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An idling gas engine may be annoyingly loud, but that’s the price you pay for having WAY less torque available at a standstill.

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-3 points

You don’t have to justify your purchase to me, just enjoy it. I never criticized anyone for owning a car.

I’m glad you’re having a good experience with your car, I just find there’s a lot of compromise and issues that would make it difficult or near impossible for most people to own one.

Something like plugin hybrids and regular hybrids would just be a better fit for 95% of people and public transportation would solve a lot more problems in the long run. It would definitely solve the ballooning cost of infrastructure maintenance and ever growing traffic as well as being better for small businesses.

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2 points

I wasn’t trying to be modest or justify my purchase, I was trying to point out that I’m a pretty normal person who wouldn’t be the lucky 1 in 20 for whom an EV would make sense.

Maybe I have to charge a little more on a big road trip once or twice a year and that trip will take an hour or so longer (keeping in mind I stop for other things anyway). Over that year I’ve saved time in other ways by not going to the gas station or getting my oil changed (or doing it myself). Saved money that way too. Oh, and the car is a battery and a motor. There’s no series of accessories given by a belt moving at 2500 RPM. There’s no catalytic converter to worry about. All that’s to say, less maintenance over time. No need to check emissions. The car is quiet and an absolute pleasure to drive.

I’d say having an EV works damn fine for me. The question is, why am I not part of the 95%?

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-1 points

Because you thought the benefits out way the downsides. The idea of a bad product is subjective and in my opinion the alternatives are just better for the vast majority of people for now.

It’s will take standardization of parts and the ability for owners and mechanics to work on it, ability for third parties to produce parts, a track record that proves their claimed reliability and longevity, a more competitive market, better battery tech, more infrastructure for charging, more reliable charging and better range during the winter, etc. all that before it’s suitable for more individuals in my opinion.

I still hear plenty of stories involving people trading their EVs in for a gas powerd car either before or after their lease runs up. And I’ve seen actual people in my life considering an EV and getting a hybrid because of this or that. There are just so many reasons it’s impractical for people. It doesn’t make them bad and your not wrong for owning one. They just fit your use case better than most.

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2 points

And I’ve seen plenty of people go from a Chevy Volt (hybrid) to a Bolt (full electric). But that’s not the point. None of what you said was. I told you my car has worked great for me and why, and asked why I’m not part of the 95% of people you mentioned when my life is generally pretty average. You failed to answer that pretty basic question.

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