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worklaptopacct | 2 years ago
This made me think about the viability of EVs in places like Europe where inner-city driving is discouraged and there is a lot of public transit options. Among the people I know, if someone is thinking of buying a car, they plan to use it for leisure trips - public transport outside of major population centers tends to be unreliable and insufficient, and if you have kids, then it's straight out impossible to travel without a car. That's why convenience is king when people choose a car here - having to stop every 300-400 kilometers for an hour to charge your car is not something people would gladly plan for.
I guess that Americans might have different priorities, as everyone has a car that is being used within the metropolitan area most of the time, so this means more shorter trips with breaks that could be used for charging.
blagie|2 years ago
There was an early Israeli car company where, rather than charging, they'd swap the battery. Faster than filling a tank of gas.
I don't think cars are worth owning unless you drive nearly every day. A car costs a couple of grand a year to own. That makes for a fair number of Uber / taxi trips and car rentals, with much less hassle. You can also get the right car for what you're doing; a 400km family trip usually wants more trunk and interior space than a trip to the Kwik-E-Mart.
If I lived in a city like you described, I wouldn't even consider owning a car. For those trips, I'd use the local car rental.
Coincidentally, my experience in the EU is the opposite: Long-distance rail is awesome, and a lot better than a 300km drive. The time I've seen people do that drive is waaay off the beaten path, where rail doesn't run anywhere close. So I guess it depends on what country you're in.
anotheruser13|2 years ago
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Better_Place_(company) says ""Better Place filed for bankruptcy in Israel in May 2013. The company's financial difficulties were caused by mismanagement, wasteful efforts to establish toeholds and run pilots in too many countries, the high investment required to develop the charging and swapping infrastructure, and a market penetration far lower than originally predicted by Shai Agassi."
consumer451|2 years ago
https://www.electrive.com/2023/01/03/nio-counts-10-battery-s...
cypress66|2 years ago
More like 20 minutes to charge that much in something like a model 3.
lelag|2 years ago
Sure, if you are the type with a superhuman bladder who can drive 1000 kilometers with no stop, then an EV will be slower.
But for most people, and especially if you are travelling with kids, the right EV (like the model 3 you suggest), will not make much of difference with a petrol cars. Sure you will be stopping between 20 to 30 minutes every 2 to 3 hours but you should probably do so regardless of the car engine type.
I did saw some unexpected drawbacks however:
- you have less options about where and when to stop
- Tesla chargers are often in malls and shopping centers, and I found those stops can actually become quite expensive when travelling with 2 shopping addicted teenage girls...
- stop often end up being longer than planned due to said teenagers not coming back in time once the car is ready...
paxys|2 years ago
graemep|2 years ago
I now live in a town, rather than a city of any size, and (apart from shopping) need a car mostly for trips between towns within the same county and a bit beyond which are fairly short but there is a lack of good public transport.
I think this is a situation that tends to get forgotten about by policy makers living in big cities - we cannot reduce car usage without either being unable to do a lot of things easily or without a huge improvement in public transport.
pornel|2 years ago
I've road tripped across Germany and France twice now, and it was easy.