oilerlord said:
DucRider said:
People got used to making sure to charge their phone, and put up with the spotty cell phone coverage, dropped calls, poor audio quality - all barriers equivalent to the issues some people would have in learning and adapting to an EV.
I'm trying to come up with reasons why less than 1% of the car buying public choose an electric car. Let's stipulate that they are wonderful machines, for all the reasons you've listed and more. I love mine, you love yours, and people on this board with Bolt orders are excited to take delivery.
You've mentioned time & again that range isn't an issue, price isn't an issue, charging isn't an issue, and that EV's are more reliable than ICEV's and EV's operating costs are lower. If all of that is true, and EV's are superior to ICEV's in practically every way, why are overall sales of EV's less than 1% of the market?
I suggested that a barrier to widespread acceptance could be that people don't understand EV's and/or resist change. People may be staying with gasoline vehicles because that's what they know and are comfortable with. I also suggested that a catalyst of $5.00 gasoline, or EV's that can be bought for the same price as ICEV's may help overcome people's resistance to change, but you don't believe that either.
Clearly, you don't agree but offer no suggestions of your own.
I believe that a big reason is that they haven't yet tried a plug-in car. I know of few, if any, people who have gone back to a hybrid or ICE car after having tried a plug-in (whether EV or EREV)
That's the rationale behind carpool stickers, government funding, free charging, etc. To get enough people to try these things that they become mainstream.
I recall when hybrids first came out...they got I think $5000 incentive, plus carpool stickers, plus preferential parking. Once people realized that owning them was it's own reward, the incentives were removed.
I've told this here before, but I have friends who in the past drove nothing but Lexus (except when the kids were small and they had a Lincoln Navigator). Based on my happiness with my Focus Electric, they tried a Volt, and quickly got rid of all the ICE cars, ending up with three Volts (Red, White, and Blue)
The wife once said, and this is no lie, "I had heard there was something called a Chevrolet, but I don't think I had ever actually seen one. Now we've got three and we are perfectly happy with them"
One hears people saying things like "When an EV can go 400 miles on a charge at 80 MPH and recharge in 5 minutes, I'll get one..." Basically, they are saying when EV's can do things ICE cars cant even do, maybe then...
But once they do try....
Incidentally, here's my solution...
Set a floor on the price of gasoline at today's value. If oil prices drop, gasoline pump prices do not fall and the difference gets added as an additional tax. If oil prices go up, gas prices go up like they ever did. In other words, they keep ratcheting up, never fall.
In addition, starting three years from now (to give people some time to adjust) start raising the gasoline tax by 20 cents a gallon each year. Stop all talk of taxing EV's for road miles, throw the tax on the remaining gasoline users.
In 10 or 15 years, gasoline will be like cigarettes...very few people will buy it because it's so expensive.