this post was submitted on 05 May 2025
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Electric Vehicles
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I've been driving a Nissan Leaf EV for more than 10 years at this point. I've put on about 70k miles of the over 90k miles it has on it.
Maintenance has been: 2x Tires. 3x Windshield wiper blades. 1x cabin air filter (because pollen). Replacing the radio that went bad. 1x Replaced the 12V battery ... I really can't think of anything else.
That's it. It doesn't even go through brake pads because the regen braking does most of the work unless I'm slamming on my brakes. = = = I don't know for sure, but I'd be willing to bet the average EV has nearly an order of magnitude fewer moving parts than a similar ICE vehicle. It just makes sense that there's less maintenance.
A typical ice car only adds oil changes in that same 90k miles. Let me know how it is doing at 300k miles.
in my experience it is the body going that gets cars. Even my last one that I traded in a 250k miles because the transmission needed a 16k rebuild would have been worth the money if the body wasn't rusting away.
Oil changes and frequent visits to the petrol/gas station. I just plug in my car in my driveway every night and I'm golden.
Oil changes are cheap and don't happen very often. Gas is expensive but at least it is readily available and fast. EV chargers are common, but not in all the places where gas stations are and so sometimes not where you need one. No EV yet charges as fast as I can fill a tank of petro. If you never go on road trips you may not care, but since I do road trips this matters to me.
Yes plugging my EV in every time I get home saves me from visiting the petro station often. (I have a plug in hybrid)
Our second car is a plug-in but l hybrid for road trips. Agree, that's a useful case for ICE, but that car costs us far more to drive than our EV.
90% of personal driving (I'm ballpark guessing) is in town and can be handled by charging an EV overnight every few days by most drivers - doesn't even have to be nightly.
At least in the US there are not good options though. Since a minivan is the right vehcile for our family we get a new id.buzz, or for half the price a used pacifica (which we were lucky to find at all). Everything else is ICE. I don't know how anyone can afford a new car - I make more than the average person and the payments on the used minivan are already hard.
This does not help people who rent or don't have a driveway. This a significant portion of the United States. Cannot charge a car when you have no place to charge it and sitting for an hour or 2 at a super charger is much more of a waste in time than filling up a car at a gasoline station.
Totally agree, that's a huge issue that needs to be solved. Apartment complexes need to start putting in more outlets - they don't even need to be L2.
Those who have to park on the streets will be a tougher challenge.