I'm sick of going to the gas station and gas prices going al over the place. I'm sick of oil changes and ICE maintenance. I have plenty of that to do. I am intrigued and excited about the future of transportation and I wanted to try it out. I'm so glad I did! It's way more fun than I thought it would be. It's hard to explain to someone who is skeptical and a die hard piston head, but all I can say is, it's true what they say. Once you go electric you won't want to go back.
This!
the insurance is higher because they cost more to repair or replace at this time.
Not always. The insurance on the i3 was surprisingly low.
Related to insurance though is safety and the Bolt as well as the Teslas are the safest cars you can buy. They rank at the top in the crash tests. I guess surviving a crash is kind of practical in a way...
Tesla has built the safest cars on the road, including the only SUV that can get 5 stars in all categories on the car scale instead of the SUV scale - Probably because it's darn near impossible to roll over, with the CG about a foot off the ground thanks to the "skateboard" battery.
This is at least partially out of necessity - Otherwise, you can bet the FUDsters would be talking about how unsafe they are. They still love to talk about battery fires, when electric cars burn at a far lower rate than gas cars do.
There you go again, all focused on the once in awhile 400 mile trip to Grandma's or something. I think you have it all wrong. The primary car should be the one you drive every day. The one you drive less than 150 miles daily 90% of the year. That's the car that needs to be EV. The secondary car is the one you take on the long highways trips, probably 10% or less of the year. That's the car that ideally would be an ICE car, but could be a Tesla with the network if you have the patience.
This is why a Bolt, or Tesla if you have the money, makes an awesome primary car.
I think there's a big difference between, for example, my case and
@RJM62 's case. He has one car for himself, period... And there are plenty of people for whom that is the case. For that use, a PHEV, a Tesla, or being OK with renting a gasser for longer trips with insufficient charging infrastructure are the options right now.
In my case, I have a primary vehicle, and I have a commuter. My wife drives the primary vehicle, and I drive the commuter. It's very easy for the commuter to be an EV, and that's an ideal use for most current EVs. My wife drives the primary vehicle, and when we travel as a family, we take that vehicle and I drive it - Mainly 'cuz it's easier to get the kid in and out of. We also drive that longer distances for comfort.
So yeah, I drive the commuter whenever possible - Both commuting and going to the store or wherever. But I sure wish the bigger one were an EV. It's not, yet, because I look at the options as follows:
1) Tesla X: Too expensive, even used. I don't think I've seen one below $70K yet. We're just getting to 3 years since the very first ones shipped though, so lease returns should start coming in and making a better used market... We're just not there yet.
2) Tesla S: Lower ride will make it more difficult to get the kid in and out, and they're just starting to get affordable on the used market. I've seen exactly none for under $20K, three for under $30K, but low $30K's is getting fairly common, upper $30Ks is very common, and there's oodles in the $40Ks. I expect that over the next couple of years, the Model 3 will continue to put a lot of downward pressure on used S prices.
3) Toyota Rav4 EV: No real support outside California, and if you get one that hasn't had the drive unit replaced... You'll need to at some point. IMO, the "Jdemo" fast charging mod is pretty much required equipment too. But the lack of support here is a non-starter, even though the prices are really good on these.
That's it for purely electric vehicles, but there's also...
4) Volvo XC90 T8 "Twin Engine" PHEV with turbo & superchargers. Too expensive (haven't seen one under $60K) and only 14 miles rated electric range.
5) Mitsubishi Outlander. Mitsubishi really screwed the pooch on this one. After introducing it outside of the US in 2013 and having it be the best-selling plug-in car for four years running, they didn't introduce it into the US until this year. MAJOR fail! Now, nearly 6 years later, it rates a solid "meh" with only 22 miles of electric range. With as SUV-happy as the US is, this was a gigantic missed opportunity on Mitsubishi's part.
6) Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid. Really a nice vehicle, with good electric range for a PHEV, especially of its size. But, still relatively expensive because they've only been out since early 2017. And my beautiful bride said "No minivans."
7) BMW X5 xDrive 40e. Pretty much the same as the Volvo, only it came out later so an even smaller used market.
So, we'll keep driving the Rogue for a while yet.
How is having two cars, one of which will rarely be driven, more practical than having one car that can do both missions while consuming zero or almost-zero liquid fuel in its primary one? That's not hard to pull off for most people. All you need is a plug-in hybrid that can run on batteries for the number of miles driven in a typical day.
Bingo - For you, the Volt really makes a lot of sense.
I also go shopping once a week. That's either a 54-mile round trip or a 100-mile round trip. If we call the longer trip "typical," then I need a 100-mile battery capacity. That's doable in a higher-end plug-in hybrid.
The only one that'll do 100 miles on the battery and still have a gas backup is a 2017 or later BMW i3 REx with the 94aH battery.
But to own a second car for the sole purpose of making trips that exceed the non-stop range of the first car just doesn't make sense mathematically for me nor, I suspect, for most "average" drivers.
Not unless you're in a household that needs two cars anyway.
One interesting thing BMW does with the i3: Owning an i3 entitles you to something like a week or two per year of free rental on a BMW gasser. So, with the minor inconvenience of heading to a dealer to swap cars, the i3 can be the only car for a lot of people too. Pretty smart.
They're letting you win.[1] Even the base 4 and 6 cyl Mustaros are running 0-60 in the mid to low 5's. The V-8's are in the low 4's. The fastest i3 Car and Driver has tested is the latest '18 model, and it runs 0-60 in 6.3.
[1] Or they flat out can't drive.
Or that.
But it's probably also that they didn't really push too hard on the gas pedal because they don't expect a car that looks somewhat like a Honda Fit wearing a halloween costume to jump off the line like that.
I'm also rarely on a road that has stop lights and a speed limit high enough to get to 60, and the "Mustaros" are going to have their biggest advantage at the higher end. The i3 is BMW's fastest car from 0-30, even more so than the i8, but after that it quickly loses its advantage over all of the above.