MichaelLAX said:
TimBolt said:
If you don't intend to take any 200+ mile trips with your Bolt skipping the DCFC option seems like an easy way to save $750.
Don't take this the wrong way, Tim, but anyone who gets the DCFC option and then recommends to someone else not to get it, his opinion is worthless!
...How often do these problems happen? Not very often, but you have the DCFC option, like I do!
In what other way should we take your comment, other than you lobbing an ad hominem at Tim, saying his opinion is worthless?
The scenario in which you describe can be solved with a couple Uber rides. How many Uber rides can one get for $750?
We know you are a champion of DCFC being standard equipment, and I am too, but there are plenty of people who would benefit more from having an extra $750 in their pocket than the ability to fast charge. Heck, I have no use for it since I would take my Prius on any trip that would require me to DCFC. If I moved long distance, I would put the Bolt on a trailer attached to the moving truck. If we lost power, I'd likely have plenty of range to go a few days for around town driving, and I have other ICE vehicles ready to stand in.
Then there is the resale value argument. Options never get their full value back on a used vehicle. When I go to sell the car when it has a value of $2,000, nobody is going to pay an extra $750 on top of that to get DCFC.
I'd be curious to know how much extra it costs Chevy to install DCFC capability, but I bet it's something like an extra $100. It should be standard equipment, but if Chevy is going to charge $750 for it, then it's a good thing people have the option to skip it.
MichaelLAX said:
I would like to get the Prius plug-ins out of the HOV lanes in California. With a 9 mile battery range, they do not deserve to be there!
Most of the plug-in Prius owners I know in California, never plug them in! They just use them as an excuse to get the green HOV stickers ...
Agreed.
The HOV access thing is a fraud. Why are we putting the most efficient vehicles in the HOV lanes in the first place? If the purpose of HOV is ultimately to reduce our impact on the environment, then it should be semi trucks, Hummers, Suburbans, and all the other large vehicles that consume relatively large quantities of fuel stopping and going, and idling at a standstill, that should be free flowing lanes of traffic.
I'm not actually arguing that we encourage people to buy Hummers so they can get HOV access, rather pointing out how useless the idea is at solving the issue of traffic congestion and pollution.
If the goal is to reduce both, then increasing taxation on fuel is the smartest approach. No administrative overhead, no crowding the HOV lane with vehicles capable of being very efficient in stop and go congestion, and no funny business between government officials and lobbyists.
... and I average 13 miles of range in my Prius. From a low of 11 in the winter to a high of 17 in the summer. It's not much, but it allows me to average 75 MPG compared to the 50 MPG standard Prius drivers get.