I sense that there are a lot of people posting in this thread who do not own electric cars. Once you have one (and have put the 220 line in your garage), there's no going back. We have a Tesla 3, and it is just a plain hoot to drive. The acceleration is unmatched by anything short of a muscle car (and possibly not by them, in the short run). True, we'll take one of the gas cars on trips that will exceed 200 miles, but that's just because we're lazy and don't want to spend 20 minutes in a rest area. I expect that will change as we get bolder (and even older). But those trips are rare, possibly two or three times a month. The rest of the time, the range is not a problem.
I haven't yet met an electric car owner who regrets the purchase.
- oldman
If you buy a new car and make payments, do your maintenance on a regular basis, do repairs, purchase gasoline, and compare the monthly payments to a Tesla that
never needs maintenance and charges with much less expensive electricity the Tesla comes out ahead by a wide margin. I have had zero repair bills, no maintenance after
4 years, and the vehicle will accelerate faster than almost any gas powered vehicle commonly seen on the freeways and it is not even close. BYD and Tesla may bankrupt many
of the legacy car makers in less than 5 years if they do not build huge huge battery factories. The Ford CEO may be the only one that gets it. Mary Barra of GM absolutely does not
get it. GM has had to recall every EV they have sold because of battery issues. You cannot buy expensive batteries from a supplier like LG Chem, CATL, or BYD because you cannot make a profit. You also do not have any control over quality or availability. If the government bails them out they still might not survive. If Toyota goes under that would be a huge blow
to the Japanese economy.
If you have a friend that owns a Tesla ask him or her about it. Tesla does not advertise. How is Tesla growing so fast without advertising? Year over year 50 per cent growth.. How
many companies do that?
You may not like what is coming, but technology disrupters always make companies disappear. Kodak, Nokia, Motorola, Block Buster, Polaroid, Minolta, and many more are gone
because they waited to long to adapt.