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My great grandmother in West Texas never took a ride in one of those new fangled death traps. She believed that God didn't intend the human critter to move any faster than it could run...(Or fly if he didn't have feathers.):-)
You are only observing the market here in the US , worldwide Tesla delivered over 95,000 new vehicles during the last reported quarter . As for depreciation , have you been paying attention , any new vehicle's value drops like a rock now once it has left the dealership . Even the once vaunted HD resale value has disappeared . Dusty
But define "task". Unless you live in an urban area or it is used for recreational purposes the task can't be accomplished for the vast majority of people traveling by over the road. vehicles.Totally unusable for my required "tasks"... And 'till the battery tech is develop a BUNCH more is almost fantasy and considering all the trade offs to produce the mechanisms that make it possible at all as in manufacturing and the fact the batteries of today don't last for very many cycles considering the investment of a high end automobile or a scoot, depreciating very fast as the "new models show up.Might be a business opportunity for somebody "recycling batteries and cars/motos. Might be big.Not anywhere near ready for prime time..\\ for the masses.
^^^Huh ? Dusty
Might as well give it up, mon ami. You're using science, facts, economics, historical data, and experience to make your case.No way that can stand up to the brilliancy and freshness of simple mindless optimism, pseudo-science, hope, cliches like "change is inevitable" and "they said man would never fly", added to the fact that you're old and therefore must step aside and let the young people learn all over again what we spent a lifetime learning ... Lannis
While they don't fit "my" needs, they do fit a great number of peoples needs. And if social engineering pushes the EV's, they will become popular. They are economical to operate, especially in dense metro traffic, just not buy and dispose of, yet. Remember, where there is a vacuum, technology will advance exponentially.
Many cancers are indeed curable, 25 years ago they weren’t. Cancer survivor rates are dramatically higher than they were 50 years ago. It’s been a agonizingly slow rise, and there remains a long way to go, cancer is a scourge against humanity but progress is being made.
I define task as vehicle distance travelled per unit of energy consumed. Electric vehicles excel at this. And while they may not be of any use to you, electric vehicles are actually more than adequate for the vast majority of non-commercial vehicular travel in the US. The majority of miles traveled are for a round trip of under 30 miles or so, and the vast majority of that is in urban areas.
Chew on this bit of data. Quite an interesting data point for those who think EV and Tesla is not encroaching on the base. Pretty sure no one here would have made this prediction 8 years ago...I chew my nails but..What is the source of that info, (please don't say google). Your investment monthly?Just curious.:-)
Chew on this bit of data. Quite an interesting data point for those who think EV and Tesla is not encroaching on the base. Pretty sure no one here would have made this prediction 8 years ago...Must be a regional component. While there are a few Teslas around in my metro, Mercedes-Benzes are about as common as Toyotas!
Must be a regional component. While there are a few Teslas around in my metro, Mercedes-Benzes are about as common as Toyotas!
Chew on this bit of data. Quite an interesting data point for those who think EV and Tesla is not encroaching on the base. Pretty sure no one here would have made this prediction 8 years ago...
Tesla, Mercedes and BMW combined are a very small fraction of the US auto market - seems to be less 5% in total.
I can't fathom the argument that EV's aren't up to the 'task' of transporting a majority of people yet, when the average american driver moves their car less than 40mi a day, and even that 39.xx/mi figure is artificially elevated by a small proportion of "super commuters".
For a family vehicle, EV's already have the capability to serve something like 75% of drivers ....
and the range times will only get longer and the charge times will continue to drop. Sure, they can't take you on a many hundred mile trek... but it wont be long before battery swap stations, improved charging tech, and possibly infrastructure-integrated charging tech catch up.
Avg EV now has over 100mi range (top of the line tesla is 250mi)... EVEN if you have to drive, say 80mi to work.... you can charge it for 8hrs while you are working before your return trip home.
Most of the people complaining that EV tech isn't going to work seem to be the same people who think they need an F-250 superduty to drive 3mi to WalMart for their groceries.
It's funny , we built an entire infrastructure to support gasoline burners , and yet somehow we can't build an infrastructure to support E vehicles Dusty
. Oh but we can...and it’s well underway. Here’s a map of charging stations across the US. Looks like it’s growing nicely.
Really? Is that all that people drive
Electricity is available everywhere. All you need to recharge an EV is a 220v feed -- which is already built into every home and office in the civilized world. The cost to wire in a parking spot will soon be less than the cost of a decent home air conditioner. It will happen because private enterprise will see a chance to buy electricity at 8c/kWh and retail it at 20 or 40c.
In 1905 the drive-in gas station didn't exist. Chemical companies, farmers and motorists bought fuel by the barrel from about 3500 Standard Oil outlets around the country, and you could buy tins of gasoline at drug stores and hardware stores. Less than 10% of gas sold this way was used in registered on-road vehicles. The first urban gas station was started as a personal enterprise by a Standard Oil executive, in Seattle, in 1907. Anybody and everybody then invested in local gas pumps and by 1925 there were more than 200,000 stations. Until the OPEC embargo in 1973 we had way more gas stations than the auto fleet needed -- it peaked in 1969 at about 236,000 stations. No wonder there were price wars between stations at the same intersection. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2018 there were only 107,000 filling stations in the U.S. Lesson here is that where a market exists an infrastructure can grow fast and way overshoot the mark.
I'm not putting my own money in any of this -- all these investments will be speculative and probably volatile. I'm not saying it's going to happen, but it is naive to search for reasons that it can't happen.
Really? Is that all that people drive?Really? Where'd that number come from?Really? How long is "won't be long"? I've never seen one.Charging stations for every employee at every workplace? Wow! When will that happen?Are they really? I'd heard that they were mostly old people shaking their sticks to get these EVs out of their yard. Lannis