Tommyd
Well-Known Member
Preach it!It'll work for some but there's a huge swath of people EV is just not right for. They're a super long way off from working for us.
We won't own any, possibly ever.
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Preach it!It'll work for some but there's a huge swath of people EV is just not right for. They're a super long way off from working for us.
We won't own any, possibly ever.
Howdy - I don't own one, but have many colleagues that do have them here in Austin. All with various flavors of Tesla. Their feedback has been very useful and insightful for me. First, they all love the fact that our employer provides charging stations for free, which they take full advantage of. Second, if they take a day trip to Houston or Dallas, they take an ICE vehicle not their EV due to the charging inconvenience. It gets a tad warm here in the summer, and they've provided feedback that the A/C running to keep the batteries from overheating in the summer sun in the parking lot really makes for logistic challenges when planning a trip - hence their happyness with the fact our employer provides charging stations.Really? No takers? Has anyone on this thread that claims EVs either don’t work, or are more expensive to charge, ever owned one? Anyone? My advice is stop looking at charts. Talk to people that have these. They’ll happily tell you how it’s worked for them.
Fair kind of. Tesla shouldn’t be the only example. They suck.Howdy - I don't own one, but have many colleagues that do have them here in Austin. All with various flavors of Tesla. Their feedback has been very useful and insightful for me. First, they all love the fact that our employer provides charging stations for free, which they take full advantage of. Second, if they take a day trip to Houston or Dallas, they take an ICE vehicle not their EV due to the charging inconvenience. It gets a tad warm here in the summer, and they've provided feedback that the A/C running to keep the batteries from overheating in the summer sun in the parking lot really makes for logistic challenges when planning a trip - hence their happyness with the fact our employer provides charging stations.
Their general take is "the good parts are good" but "there are not-so-good parts" that need to be understood up front before buying one. Which, honestly, is close to the same thing I tell folks who see my JT or my wife's JLU and want to get one.![]()
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Cruise was unavailable. They were trying to tweak up the remaining distance gauge, reducing electric use by turning the wipers down, turning off cabin cooling and so forth. It's accurate. They were driving it, they were trying to make the next charge station and at one point, the next station was farther than what their dash told them they had in distance. So, if you are 50 miles from a gas station, your truck tells you that you have 35 miles left on that tank, do you not try to tweak your speed or the load on the electric systems or take other moves to try to squeeze out another few miles? That's what they were doing. That Kia told them they had xx miles left. The next station was farther away than what they had. It told them cruise was not available. I didn't catch the reasonThese are mostly inaccurate statements based on no real information. Take it from someone who has owned 5 plug-ins to date from multiple manufacturers. You of course can use the cruise control. It’s more battery efficient. No you don’t need to turn down your wipers. This is absolutely false. You get enormous regeneration on the interstate, especially if there are some hills to go down. Your figures regarding cost to charge compared with cost to fill a gas tank couldn’t be further from accurate. We spent many years with two electric daily drivers. Our average increase in our electric bill was around $100. And one of ours was doing 140 miles round trip, 4 days per week. That’s a lot of kw per week. It’s not even close to the cost of gas. Depending on your tank size, most people spend between $60 and $100 per tank to fill up. And usually several times per month to fill up. Fox News should be the last source for accurate EV statistics. They get their ratings with controversy, not accurate reporting.
LOL - you didn't read it, did you? I was quoting the cost they tracked to charge along the trip they took!! No one was saying it was the cost to charge at home. Even they said it would be cheaper to charge at home. When you are driving a full day, you find charging stations using at app like they did, and you PAY. Charging along the way isn't free.Your figures regarding cost to charge compared with cost to fill a gas tank couldn’t be further from accurate.
So, you are comparing a trip on the road to the cost to charge at your home? You believe you can drive 2,000 miles and not need a charging station?We spent many years with two electric daily drivers. Our average increase in our electric bill was around $100.
Any type or combination of electric, hybrid, whatever, has its place and that place will likely grow.Howdy - I don't own one, but have many colleagues that do have them here in Austin. All with various flavors of Tesla. Their feedback has been very useful and insightful for me. First, they all love the fact that our employer provides charging stations for free, which they take full advantage of. Second, if they take a day trip to Houston or Dallas, they take an ICE vehicle not their EV due to the charging inconvenience. It gets a tad warm here in the summer, and they've provided feedback that the A/C running to keep the batteries from overheating in the summer sun in the parking lot really makes for logistic challenges when planning a trip - hence their happyness with the fact our employer provides charging stations.
Their general take is "the good parts are good" but "there are not-so-good parts" that need to be understood up front before buying one. Which, honestly, is close to the same thing I tell folks who see my JT or my wife's JLU and want to get one.![]()
The idea that a 2000 mile drive is a test of whether electric works or not is dumb. Which is probably why Fox News did it. I replied to your statements as if they were general facts about EV’s, not facts about their unrealistic test, designed for ratings and to start discussions like this. Most EV’s and PHEV’s don’t disable things like cruise control, but Kia is the bottom of the barrel. Obviously PHEV is a better choice for longer than a couple hundred mile drives. And no, I wasted not a single moment of my time reading Fox News commentary. I’d like to see an actual apples to apples comparison. Meaning one PHEV suv against one of your examples, say a Cherokee, for the same 2000 mile drive. Guess which one will get there faster. Guess which one will cost far less?Cruise was unavailable. They were trying to tweak up the remaining distance gauge, reducing electric use by turning the wipers down, turning off cabin cooling and so forth. It's accurate. They were driving it, they were trying to make the next charge station and at one point, the next station was farther than what their dash told them they had in distance. So, if you are 50 miles from a gas station, your truck tells you that you have 35 miles left on that tank, do you not try to tweak your speed or the load on the electric systems or take other moves to try to squeeze out another few miles? That's what they were doing. That Kia told them they had xx miles left. The next station was farther away than what they had. It told them cruise was not available. I didn't catch the reason
I would have personally done pretty much what they did - shut down as many things as possible to conserve power.
I've been in the situation where the next gas station was farther than expected due to road construction - I turned off accessories, AC, slowed my speed, and made it (was with my Chevy, and that thing was damned accurate on miles remaining - you didn't second-guess that thing)
This was a Kia, so to say it operates exactly the same as any vehicle someone else has had may not be accurate.
LOL - you didn't read it, did you? I was quoting the cost they tracked to charge along the trip they took!! No one was saying it was the cost to charge at home. Even they said it would be cheaper to charge at home. When you are driving a full day, you find charging stations using at app like they did, and you PAY. Charging along the way isn't free.
I calculated what they HAD TO PAY (because electric charge stations cost you money just like gas at a gas station - you plug in, you pay) and I figured what our vehicles would have used in gas along that route, estimate, of course, and used what they PAID out of pocket, and yes, I could have saved half a day and only paid 200 more.
So, you are comparing a trip on the road to the cost to charge at your home? You believe you can drive 2,000 miles and not need a charging station?
I've driven KS and NE many times, and trust me, there won't be any regeneration on many of their highways. Flat, you can see for so many miles, it's crazy. Even in chunks of Indiana, you won't be going down hill much at all. There are states where you drive for 2 hours and not really go down a hill.
Anyway, I'd love to see how you could drive 2,000 miles and never need a charging station - or where you drive that the charging stations are free to use and charge in 30 minutes. They tracked the costs to recharge and the time it took. It's accurate.
They were not commuting, so you can't compare your experiences to anyone making a long trip through multiple states and needing to pay for power.
Commuting, it makes total sense. If we weren't retired, I'd seriously look into some sort of electric power, be it a 4xe, or a pure electric like a Tesla. It would save us a ton in the long run. Depending on the vehicle we used, we had to fill up either every week, or every two weeks.
And in Iowa, electric power is cheap. We're all electric and we get a huge discount on any power used over xxxx Kilowatt-hours.
Our problem is that it's not reliable, so there would be times I would have to go out to fire up our generator to supply power to recharge the car, and go through 7 gallons of gas every few hours. There goes the savings.............
Hardly accurate. They may be newer to the hybrid/EV world, but they're anything but bottom of the barrel.Most EV’s and PHEV’s don’t disable things like cruise control, but Kia is the bottom of the barrel.