oilerlord
Well-known member
ScooterCT said:Last month I chatted with an EV specialist at an RI dealership with 100 Bolts on the lot at that time. Not in transit, on the lot. I walked and looked. This dealership was all-in with EVs. They were a volume dealership. They told me they could get all the allocation they wanted. They planned to sell hundreds and hundreds of Bolts in their urban market (RI is a tiny state where a 50 mile trip is something you boast about at parties).
Then I talked with a smaller dealership here in CT. They got what they were allocated, not a car more, and it was a handful of Bolts. They planned to keep only a few on the lot in fear they wouldn't sell. And in fact, after they sold everything they got the first two months, subsequent Bolts have been sitting unsold and lonely and unwanted. And we're a CARB state.
I also talked with one MA rural dealer who laughed at the idea they would ever have a Bolt on their lot. They would not order one for a customer. They would not accept one on allocation. They had no plans to supply a charger, etc. They literally laughed when I brought up an EV.
So there are three very different Bolt stories from real dealerships. When we talk Bolt sales, I think this reflects how complex the story is.
Well said.
From Elon Musk's "insights", to the Bolt's low sales / high inventory numbers, and various conspiracy theories surrounding the matter, why GM actually decided to build a car that apparently only the relatively few choose to buy, does reflect how complex the story is.
Another question is why we're not seeing real people (not actors) on TV in group amazement over the car telling us how cool the Bolt is, but we are subjected to an onslaught of TV ads showing real people (not actors) telling us how great the Sonic, Malibu, and their trucks are.
Yup, pretty complex indeed.