I've never taken a road trip in one, but have seen the struggles people have with long trips. Currently a lot of charging stations are at places like car dealerships, but they need to be right off the highway just like regular gas stations.Currently I'm "against" because we don't have the infrastructure for them despite how hard they're being pushed, and the tech isn't resilient enough.
In 10 years maybe.
Why? It's already started. 50 years or so will be all electric ImoI don’t believe there will be a time where we can fully transition to electric cars. So, I’m against
The inside of a model S is plain as shit too. They don't even put real leather in it.My boss has an electric porshe and it is quick. Especially of the bat. But inside its plain looks shit for 120k car and you can't hear it
And only do 200 miles then charge
60's mustang car awesome now imagine 50 years time when probably all cars electric ..for me car is engine noise I have z4 bmw. And noise is great when put foot downThe inside of a model S is plain as shit too. They don't even put real leather in it.
Or you could spend 100k on a new 7 series BMW which has a gorgeous interior.
There isn’t a strong enough grid and there aren’t enough deposits of required materials.Why? It's already started. 50 years or so will be all electric Imo
I think the TV just reported the % of cars taken out of service (no longer registered) consist of more electric cars than gas cars even though gas cars greatly outnumber electric cars.
For but only cuz they're an improvement environmentally from gasoline, I want car based infrastructure decimated to the point possible and practical. Infrastructure built around everyone owning cars is wildly inefficient, wasteful, and fucks up cities, towns and landscapes. It takes up too much damn space and causes too many problems.
I"m for PHEVs at the moment. THe battery supply and cost issue could be largely solved by having the battery supply split among more cars that are PHEV. Most people could charge at home for the 40 or 50miles they need to drive in the city that are the most inefficient use of ICEs while having ICEs for highway and long haul travel. With PHEV and home charging it would allow for the infrastructure to be built for EVs.
Environmental issues:
With smaller PHEV batteries we could use slightly less efficient, cheaper and more environmentally friendly materials.
My issue with the environmental spin is that if that was our primary concern, we could make sure that most of the batteries went to India and other developing world urban centers that produce the most carbon emissions. But unfortunately, like a lot of other things, it's not about optimizing for a problem, it's about looking virtuous.
I suppose that Japanese OEMs can have a close minded view because they know that regardless of what they build, people will just buy them in Japan. They may lose sales in other countries but Japan is so nationalist they probably don't even care. They figure they'll can pump out a couple EV models just get some market share elsewhere and that's enough. They'll just keep selling hybrids 30 years from now at home.This is exactly the best case for most people and their daily commute. I would love to have a PHEV.
This was Toyota's vision for the near future, but the CEO got cancelled for not wanting to go full electric with everything.