True. A better consideration is the Nissan Rogue at ~3500 lbs. That's a 1000 lb. difference, which is more. But the GP didn't bother to mention the road-wear differences between, for example, the Ford Edge and Ford Escape, which also have a 1000 lb. difference between them. So it sounds disingenuous to single out EVs here.
I don't think the typical Tesla Model Y buyer is likely cross-shopping against a Rogue.
Unless they're dead-set on an EV, they're much more likely cross-shopping the Model Y ($48K base MSRP) against a luxury ($57K base, $62K base, $67K base) SUV than an economy ($27K base MSRP) SUV. If they are dead-set on an EV, they might cross-shop against the Ariya ($43K base, but also 4323 lbs).
MetaWhirledPeas|2 years ago
sokoloff|2 years ago
Unless they're dead-set on an EV, they're much more likely cross-shopping the Model Y ($48K base MSRP) against a luxury ($57K base, $62K base, $67K base) SUV than an economy ($27K base MSRP) SUV. If they are dead-set on an EV, they might cross-shop against the Ariya ($43K base, but also 4323 lbs).
gxs|2 years ago
Yeah, not to mention, the SUVs he's comparing are especially large.
Comparing passenger cars illustrates the point as the model S weighs almost the same as the Model Y.
Mercedes E-class weighs 3,700 lbs compared to a model S which..still weighs 4500 lbs.
And no, I would not compare a model S to an s-class.