How are people in apartments/condo/townhouse with no garage or in the city going to charge the EVs? Seems like a logistical nightmare to me.
Sorry, no tax credit and too expensive.If you are getting EV you get a Tesla. To consider anything else is a big mistake.
Hummer EV FTWIf you are getting EV you get a Tesla. To consider anything else is a big mistake.
Look up the resale value for both. You'd see your wrong.Huh? 99.5% of all automobiles sold today, including both ICEs and EVs, are terrible investments. In general, a car is a depreciating asset, not an investment.
In fact, the rapid phase out of ICEs in favor of EVs will cause the few ICE cars that actually appreciate in value, and thus aren’t necessarily terrible investments, to appreciate even more rapidly due to becoming even more rare and unobtainable.
Expect the tax credit to be reinstated and possibly increase to $10K.Sorry, no tax credit and too expensive.
That's pretty much now.I will consider an EV once I am able to charge it in 10 minutes and go 250 miles. If I can't take a road trip the vehicle is useless to me.
Look up the resale value for both. You'd see your wrong.
As for appreciation of used ICE cars? I guess you could be right. There is a huge market for VCRs and flip phones.
I will consider an EV once I am able to charge it in 10 minutes and go 250 miles. If I can't take a road trip the vehicle is useless to me.
There is no perfect solution. While battery materials need to be extracted from the earth, there will eventually come a point where the raw materials for batteries can be sourced from recycled materials. The same cannot be said of fossil fuels, which requires continuous extraction, and then refinement.
Also, lithium does not need to be mined. It can and is being extracted from sea water.
You're making an old, tired, and already disproven argument pushed by the fossil fuel industry.
I buy all my 6 cylinder high horse ICE vehicles used. Agree about that but I'll buy a POS electric car when penguins fly.Electric cars with autonomous capabilities are the future. Buying a new ICE car today is a terrible investment. If you have to go with an ICE because of price, buy used.
That would put it on par with the VW ID.4. The difference is that VW still has the 7500 federal tax credit and Tesla doesn’t. It will be a no brainer for me if they increase NJ to 10k. I would consider the Mach E too.Expect the tax credit to be reinstated and possibly increase to $10K.
Tesla Model 3 SR+ is $39K
Good question, something NIO is working on for the Chinese market:How are people in apartments/condo/townhouse with no garage or in the city going to charge the EVs? Seems like a logistical nightmare to me.
Except the majority of streets that have speed limits below 60, like residential or schools or construction.The 60 mph involved in 0 to 60 is generally legal, tho.
Tesla chargers are waterproof and can be installed outside of the house- costs less than $1000 installed. The batteries are designed to last 300-500k. Maintenance is less than an ICE- tires, brakes (less frequent than ICE due to regen braking), wipers- no oil changes. No scheduled maintenance.Where are people with no garage putting their charging station?
I’d have to drive an hour to the nearest Whole Foods parking lot to find a public charging station.
But my biggest concern about owning an EV is potential high maintenance costs. How much to replace the batteries?
Charging units can be setup for outdoors. You don’t need a garage. If you have an assigned parking space, you can have a charging spot.Where are people with no garage putting their charging station?
I’d have to drive an hour to the nearest Whole Foods parking lot to find a public charging station.
But my biggest concern about owning an EV is potential high maintenance costs. How much to replace the batteries?
I'd imagine you would have to have electricity run (probably underground) to your assigned parking space. That's not always an inexpensive thing.Charging units can be setup for outdoors. You don’t need a garage. If you have an assigned parking space, you can have a charging spot.
People in cities are dumping their cars thanks to ride sharing companies. Parking garages are now 2/3 full now because of decrease monthly parking demands. Think apartment complexes will have to upgrade and offer it as an amenity.I'd imagine you would have to have electricity run (probably underground) to your assigned parking space. That's not always an inexpensive thing.
Also, lots of older home's electric panel's are undersized. Adding another large circuit (240V / 50A?) may be difficult without upgrading the main service.
Just saying that this is not the trivial thing for all that you make it out to be.
I hear you. You might consider an EV for a second family car. My wife and I charge the Telsa overnight and haven't had any issues for daily travel.
Same here. Only I'd want the range to be closer to 500+ miles on a full charge. I'll also wait until charging infrastructure has gotten closer to gas station infrastructure in terms of availability.I will consider an EV once I am able to charge it in 10 minutes and go 250 miles. If I can't take a road trip the vehicle is useless to me.
You're either intentionally missing the point by choosing to be deliberately dense or you're actually clueless about both cars and investments. And your cell phone/VCR analogy is deeply flawed. EVs are a different technology than ICEs, not a more advanced one. Le Mans LMP1 cars (or the newer Hypercar class cars), or a current spec F1 car, which are different types of ICEs with varying degrees of hybrid tech, are the most technologically advanced cars on the planet today.Look up the resale value for both. You'd see your wrong.
As for appreciation of used ICE cars? I guess you could be right. There is a huge market for VCRs and flip phones.
Great comparison since so many people own classic cars.Have you seen the market for classic cars? Breaking records every year.
I was referring to the fed credit possibly going to 10K.That would put it on par with the VW ID.4. The difference is that VW still has the 7500 federal tax credit and Tesla doesn’t. It will be a no brainer for me if they increase NJ to 10k. I would consider the Mach E too.
ETA: the problem with the model 3 is the big jump in pricing if you want awd. For Mach E and ID.4, AWD is a 3k and 4K option, respectively. For Tesla, it’s 9k.
He literally said .5 percent of cars. To what did you think he was referring?Great comparison since so many people own classic cars.
EVs are advanced tech. You may disagree. Fine. You've also probably never been behind the wheel of one.You're either intentionally missing the point by choosing to be deliberately dense or you're actually clueless about both cars and investments. And your cell phone/VCR analogy is deeply flawed. EVs are a different technology than ICEs, not a more advanced one. Le Mans LMP1 cars (or the newer Hypercar class cars), or a current spec F1 car, which are different types of ICEs with varying degrees of hybrid tech, are the most technologically advanced cars on the planet today.
Back to cars as "investments"...
Your EV, and my ICE, started depreciating the moment we signed the paperwork and drove them off the lot. If that's your idea of an investment, then I have a bridge in which I'd like you to invest, please. One car depreciating more slowly than another does not magically make it a good investment vehicle (pun intended). It's still a depreciating asset.
As for ICE cars that do qualify as investment vehicles, you should look up some resale prices of some of the vanishingly few 0.5% of cars sold that, eventually, turn out to be decent investments. There are classic cars that appreciate in value over time. Some Corvettes, for example: https://moneyinc.com/most-expensive-corvettes-ever-sold-at-auction/. Bought for peanuts, sold for $3MM+. A decent return, although not exactly a rapid ROI.
There are a few examples of cars that immediately appreciate in value. Unobtainable and therefore extremely rare hypercars are one example. Another more common and obtainable example is the last series of the Porsche 991.2 911 GT3-RS. Many of them sold for well over MSRP (50-150K over in some cases). Some folks, who were well-enough connected to a Porsche dealership to get one for MSRP, were able to turn around and resell them 50-150K over MSRP a month or two later. That would have qualified as a good investment with a rapid ROI.
As a general rule with very few exceptions, cars are not investments, doesn't matter how they are powered.
So why bring it up?He literally said .5 percent of cars. To what did you think he was referring?
Trying to help ya not look like an idiot here ...the VCR comparison was asinine.
Because you brought up the topic of investment. The average commuter car isn't an investment. He pointed out the small group of vintage and rare cars that are an investment. And if ICEs phase out, it will add to those vehicles' allure.So why bring it up?
VCR analogy works perfectly fine. Dead technology goes extinct. Replaced by cheaper, more advanced tech.
Why would that matter for Tesla? They don’t qualify.I was referring to the fed credit possibly going to 10K.
I'd imagine you would have to have electricity run (probably underground) to your assigned parking space. That's not always an inexpensive thing.
Also, lots of older home's electric panel's are undersized. Adding another large circuit (240V / 50A?) may be difficult without upgrading the main service.
Just saying that this is not the trivial thing for all that you make it out to be.
Why would that matter for Tesla? They don’t qualify.
I'd imagine you would have to have electricity run (probably underground) to your assigned parking space. That's not always an inexpensive thing.
Also, lots of older home's electric panel's are undersized. Adding another large circuit (240V / 50A?) may be difficult without upgrading the main service.
Just saying that this is not the trivial thing for all that you make it out to be.
Do ICE vehicles need to go away? I don't know, but that's the current popular trend with a lot of political and business capital being invested in it. So electrification is going to continue for a while simply due to the massive investments being made. Will it still be around for a long time or will it be replaced by something more efficient and less dependent upon finite raw materials? We'll see.@mildone
Do ICE vehicles need to completely go away?
How much further can ICE get in terms of efficiency and such on the retail level?
You mention hypercars - can that technology get down to the consumer level eventually?
I know nothing about cars.
You're arguing with yourself. I never said anything about EVs not being advanced tech.EVs are advanced tech. You may disagree. Fine. You've also probably never been behind the wheel of one.
EVs improve over time through software updates. Hence, considerably less depreciation. Sounds like advanced tech, no?
Classic cars and supercars apply to a miniscule fraction of the population. Who cares.