hydrogen is cheap and plentiful
Geo said:Sometimes I imagine that Toyota is keeping their powder dry until prices drop and/or the other big manufacturers use up their EV credits.
Think about it. In a few years, GM, Tesla, and Nissan will have burned through their credits and the prices of their EVs will jump $7500. Meanwhile, prices on batteries and components will be lower. I couldn't think of a more perfect time for Toyota to jump in with a competitive EV priced $7500 below the competition (with credits, of course).
Sometimes I imagine that Toyota is keeping their powder dry until prices drop and/or the other big manufacturers use up their EV credits.
DanCar said:Toyota has been caught off guard by the popularity of electric cars. You can bet they are developing their 200+ mile electric car. Typically development times are 5+ years. So they will downplay electric and upplay what they have, fuel cell, until their electric car is ready. In three years when their electric cars are ready they will be touting how wonderful electric car technology is.
DanCar said:Expect a company to lie, when there is a profit motive. The stragey is to maximize current sales.
The priority is to sell cars today, not in a few years. If the CEO told the truth: nobody wants our fuel cell cars, too expensive to buy and fuel, then sales would tank. Instead they say it is the best thing since sliced bread. Truth: EVs are great. Lie: they are bad as the CEO said. If he told the truth that would send buyers to others like Tesla, and lower sales and profits. A major no-no from Toyota's perspective.oilerlord said:How so, Dan? I'm not getting your connection between the CEO lying about an EV in development and the company profiting from it. That would go against marketing 101 - create a buzz, get market excited, profit from it.DanCar said:Expect a company to lie, when there is a profit motive. The stragey is to maximize current sales.
Please explain.
SparkE said:You aren't hauling around a 60 kWh battery (10 will suffice)
SmartElectric said:I'll gladly carry around the 85 kWh pack in our Tesla, it allows for greater performance (higher Volt*Amps), longer life (80% after 10 years will still be >300km range) and it allows us to never need to pump gas again!
As for my daily commute, I bought a Smart ED with a 17.6kWh pack, which is about 30% more pack than a regularly use, but glad to have that spare capacity.
I hate PHEV. Low power output vs pure electric of same car size/weight and needing to put gas in it is a fail. But that's my opinion having >1000 days of pure EV driving under my belt.
The specification for your Smart ED is 0-60 mph in a little over 11 seconds. The about the same as the new Prius Prime PHEV that has a 25 mile electric range.SmartElectric said:As for my daily commute, I bought a Smart ED with a 17.6kWh pack, which is about 30% more pack than a regularly use, but glad to have that spare capacity.
I hate PHEV. Low power output vs pure electric of same car size/weight and needing to put gas in it is a fail. But that's my opinion having >1000 days of pure EV driving under my belt.
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