Posted on 02/22/2014 10:58:52 AM PST by jazusamo
There are two electric cars on the market that have received a lot of attention in the media. One is GM's Chevy Volt and the other is the Tesla Model S. Extravagant claims have been made by both manufacturers to have us believe that these that these automobiles are practical and economical to drive. As we shall see, that is not really true when one takes into account all the factors which contribute to the total operating cost of each of these two vehicles.
Chevy Volt
The manufacturer claims that "The Chevy Volt is the most fuel-efficient car with a gasoline engine currently sold in the U.S. -- and it's easy to see why. While most plug-in cars can make it about 20 miles tops before switching to hybrid mode, the Volt can run up to 38 miles on battery before switching over to its 1.4-liter four-cylinder engine." GM describes their product as follows: "The Volt is powered by an electric motor that's connected to a 1.4-liter four-cylinder gasoline engine. It runs exclusively on battery power until the charge drops to 30 percent and the gas motor kicks in. There are four modes -- Normal, Hold, Sport and Mountain ....When running on gasoline, the Volt returns 35 mpg city and 40 mpg highway." When all of the energy, battery plus gasoline, is used the total range of the car is 270 miles. At that point one must recharge the battery which takes nearly 10 hours if the car is plugged into a 120 V outlet. The charging time is less if one has a 240 V outlet and a special battery charger.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Don’t know where you get gas but if I spend 5-6 minutes it’s a lot.
Reality check, kids: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jimgorzelany/2014/02/07/tesla-model-s-worth-more-used-than-new/ Tesla Model S Worth More Used Than New
Now, you are hereby ordered to post a bunch of mindless rants denying the above.
Interesting. Thanks!
Never would have thought I would have a hybrid. I have the Ford C Max and love it!
My son bought a used Prius hybrid strictly for commuting to work, has had it close to a year and it’s worked out good for him.
The Chevy Volt and the Prius are comparable vehicles.
The Chevy Spark and the Prius C are comparable vehicles.
Tesla's next model, which is the Model X, will be comparable to the Volt and the Prius.
Of course you love your hybrid. No one likes to admit they made a mistake, do you?
He’s not comparing the Volt to the Tesla, he’s comparing each with a similar gas model car.
It depends on what your criteria for 'works great' is.
By my criteria, it is phenomenal.
Porsche 918
McClaren P1
OTOH, you can compare the Chevy Spark electric with the Chevy Spark gasoline.
But if you want to get auto reviews from a political website, you are doing good.
There is nothing but left-wing/green/watermelon politics between North America and energy self-sufficiency.
Oh no mistake here love it. I will admit it is a company provided vehicle but now that I have it its quite cool.
Nice analysis.
I am curious - using the math of this article, what would the comparable costs be for the Toyota Prius and the Honda high mileage Civic?
to post 33.
what you write may be true,
but the muzzies will still dictate the price.
as far as, energy delivered to the wheels,
liquid fuel costs 5x to 10x as much as mains electricity.
Interesting, until I thought of my own auto usage.
Daily commute, home to work is 3 1/2 city blocks.
Daily commute, Work to Home. never the same by the time errands etc are run.
Every last nice weekend is 50 miles ONE WAY to boat in adjoining state.
Drive to see daughter and kids is 124 miles ONE WAY. I can fill up car before I leave and drive UP and BACK on that single fill-up. And it is non-stop each way (but for tolls) Even then I have 3 more days until I “need” more gas.
What a short commute! You’re very fortunate. My commute was usually an hour each way, mostly highway.
“Suppose you spent that 17 hours doing something that you enjoy”
Like, say, waiting by the side of the road for a tow truck because your didn’t quite get enough mileage out of your plug-in.
Or maybe NOT doing something because you still have 6 hours to go before your plug-in hybrid is fully charged.
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