flyingcheesehead
Touchdown! Greaser!
I gave the details in the Bolt thread, but I recently ditched my Chevy Bolt and am finally getting a Tesla.
I've been following Tesla since early 2015, when I still owned my first plug-in vehicle, a Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid, and when they introduced the Model 3 in 2016, I was one of the people who waited in line to put down a reservation. In the meantime, I've had a parade of plug-ins:
2014-2017: Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid. Leased kind of on a whim, they were running a special that made this one cheaper to get into than an equivalent non-plug-in at the time. I have a degree in EE and tech like this interested me, so what the heck. And it was a really good car. Enjoyed it, went over the lease miles, turned it back in still a happy customer but for the fact that Ford had gone essentially nowhere in their electrification efforts and I had found that I really liked electric driving (and got mad when the engine kicked in).
2017-2018: BMW i3 (94Ah BEV version). Fully electric. Lease takeover from a friend of a friend. This thing was a steal and really fun to drive, even if it was butt ugly. I'd have kept it longer if I could have.
2018-2020: 2013 Chevy Volt. Bought it to replace the i3, was trying to be cheap. Engine blew a head gasket and ate itself. Not worth fixing, to me, and by this point I had a much longer commute and wanted more electric range.
2020-2021: Chevy Bolt. Bought new. With the long commute it was practically free to purchase, payments were less than I'd have been spending on gas and maintenance otherwise. Recalled. Buhbye.
In any case, I'd wanted a Model 3 for a long time, but even after I was invited to configure, I kept passing it up. It was supposed to be a $35K car, and they said they expected the average optioned price to be $42K. In reality, I kept coming up with a $60K car because I got a bit trigger happy in the configurator, making my dream car, yet making it further away.
When the earlier Bolts were recalled and people were talking about GM buying them back, it got me to thinking. I did not expect a recall of the newer ones (none had burned yet at that point) but I realized that for the mission I was using the Bolt for, I didn't need the long range one, and I could live without AWD and the full self driving package and still have a really nice car that I'd be happier with than the Bolt.
When my Bolt did get recalled unexpectedly last month, I looked at many options. The long commute still favors fully electric, but about half the electric cars out there right now are using pouch cells from LG, which are what caused the Bolt recall. For the rest - Well, it's a really REALLY bad time to buy a car. With all of the supply issues, people are actually paying over sticker in some cases, and there are no deals to be had. That made the Tesla compare quite favorably on price - Other manufacturers are asking north of $45K for an EV with any sort of driver assistance features, while the Model 3 starts at just shy of $40K with Autopilot included (more on that later).
The one drawback to Tesla: The base model (Model 3 Standard Range Plus) was sold out through January, and there was a significant cost to bridging that gap.
Then, they released a limited number of M3SR+ cars into inventory for "immediate" purchase, and after a quick conversation with my wife, I snapped one up. Good thing I was quick about it - I had searched for a Blue one because I'm sick of various shades of silver/gray/black, and 9 were available. In the time it took to have that conversation, 8 of the 9 were taken and I quickly snapped up the last one.
... to be continued ...
I've been following Tesla since early 2015, when I still owned my first plug-in vehicle, a Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid, and when they introduced the Model 3 in 2016, I was one of the people who waited in line to put down a reservation. In the meantime, I've had a parade of plug-ins:
2014-2017: Ford Fusion Energi plug-in hybrid. Leased kind of on a whim, they were running a special that made this one cheaper to get into than an equivalent non-plug-in at the time. I have a degree in EE and tech like this interested me, so what the heck. And it was a really good car. Enjoyed it, went over the lease miles, turned it back in still a happy customer but for the fact that Ford had gone essentially nowhere in their electrification efforts and I had found that I really liked electric driving (and got mad when the engine kicked in).
2017-2018: BMW i3 (94Ah BEV version). Fully electric. Lease takeover from a friend of a friend. This thing was a steal and really fun to drive, even if it was butt ugly. I'd have kept it longer if I could have.
2018-2020: 2013 Chevy Volt. Bought it to replace the i3, was trying to be cheap. Engine blew a head gasket and ate itself. Not worth fixing, to me, and by this point I had a much longer commute and wanted more electric range.
2020-2021: Chevy Bolt. Bought new. With the long commute it was practically free to purchase, payments were less than I'd have been spending on gas and maintenance otherwise. Recalled. Buhbye.
In any case, I'd wanted a Model 3 for a long time, but even after I was invited to configure, I kept passing it up. It was supposed to be a $35K car, and they said they expected the average optioned price to be $42K. In reality, I kept coming up with a $60K car because I got a bit trigger happy in the configurator, making my dream car, yet making it further away.
When the earlier Bolts were recalled and people were talking about GM buying them back, it got me to thinking. I did not expect a recall of the newer ones (none had burned yet at that point) but I realized that for the mission I was using the Bolt for, I didn't need the long range one, and I could live without AWD and the full self driving package and still have a really nice car that I'd be happier with than the Bolt.
When my Bolt did get recalled unexpectedly last month, I looked at many options. The long commute still favors fully electric, but about half the electric cars out there right now are using pouch cells from LG, which are what caused the Bolt recall. For the rest - Well, it's a really REALLY bad time to buy a car. With all of the supply issues, people are actually paying over sticker in some cases, and there are no deals to be had. That made the Tesla compare quite favorably on price - Other manufacturers are asking north of $45K for an EV with any sort of driver assistance features, while the Model 3 starts at just shy of $40K with Autopilot included (more on that later).
The one drawback to Tesla: The base model (Model 3 Standard Range Plus) was sold out through January, and there was a significant cost to bridging that gap.
Then, they released a limited number of M3SR+ cars into inventory for "immediate" purchase, and after a quick conversation with my wife, I snapped one up. Good thing I was quick about it - I had searched for a Blue one because I'm sick of various shades of silver/gray/black, and 9 were available. In the time it took to have that conversation, 8 of the 9 were taken and I quickly snapped up the last one.
... to be continued ...