Which report on production numbers do we believe. Electrac says that GM has produced over 20000 Bolts as of Dec 2017
Tesla is reported by Wikipedia over 300000 produced Maybe not all sold in the USA but that’s the number they have reported for Feb 2018 How is it one of the automotive giants have let this happen. I can’t believe their serious. They had the technology 20 years ago and they have been manufacturing vehicles for a hundred years ,wheels ,chassis ,seats ,steering wheel -the only thing different is the motor and batteries The balance of the car should seem familiar to them. I guess it’s kinda like NASA. If you can return a rocket to the launch pad don’t you think we would have done that!!?? Complacency. We’ve always done it like that Running out of cars for a manufacture the size of GM???? “ If I had 50 more cars I would have sold them all” Internal combustion vehicles are making them money. That’s what they know and that’s what they are going to sell you. I shouldn’t just highlight GM Pick one It’s going to be interesting and I’m happy to have a seat to watch the outcome in the next few years Randen |
OK OK
I will cease my ranting and move my efforts to more constructive work. We have two EVs in the stable and are loving them. One just happens to be a famous GM product, an OEM electric S-10EV I have not bought gasoline in 2 yrs. with the exception of borrowing my dads truck. Believe me it never gets old driving past a gasoline station. So for the bottom line saving more than $3500.00 per yr. My concentrations are now focused on approaching Net Zero for my electrical needs. See :Anyone working toward Off Grid |
"McKinsey and A2Mac1 analyzed design choices that can help pave the way to profitable mass-market EVs."
This is a good read https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/...***-market-evs If you do not want to follow the link just google. "McKinsey and A2Mac1 analyzed design choices " |
I know I promised to leave it alone but it seems I’m not the only skeptic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TabS-GK-3vA&sns=em
Randen |
If you are considering buying a EV and will get a tax credit. Keep this chart in mind.
https://insideevs.com/top-6-automake...-credit-limit/ Chevy and Tesla are getting closer to no tax credit. |
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https://insideevs.com/top-6-automake...-credit-limit/ |
Many new EV's coming to bad most of them are on the higher end.
VW is stepping up from everyday buyers. "Can Tesla survive the surge of EV competitors from Jaguar, BMW, VW, and others?" Tesla Killers: Rise of the E-Machines - Motor Trend if you don't want to follow the link just google "Can Tesla survive the surge" select motortrend link. |
People may be concerned with catastrophic resale value like with the leaf.
Or not be sure they are going to have a place to charge. Until I get 240v power out the the garage it could take up to 20 hours to recharge my leaf on 120v power if I run the battery down. For me it's only a matter of time, at our last place I had four 240v receptacles, one for the backyard, one in the garage in addition to the dryer and one on either side of the house towards the front yard, all 30 to 70 amp circuits. |
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As it is I have a VW diesel that I don't really want to get rid of :) |
Ford is getting out of the car business and moving to a SUV and Truck only line up. I expect they will have electric trucks but who knows how predominate they will be...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pEhIbue_FFA Ford is cleaving an additional $11.5 billion from spending plans and dropping several sedans, including the Fusion and Taurus, from its lineup to more quickly reach an elusive profit target. The automaker is almost doubling a cost-cutting goal to $25.5 billion by 2022, Chief Financial Officer Bob Shanks told reporters Wednesday. By not investing in next generations of any car for North America except the Mustang, the company now anticipates it’ll reach an 8 percent profit margin by 2020, two years ahead of schedule. Ford is trying to kick-start a turnaround that’s yet to take hold almost a year after the board ousted its chief executive officer. Getting rid of slow-selling, low-margin car models and refocusing the company around more lucrative trucks and SUVs is a crucial element of new CEO Jim Hackett’s rebound bid. By 2020, almost 90 percent of Ford’s North American portfolio will be pickups or sport utility and commercial vehicles. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ad-margin-goal |
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