I doubt they stop for 45 minutes. I wouldn't stop for 45 minutes on a 650 mile drive.But do you really make that trip non stop anyway?
I doubt they stop for 45 minutes. I wouldn't stop for 45 minutes on a 650 mile drive.But do you really make that trip non stop anyway?
Depends on if you mean new vehicles for sale, or just vehicles on the road. I could see ICE making up 10% of vehicles on the road, but I think in 20-30 years you're going to be hard pressed to find new ICE models that are broadly available.I am a big fan of EV, but there will always be a role/market for ICE. Whether that's for heavy towing, sports cars, whatever. Right now EV has what, 7%? That will grow, but I could see ICE having 10-20%, even in 50 years.
That's the other use case that is a pretty noticeable difference currently. If I'm going to Kansas City from the Des Moines metro it doesn't make much difference if I take our EV or gas car. If I'm going to Chicago or further I'd very likely take our gas car.I LOVE road trips and that's my biggest barrier right now, not the day-to-day. Basically if I can't make it to Deadwood without needing to stop for an extended period of time, I'm out.
As far as daily use goes, I have a garage but it would need some serious electrical work before I could effectively charge an EV there. My place of employment has chargers, but I'm only in the office a couple days per week. So I'd either have to drop a decent chunk of coin on upgrading our personal infrastructure, or figure out the best place to park it for a bit to charge. I think I'll stick with my Civic and Bronco for the time being.
Their best sellers are cab and chassis units used to build RV's, work trucks with unibodies on back or crane uses. I haven't seen many of those be electric and I have 3 large cab and chassis users very close to me.Ford and GM are transitioning to be all/mostly electric. Will be very interesting to see how the infrastructure shapes up here in Michigan since we don’t have public transportation and every drives. Will be a very interesting decade.
Personally waited until we got solar on the roof before getting a Tesla. But the batteries are constantly getting better so kinda feels like buying a computer where it’s outdated within a year or two.
Only stops i have made on the last few long drives that were longer (Nashville and San Antonio come to mind) were to fuel up. I guess I stopped in Waco on the way to SA because I figured I would be extra tired the next day if I didn't.I doubt they stop for 45 minutes. I wouldn't stop for 45 minutes on a 650 mile drive.
Agree if it's a destination drive there is one or 2 fuel stops, restroom break, and a meal in there somewhere.I doubt they stop for 45 minutes. I wouldn't stop for 45 minutes on a 650 mile drive.
That estimate is incorrect. Please watch the link I added.
Yeah if I was taking our EV on a 650 mile trip I'd probably stop twice for about 30 minutes each. Which is about 15 to 20 minutes longer each stop than how I'd do it in our gas car where those stops would be for food, fuel, and/or using the bathroom. When I was in my 20s I'd probably do that trip with a single 15 minute stop.I doubt they stop for 45 minutes. I wouldn't stop for 45 minutes on a 650 mile drive.
I have childhood memories of riding in my dad's Buick Skylark in the Iowa winter, that was enough for me.I just wouldn't want a RWD vehicle.. really ever. Haha
Right? We just bought a minivan, and toyotas new models are hybrids, but the wait time is a year and cost 10k+ than the used models we were looking at. We needed a new vehicle. Not waiting a year for one.Would have liked to have gone hybrid with the last vehicle but minivan market is tiiiiiiiiiight and Honda didn't yet have an option. We don't go through cars quickly so I imagine when our older vehicle (~7ish) yrs needs to be replaced, we will go that route.
I feel like I'm in phev.What you have a problem with TLAs?
I mean, a/s/l, lol, roflmao, ttyl?
Nothing against electric cars but wake me when they self charge by solar or their own movement. At least partially?