edvf1000r
edvf1000r
edvf1000r

Re-read what I said.

Perhaps, but that would be dishonest cherry picking that would not support their headline or their conclusion.

Nope, the Bolt is the GM BEV2 skateboard platform, which shares no parts with the Gamma 2 platform used by the Sonic/Trax/Encore. It’s a common misconception, since the Bolt development started with the Gamma but evolved into its’ own unique platform.

And if you want to talk national average prices, let’s do that -

Ave

Even with 100% EV adoption - which we are a LONG way from - every space doesn’t need its’ own charger, because most people only need to charge once a week, maybe twice a week if they drive a lot. The apartment complex I stayed at in Hawaii last year had one charger for every 4 spaces in their parking lot, on a post in

Uh, what? This smells like bullshit to me.

My Chevy Bolt uses about 29Kwh to drive 100 miles.
I pay .25 per Kw to charge at home. That’s $7.25 for 100 miles.

My gas car gets about 22 mpg combined, for 100 miles that’s 4.5 gallons @ $4/gal = $18 in regular gas for 100 miles.

EVs may be harder on tires, but they’re often much, much easier on brakes because you can get so much of your routine slowing down from regen. The brakes on my ‘19 Bolt EV still look like brand new, with 4 years of lots of stop and go driving and a fair bit of highway driving as well in that time. I fully expect the

It’s a 4,200 lb non-hybrid AWD box with nearly 300hp, raised ground clearance and large, wide, high rolling resistance knobby tires. Defeating those physics is tough to do. I’m frankly surprised the rated mileage isn’t worse.

For comparison - my 250hp/295 lb-ft 2018 Buick 2.0T/8A AWD wagon (on much narrower 235/50-18

Yup. In several decades of buying new cars and motorcycles, I’ve never bought the same brand twice. Although I have bought a lot of Honda cars and motorcycles used (3 used Civic hatchbacks and a Civic wagon, 6 1980s Honda M/Cs) of various generations.

Dealerships have nothing to do with whether a lease holder can buy the car at the end of the lease. They literally cannot prevent you from doing that if you want to and your lease has that option; it is between the leasing company and the person who signed the contract.

Yup. One client of mine bought his range rover at the end of the lease last year, cleaned it up and sold it in three days for a tidy $25,000 profit, after expenses.

My quad cab long bed 3/4 ton has been a “real truck” (whatever that means) since it was built back in 2005. It pulls the camper and racecar hauler trailers quite well, and handles 2500 lbs of gravel/topsoil/lumber with relative ease, or two liter class motorcycles.

Anyone in California has been able to walk into a Toyota dealership and buy or lease a Mirai (not “Miraj”, LOL) since 2015.

Not that that is a good idea, or that many people have actually done that over the last 7 years.

I don’t know, but considering that the repeat lifter failures on my clients’ ‘16 Escalade happened before 55k miles, on an exclusively (and carefully) dealer maintained vehicle tells me that the lifters are problematic, even with the right oil, filled to the right level, changed at the right time. The latest lifter

Okay? That does not affect anything I said. “Energy consumption” does not mean “electrical power generation”.

They’re not regular lifters, the complexity and extreme precision machining required to not have internal seals (from what I’ve read) don’t play well with normal levels of oil contaminants, wear and viscosity change over time - and they’re apparently very sensitive to using the spec oil and nothing else.

Is there some trick to watching the videos? None of them work for me.
Windows 10, laptop, firefox.

I’m glad you had that experience, especially since my customer’s meticulously dealer maintained 2016 Escalade Platinum EXT sucked down over $10,000 in repeat lifter/pushrod failures in 18 months, and was in the shop 7 times and out of service for 55 days due to transmission problems - and all under the factory

The AFM lifters seem to be the major issue, GM has changed the part number at least once if not more times. The lifters break the lock pins or lock pin springs, from what I’ve read.

California resident here. Hydrogen just doesn’t work in the real world yet. maybe it will some day, but not anytime soon. The fuel is far too energy intensive and expensive, the problem-prone refueling network is heavily subsidized yet barely exists statewide outside of three major cities, and half the stations in the

Here in California, my power (and the power for millions of others in NorCal) is 91% carbon free.

PG&E’s standard power is 48% renewable, 39% nuclear, 4% large hydro and 9% natural gas. 0% coal. And you can choose 100% green power for about $3/month more for the average residential user.