’t have an abundance of green electricity today, and we’ll have better batteries that will last longer and be cheaper before we do have that much electricity possible.

          • Virulent@reddthat.com
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            1 year ago

            Hydrogen is terrible. It is much more expensive than even gasoline, adds way more complexity compared to all electric, and extremely inefficient. It’s a joke. It might make sense for semis in the future but will never make sense for passenger cars. The Mirai is a concept science experiment sold as a consumer car.

            Batteries are expensive to replace right now but that’s only because we don’t have battery recycling infrastructure yet. Eventually they will be much cheaper to replace. Already, even factoring replacing the battery every 100k miles, electric cars are cheaper to own than gas and many batteries are known to last 200k+ miles. It really is only the Leaf that has the shitty battery that needs replacing.

        • nudny ekscentryk
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          1 year ago

          Considering how skewed the sector of hybrids is right now (dominated by Toyota), they may actually be right about that.

        • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          Lol. No. I’m just a mechanic and a tech nerd and toyota and Honda look like they’ll be the first companies to release vehicles with solid state batteries. Right now when an all electric battery goes tits up it will cost too much to be worth replacing. For instance, a chevy bolt replacement with install goes for over $15,000. Teslas are over $15,000, and most others range out between $4500 and $22,000 dollars. Lithium batteries are guaranteed to fail at some point earlier than a vehicles lifetime it could have spent on the road. Having to spend $10,000+ dollars on a car that’s over 12 years old is basically a recipe for sending it to the scrap yard. Total waste.

        • Uvine_Umarylis@partizle.com
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          1 year ago

          Or maybe a billion dollar research grant to get solid state batteries out, which seem to solve all of these problems

        • burchalka@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Hmm, you sound like you’re describing electric cargo bike 😉 But seriously, much lower dead weight to actually carried ratio, lower speeds… The only missing part of the puzzle is safe infrastructure (separate lanes, prioritized traffic etc.)

          • JeffKerman1999@sopuli.xyz
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            1 year ago

            Eh I usually go around with my non-cargo and non-ev bike and it solves around 90% of my mobility problems. The rest is unfortunately up to the car since going to office means 2 hours of train + tram + walking but by car it’s around 35-40 minutes including finding a parking spot. And then there’s the occasional very large and big item (like furniture and tools) that I need to bring around and my car is sometimes not big enough for that, forget about a cargo bike.

            I’d rather rent a car when I need it, but it’s around 120€ per day, max 100km, plus gasoline and it is unpractical because you don’t know of there are cars available. Once I needed to bring a big table and it was cheaper to hire a moving company for a couple of hours than renting the big SUV and do by myself

            • burchalka@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Your 90% bike usage already lessens the environmental impact of your driving, while also adding personal health benefits, so please keep doing that 🙏

    • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      I was surprised to learn the Chevy Bolt is 26k for the base model, and would only cost 19k after the federal credit.

    • fatboy93@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The issue is that gor some reason nobody speaks in total cost of buying a car, not the car dealers not the banking institutions. They all talk about monthly payments and for some reason people can’t do basic math that $1000 for 60 months is a huge fucking amount.

  • BOMBS@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I went to the Ford site to look into their EVs earlier this week. Their site on EV info is so disorganized and unhelpful. Trying to figure out how much charging would cost and the logistics of long-distance travel is way too confusing. They’re even messing it up with a subscription plan to their in-network chargers.

    I suspect this is part of the reason people aren’t buying Ford EVs. Buying a car from a dealership is already too antagonized because we all know they’re trying to rip us off. To try to balance it out, shoppers try to gain as much knowledge on the car so they know what they’re agreeing to. However, when the car comes with all this new technology that changes the way we maintain them, and available info is scattered, indirect, unclear, and potentially costs even more, that will push away people that don’t want to deal with it.

    • Uprise42@artemis.camp
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      1 year ago

      Your electric bill absolutely will not go up by as much as your saving on gas. It’s tough to figure out how much because it depends on your electric rate and how much you drive as well as your charging habits.

      I charge my car to full every night and live in western PA, but not sure of what the rates are for electric. My bill is under $150/month though. Gas is almost $4/gallon. Before our first EV in 2018 we spent about $200 a week on gas and gas has only gotten more expensive. We spend less on Electric per month for the entire house (not just the car) than we did on a week in gas.

      As for long trips, that’s an area seriously lacking. I use ABRP which is a mapping software that uses your specific model, battery charge, distance, elevation, traffic, and weather to figure out when to charge and for how long. You can also link up a OBDII sensor to get live data for more accurate route adjustments. I’d recommend giving that a look and mess with different cars to see what cars fit the routes you drive the best.

      I drove to Kentucky from western PA and only had to stop three times for about 2 hours of charge total in a Kia Niro 2022 EV. But we then didn’t stop to eat at other times we would have because we stopped in places with restaurants so it wasn’t 2 hours lost.

      We also did a trip to Washington DC to see the pandas before they left and made it the whole way with no charge. We only had to charge on the way home.

  • hamsterkill@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Unless this is an indictment of the charging infrastructure build out (in which case — fair), this doesn’t make sense. You don’t scale back after early adoption — you scale up to mass market.

    The US makers scaling back could seriously hamper EV growth now that EV tax credits require assembly in the US. Sounds to me like they need more regulatory incentive to make the production switch.

  • spudwart@spudwart.com
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    1 year ago

    If only there was an alternative for travel, other than buying a giant four-wheeled multi-ton money pit death machine, that could also run on electric instead of fossil fuels.

    If only.

  • Grayox@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    We need to mandate EV adoption, not rely on consumer demand, the amount of misinformation directed at EVs has been extremely effective. They aren’t perfect, but they are a hell of alot bettet than Internal Combustion Engines which spew poison into the environment . . .

        • bluGill@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Which can’t be done until PT actually can get people places. Only a few cities have that level of service.

          • Katlah@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 year ago

            PT can’t get people places because of all the cars… (And the underfunding and poor engineering)

            • bluGill@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              That is false. Pt can’t get places because it doesn’t even try. The places where there are a lot of cars we need to do something of course, but the real problem is the long tail of places it doesn’t go. I consider less that a bus every 15 minutes not going: nobody who can afford a car has time to waste on such bad service.

              • Katlah@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 year ago

                How are buses supposed to get anywhere when they are blocked by cars?? There’s a reason most places (that aren’t car dependent) have bus lanes. There’s places it doesn’t go because there’s not enough public transport. And there’s not enough public transport because there’s no room for it, because places are filled with cars.

                • bluGill@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  They are not blocked by cars most places they should go. suburbs with no traffic are dense enough to support bus transport with reasonable frequencies, but they don’t get it.

                  There are a few roads where buses are blocked by traffic. However those roads have (or would if the buses would actually go anyplace other than those roads) enough demand that they should have a fully grade separated train on those routes (or often just off those routes and no service at all on the road itself - get the transit closer to where people want to be)

      • Bye@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Oh yeah that’s going to happen, just totally tear down and rebuild a century of car based infrastructure.

        EVs are necessary, because even though that should happen, it won’t.

  • cybersandwich@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I went on a trip recently and reserved a rental car at the airport. When I went to pick it up there was a huge line.

    They were running out of vehicles and didn’t have the types of vehicles that people reserved. I heard them offer electric vehicles to, no exaggerating, at least 10 people. All of them declined.

    The common theme was “I don’t know how I’d charge the thing”. Would their hotel have a charger? Would their other destinations? Where were they? How do the chargers work? Do I need an app?

    It struck me because that’s still a major issue for EV adoption. Maybe it’s just lack of exposure, but I recall a video that MKB did a while back that said EV charging is too complicated and annoying for normal people.