• @BobaFuttbucker@reddthat.com
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    3321 year ago

    Dealers will cry about their inventory while refusing to budge on various “market adjustments”.

    Boo hoo. Be competitive and watch the inventory flow.

    • @CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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      1901 year ago

      I’ve been eyeing an Ioniq 5 for about 18 months now and just checked local pricing again and they haven’t budged an inch on pricing (even now with 2024 models being sold with 2023 models left on the lot) nor are they even carrying inventory outside of the most expensive trim packages of Limited AWD. I’m interested in range, so I’m wanting a Limited RWD but they aren’t being stocked.

      This article screams “I’m not doing my job and it’s all your fault!”

      • @cantstopthesignal@sh.itjust.works
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        821 year ago

        There’s a 2008 style crash coming in the credit market for cars. There’s a lot of subprime loans and a lot of car companies that got into financing that shouldn’t have. Wait til they really get squeezed. Who am I kidding tho, they will just ask for a bail out.

        • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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          461 year ago

          Some of us are still miffed about the 2008 bailouts, which ran entirely counter to the market forces rhetoric. Then the police turned off all the cameras and ran OWS off with riot squads.

          No resolution was offered. even Dodd-Frank was reversed by Trump.

          So you can expect a lot of civil unrest. It’s been due since the great depression, about a century ago.

          • @SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Wrong! They will let it crash a bit and everyone will panic and see that shit is about to get real. The government will offer to defer the pain by bailing out the very rich and get things moving again, it’s the only way the government at the time will be able to hold onto power. People are fucking idiots so they’ll do nothing because they don’t like being uncomfortable for a short time even if it means they are getting slowly buttraped over the medium to long term

        • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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          401 year ago

          When beater 20 year old trucks can’t even be found for <$10k, you know somethings gotta give

        • @SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          And the best part is you who foresaw it and tried to warn everyone, will have to pay personally towards the bailout

      • Altima NEO
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        331 year ago

        The dealer near me has added an extra 5 grand for market adjustment too.

        • Ender2k
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          231 year ago

          Yeah, dealers around here have a huge markup over MSRP, “because there’s so much demand.”

          Okay, I can wait.

      • @Yaztromo@lemmy.world
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        221 year ago

        Meanwhile, up here in Canada I put a down payment on an IONIQ 5 Ultimate Edition (Canadian equivalent of the US ‘Limited’ model) back in early April 2022, and it still hasn’t been ordered, because Hyundai decided to flood the US market while stiffing the Canadian market.

        Hyundai (and other EV makers) are fucking around, and then blaming the market.

        • @CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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          121 year ago

          Yep sounds similar to what’s happening here. Since the car was first released you could spec one out with Limited RWD on Hyundai’s site but none existed in the entire country up until the last few months when they began trickling out. The website tells you that you can’t actually order or build the car you want and instead must visit a dealer and choose something among their inventory. I’m sorry but I’m not going to compromise on a major purchase like this for a brand new vehicle. Dealerships can eat a dick.

          • @Yaztromo@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            While I still think that Hyundai engineering and design did some real magic with the IONIQ 5, I just can’t help but feel like the rest of the company is just screwing the pooch on this car. They’ve flooded the US market with models people there don’t seem to want to buy, and dealership lots often have a dozen or more waiting to be sold.

            Meanwhile, here in Canada buying one is damn near impossible. That doesn’t seem to stop them from sending out mass marketing materials and ads trying to sell them (or the IONIQ 6), mind you — I just wish they had focussed first on ensuring their biggest boosters globally were getting the cars they want, as opposed to putting lots of cars nobody seems to want on US dealership lots.

            (FWIW, my dealership told me they weren’t being allowed by Hyundai to order any 2023 IONIQ 5s. This seems to be a fairly common occurrence across all dealerships here in Canada, with just a few cars trickling in each month).

        • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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          11 year ago

          Jfc. I have a feeling this is going to become a much more common tale with high tech or precision manufactured goods, goods just being diverted from western markets to Group of Friends and Axis of Evil countries. Hopefully America doesn’t go full isolationist and we continue to seek global trade such as the trans pac trade agreement and similar trade agreements, keep the dollar nice and strong.

      • @ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        121 year ago

        Issue is the dealership deals made with the auto manufacturers. Inventory on hand is often times (not including some of that bs that had dealerships marking stuff way over msrp) only set up to make the dealership a few thousand in profits.

        For any major price reductions that are really needed, the auto manufacturers would have to be giving the vehicles to the dealerships for less money.

        In other words, ford will have to drop prices for dealerships to drop prices.

    • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.world
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      571 year ago

      Shit dealers (and especially the sales people) tend to not at all be trained on how to sell these cars, and can be openly hostile towards people interested in them. EVs don’t make them as much money on service.

      • @Usernameblankface@lemmy.world
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        231 year ago

        They can be trained all day every day, but if they know their profits are lower they’ll do anything they can to avoid having to work with EVs.

        • @aStonedSanta@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Yup something I keep getting into arguments about at work. Sales makes a mistake on their order. And I somehow as the tech end up sorting it. And that sales person keeps their entire sales commission. I’ve been telling mgmt forever take away the commission if there are reasonable timeframe issues or incorrect selections made by the sales agent. That will make them make sure they perfect it to get their pay.

          Edit: I’d like to note I’m not even asking for the commission idc I just want sales to do shit properly. Lol

          • AlteredStateBlob
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            81 year ago

            Took us forever and is still contested now and again, but we managed to force the sales process yo include product managers or owners. Without an estimate from them, which is created in coordination with the engineers and developers, no offer is being made anymore. Certain sales people are butthurt, because the estimated costs are often too high for our “price sensitive clients” as in: they don’t know how to sell our products on added value rather than on lower cost.

      • Nougat
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        171 year ago

        New car sales people do not give a single fuck about whether the car comes back for service. They get paid for selling cars, full stop. It’s possible that management is making ICE car sales commissions higher than EV; that would create an incentive to push ICE.

        • @eltrain123@lemmy.world
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          141 year ago

          Commissions on EV sales for legacy automakers are dismal. None of the legacy automakers are making EVs at scale so they are losing 10s of thousands of dollars per EV they sell. Sales personnel aren’t moving them because they have no incentive to do so. Then these companies complain about how there is no demand while the EV sector is growing exponentially.

          Tesla got to scale while legacy automakers were all laughing at them and now they have to compete by gaslighting the marketplace about how there is no demand.

          I’ve been in an EV since 2020 and am never going back. When people start to wake up to how convenient and comfortable EVs are and stop buying into all of the negative media, it’s only going to snowball from there.

          • themadcodger
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            11 year ago

            Are you able to take it for road trips, or do you primarily use it locally?

            • @sorghum@sh.itjust.works
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              31 year ago

              Not OP, but middle America resident here. Family vacationed in my Bolt EUV 2023 to Florida and had to plan activities at most of my charge stops because of how slow it DC fast charges (50kw). Mostly meals, but locating museums and other stuff wasn’t to hard. CCS network is not good, but it’s good enough with the right planning. Yeah road trips aren’t ideal in the Bolt, but since Ford didn’t make but 15 base model F-150 Lightnings and I wasn’t paying $30,000 over MSRP for 1 of 3 trucks in stock East of the Mississippi, I bought the Bolt instead planning to put my daughter in it when she’s ready to drive. I would’ve preferred utility and faster DC charging, but had to make do with what was available. Road tripping in a Tesla would be much easier and quicker.

              Before you ask, no you can’t buy the base model Lightning direct from Ford. You can all other trims though.

            • @eltrain123@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              I drove it about 60-80 miles a day on a Houston commute for about 2 years. Now I took it on the road and am trying out the digital nomad lifestyle. Just drove 1000miles in 2 days, from sea level to 10,000ft. I haven’t had a problem finding chargers or with anything else.

              If you’re road-tripping, there are apps to plan the optimal route based on whether you want to arrive in the shortest time or don’t mind stopping for a while longer at parks, restaurants, or shopping places. I generally drive about 2 1/2-3 hrs, then stop for a half hour or so, give or take 10 minutes if I’m in a rush or want to stop for lunch or something. When im in a hotel, I just search for hotels that have EV chargers and charge overnighit… those are usually free. When I’m in a new area renting a place, I haven’t had an issue finding a plug to slow charge or a grocery store or something that has a fast charger.

              I guess to answer your question, I primarily take it on road trips, but use it locally in the destinations I land in.

              • themadcodger
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                11 year ago

                I guess my concern was charging time. Granted, I haven’t really done any research, but I had it in my head that it would take a long time to charge (slow charging?). Overnight would be fine, but I was picturing driving for a few hours, and then charging for a few hours, over and over again.

                • @eltrain123@lemmy.world
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                  21 year ago

                  Yeah. A lot of people don’t have first hand experience and there is a lot of misinformation out there.

                  It does take about an hour to charge if you go from empty to full, but it charges slower as you get closer to 100%. That’s why they say it takes about half an hour to get an 80% charge.

                  I usually try to plan my routes where I charge after getting under 10% and only save my longer charges for places that have some kind of point of interest, like a park, or a meal break. The apps strategize all of that stuff and make the route, you just have the option of optimizing if you want to adjust the route.

                  It does seem to break up a drive a bit nicer and leave you with more energy when you hit your destination, but would be more irritating if I was under a time crunch and didn’t plan the time accordingly.

    • Altima NEO
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      1 year ago

      They’ll also fail to mention that it’s the fastest growing new car segment. They may not me moving as many as they want, but they’re definitely moving.

    • hh93
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      61 year ago

      I don’t know how it is in the us but here in Germany many (single-brand-)dealers are also licensed mechanics (for that brand) - and since EVs are taking much less repairing than traditional cars they are basically shooting themselves in the foot by selling them

    • SharkAttak
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      -21 year ago

      Yeah, smthg smthg capitalism, smthg smthg free market, amirite?

  • @Bell@lemmy.world
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    1291 year ago

    EVs require much less maintenance…dealers make much of their money from… maintenance! So they mark up the sale price to compensate for their lost revenue.

    The solution is selling cars without dealerships, but our helpful state legislatures have made that illegal in many states.

    • 𝔼𝕩𝕦𝕤𝕚𝕒
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      1 year ago

      And you need a safe place to charge it. Like a garage. I can’t afford a house so why would I buy a Nissan leaf (any cheap ev)? I can’t just run an extention cord out an open window. I also can’t just leave a wireless ground pad charger plugged in unattended outside. It’s all linked, nothing happens in a bubble.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        I don’t know about other chargers but my Tesla charger is designed for outside use and can be configured to only allow my car to charge

        • @spongebue@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          The J1772 protocol is very basic and does not communicate any car identifier back to the charge unit, so it wouldn’t know what it’s plugged into (other than “something”)

          • @BitSound@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            I’m not worried about that, but I’ve seen some more cautious people get the cable underneath one of their wheels so that you’d have to move the car to take it. I’m quite sure you could also find another way of attaching or securing it to your car to make it fairly difficult to walk away with. The chargers also aren’t really worth much, so it seems unlikely that even someone desperate for cash would put much effort into it.

          • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            It helps to have your own home, and my area doesn’t have much vandalism

            My charger is not detachable and is not especially valuable in itself, so I think of it more as vandalism than theft. Someone might vandalize my charger for the metal in the cable, I guess, but I also have an air conditioner compressor outside that I’d expect to be more valuable, if harder to walk away with. As a property owner, there’s always something that could be vandalized or stolen, but you need to balance your costs and convenience with what you expect from your neighbors

          • @Dontfearthereaper123@lemm.ee
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            01 year ago

            R u so paranoid that u think people are gonna steal it? I mean it might happen but I live in quite a rough place and I wouldnt even be worried abt that

            • @oatscoop@midwest.social
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              1 year ago

              Some people will steal anything they think they can sell for a couple bucks – particularly addicts. Some people just suck and will think the owner deserves to have it stolen for not securing it.

              You’re banking on not a single one of those people seeing it and taking it. It’s not hard to sell it for cheap to someone who’ll list it on ebay.

              • @Dontfearthereaper123@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                I’ve had people attempt to Rob me in my own home, had bricks thrown in my window for literally no reason and had attepted night burglaries. Basically, I live in a rough area and I’d genuinely be suprised if someone stole an electric car charger. I’ve left much more valuable things outside by accident without them being stolen.

          • @Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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            -11 year ago

            That’s a problem that is pretty easily solved. It can all be solidly affixed to the wall, locked to the vehicle, etc.

            • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              Yeah, I do wonder about the wisdom of locking it to the vehicle. I wonder if it would really deter anyone or if it just means my car is also vandalized for the scrap metal in the cable

      • @wmassingham@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        I can’t just run an extention cord out an open window.

        This is exactly what my neighbor does in his apartment.

        But he has a driveway, so it’s not like he’s running it over the sidewalk or anything.

      • @KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I smell a solution here: Dealers can offer free charging on their lot (plus optionally a mobile charging service that comes to you) for a monthly fee.
        That way, you have a spot to charge in your city that’s never taken, and dealers can make the money they used to make on maintenance, therefore giving them the incentive to actually sell EVs.

      • @Rooskie91@discuss.online
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        21 year ago

        I don’t think this is what you meant, but you can charge an EV using a conventional wall outlet.They even have adapters that will allow you to plug it into a 240v outlet (like for a dryer or oven). I’m not saying this makes them more accessible, I still think the upfront cost of owning an EV is too high, but it is possible.,

      • @RushingSquirrel@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        With decent range, you can charge once or twice a week at a fast charger (while doing groceries or posting video games) or there are public chargers every couple of blocks. No need for a home charger (though it’s definitely more convenient).

      • Flying Squid
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        01 year ago

        Other wires come in and out of your house. It’s not hard to drill a hole and insulate it.

        • @Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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          251 year ago

          The person you replied to said they cannot afford a house.

          That means they do not own the building in which they live. In most apartment situations, it’s impossible to make infrastructure changes to the building.

          Even if a person owns their home, they aren’t just “making a hole” and insulating it. Most home owners don’t know what’s in their walls, how to tell if a wall is safe to drill into, and even fewer know how to properly seal up those holes so they don’t wind up with water ingress when the cheap caulk they slathered on gets ruined by temperatures, the sun, or pests.
          Much less that it’s also not merely ‘a cord’ unless you’re fine with being handicapped by slow charging. Installing faster chargers is beyond the scope of most home tinkerers - so that’s even more cost to set up.

  • @frezik@midwest.social
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    1171 year ago

    Maybe roll out some models people can afford? It’s all SUVs that start around $45k, but they built only a few of those base models. The ones actually available are premium trims that go for $65k and might peak around $100k. They were able to sell out for 6 months, and then that market was saturated. Now they stand around asking why nobody buys their cars.

  • athos77
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    1061 year ago

    Well, maybe if the price of cars wasn’t so fucking high, they’d be able to sell more of them. But nope, corps gotta get those record profits in, while underpaying every single [non-executive] worker.

  • @5BC2E7@lemmy.world
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    941 year ago

    I don’t see any problem with removig car dealers. Just phase out of existence no one will miss them.

  • @radix@lemmy.world
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    881 year ago

    Give me a solid car with an electric motor, but all old-school buttons and knobs in the cabin instead of a touchscreen that will be out of date in 5 years and cost 10k to replace if the kids get their grimy hands on it.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      321 year ago

      My ideal electric car is basically an 85 GTI with an electric motor, but they’re all SUVs

      • @Usernameblankface@lemmy.world
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        251 year ago

        Yeah, I’m disappointed that the evs that are actually so simple are micro cars with an in-town-only top speed and they’re only available in Europe.

        Closest thing in the US is a Nissan Leaf with a battery upgrade.

      • @tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        141 year ago

        And let me rent an extra battery pack for long trips. I only need 40 miles day-to-day, but I gotta go 300 for Christmas.

        • @Vacationlandgirl@lemmy.world
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          51 year ago

          PHEV is the answer! Give us options, doesn’t have to be one of the other; Chevy Volt had it for a bit, but it must not have been profitable because now I can’t find a PHEV that gets more than 30 miles on a full charge!

          • @tburkhol@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            I don’t want to buy the oversized battery, and I don’t really want to buy the on-board generator/charger of PHEV. I only want to own as much vehicle, and incur the manufacturing carbon debt, to meet 95-98% of my needs. Make it easy to rent, borrow, or share the extra capacity for the last 2%, and the world will be a lot less wasteful. I can see renting a trailer with enough generator to replace a series hybrid. I can see renting surplus battery. And those rental services can be a revenue stream to replace dealerships lost service centers.

            Clearly, though, I’m a minority of consumers, and no manufacturer actually wants to cater to me and my twelve friends.

            • @Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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              31 year ago

              Your use case is very reasonable, and a lot of people want it. But it’s a big challenge from a technical/engineering standpoint. You know how a replacement battery pack for an EV costs like $8k and has a range of 300 miles? Your rental battery would cost at least that much, plus whatever costs are involved to make it portable, and integrate it’s usage into your existing EV. Then the rental places would need to have massive charging capabilities for when people stop in to swap their empty rental battery for a full one, since it still only has a range of 300 miles (4-5 hours of freeway driving)

              I actually think there will be improvements on the fast charging front. You can already see this idea in other places. Many heavy duty trucks have 2 fuel tanks. You can fill them with 2 standard pumps running simultaneously, effectively giving you double the refueling speed. Some phones have dual batteries for the same reason.

        • @Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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          21 year ago

          The honest answer for right now, which will likely cause an emotional response, is to just rent a different car for these rare needs. Or plan around chargers en route, which will likely be a frustrating experience.

          The savings you’ll get day-to-day will more than cover your rental fees.

          • @tburkhol@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            You’re right. I got my current (smallish) car with the explanation that I could just rent a truck when I want to haul hobby materials, but the practical inconvenience of that rental has meant that I just don’t, and consequently haven’t done any big hobby projects in years. When I imagine renting an EV booster battery, I imagine it being easy, convenient, and reasonably priced, unlike literally everything else in the automotive market.

            And there is different emotional content in using your own vehicle vs any alternative.

    • @olympicyes@lemmy.world
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      131 year ago

      You know there are absolutely zero controls on privacy for Tesla telemetry data. It’s wild to me that a car that is really quite a bit simpler than an ICE car is required to be perpetually online. That said, I saw there’s a company trying to offer electric retrofits for ICE vehicles, primarily classic cars, but that’s likely to be closest to what you want.

    • TrumpetX
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      91 year ago

      I just had my screen replaced because the L in LCD started oozing all over. It was $2200 which didn’t include the radio that cost an extra $500. So, not 10k, but not cheap either. On the plus side, outside of New tires, that’s the only thing I’ve done to the car in 8 years.

  • @SmoothIsFast@citizensgaming.com
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    861 year ago

    How about people pay attention to local elections? The reason we are not seeing funding for EV infrastructure is most small towns can be bought by the local dealership family who would rather see continued profits from ICE vehicle maintenance and not investments into EV infrastructure, then it conviently sides with this bullshit narrative of nothing can be sold and we have no infrastructure so give up on EVs.

  • @CatfishSushi@lemmy.world
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    801 year ago

    Henry Ford designed the Model T to be a bare-bones vehicle affordable for the everyday person. Volkswagon designed the Beetle to be a bare-bones vehicle affordable for the everyday person.

    The first car company to design an EV that’s a bare-bones vehicle affordable for the everyday person will sell lots of them. Profit per car may be lower but perhaps we need to set the need for maximum profits aside on this particular issue?

    My raises aren’t even CLOSE to keeping up with inflation. Rather hard to splurge on a fancy EV with tons of high-tech nice-to-have features that are just going to break anyway. All I need to do is to get from point A to point B and have AC, heat and a half-decent stereo system.

  • @Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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    701 year ago

    Bullshit. These dealers don’t want to sell EVs because they can’t bait you into a sales pitch 4 times a year with free oil changes.

  • @darth_helmet@sh.itjust.works
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    651 year ago

    Maybe it’s because cars suck now: filled with spyware, massively complex systems that aren’t better at doing car things than similar systems in the 90s, and with a price tag that considers this garbage as worth something to the consumer.

    • gullible
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      391 year ago

      I sincerely wish that were the case. The proliferation of Ring doorbells, Alexa speakers, and overall lack of tech literacy really hampers any signs of general outcry. Our collective screech barely registers as a whimper in the grand scheme.

      • @TestShhh@lemmy.world
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        111 year ago

        I mean that’s my disappointment with the new Tacoma that’s coming out soon. It’s great that they have a hybrid now, but it’s full of electronic crap now that used to be mostly isolated to certain components.

        Now the entire gauge cluster is a screen, it’s sad.

        I was legitimately going to buy a brand new one in the next year or two when I’m back in the US, and I’ve never bought a new car. now I guess I have to get a 2023 model or earlier. I bet any of the 2016-2023 generation lasts longer than the 2023-2030ish generation.

        Honestly I don’t even like trucks but the biggest pull for me was that the Tacoma was still pretty old school for a new vehicle, and that it could go anywhere kinda rough.

        • @automattable@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Now the entire gauge cluster is a screen, it’s sad.

          This is a really interesting take to me because I’m excited for all the physical displays to be replaced by screens. Because once they’re screens, the new CarPlay can take them over and give an actually good user experience compared the incredible dog shit quality in-car experience that the manufacturers provide.

        • @MrMamiya@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          I wanted to like the Tacoma but I owned a Corolla and it’s the same size inside. Not like in a “this is a truck” way either I mean the cabin is like a compact car. Seating position is just awful. I’m tall but this isn’t a tall thing even.

          Thing about the Corolla is it had 41” legroom in front at least. More backseat room too.

      • Flying Squid
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        11 year ago

        There was another thread here on Lemmy where I talked about how my parents installed a wired intercom in our house so they wouldn’t have to yell at me when they wanted something and someone replied that they just use Alexa to do that and I wanted to hit my forehead on my keyboard.

    • SeaJ
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      111 year ago

      The same thing happens in ICE vehicles. The issue here is that they marked them up an insane amount, refuse to learn about them, and actively discourage people from buying them.

    • @Moneo@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Spoiler alert: cars have always sucked.

      Inefficient drain of public and private money. Demand better public transportation.

  • LazaroFilm
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    521 year ago

    If they can’t sell them then let companies sell without a dealership! Sorry your scammy business isn’t working anymore either clean your nose or get out

  • @AlecSadler@lemmy.world
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    511 year ago

    When GM killed the Bolt, I tried to buy one at two different dealerships near me. One wanted a $10k premium over MSRP and the other wanted $8k.

    They also both had a non-negotiable “security” etching added and wheel protection whatever that I had to pay for.

    It isn’t that I didn’t want one, it’s that your dealerships fucked it up.

    Honestly, may have settled for MSRP, but they wouldn’t budge. Fuck off.

  • circuitfarmer
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    491 year ago

    The infrastructure isn’t there. I live in an apartment (and likely will for the foreseeable future), and there are no chargers here.

    The option of a (practical) electric car does not exist for a sizeable portion of the country. The fact that they’re really expensive is actually secondary considering they’re just a non-starter without the infrastructure.

    • Even worse, my former apartment complex had EV chargers that you paid for at 8x the rate of electricity making it more expensive than gas. There were no other options to charge your car. But when I locked in my lease all they advertised was that they had EV chargers. Not the credit card required or price.

        • @shadowSprite@lemmy.world
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          131 year ago

          I would love to consider getting an electric car whenever I can afford a new(er) vehicle. But there’s no way my landlord will let me run an extension cord from my 3rd story apartment around the building and around the pond between my building and the parking lot. It’s sad that an EV would be so great, but its really a mark of privilege to own both in initial affordability and just having the place to park and charge one. Not that it matters, I can’t afford anything other than my 24 year old Honda.

            • @rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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              -181 year ago

              Is there a power outlet in the street? If not, it would be hard to use level 1 charging and wouldn’t really be relevant to bring up, would it?

              • @cantsurf@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Let me summarize the stream of these comments for you, as if it was a conversation between two people.

                A)There isn’t infrastructure for electric cars, particularly for those living in an apartment.

                B)Level 1 charging is good enough for most people.

                A)How is a person who lives in an apartment going to use a level 1 charger?

                B)You just use a regular outlet.

                A)But I live in an apartment, there is no regular outlet near my car.

                B)(this is your comment BTW)Well then why did you bring up level 1 charging?

                You’re a moron.

                • @rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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                  -191 year ago

                  Some apartments have outlets in them, this is a simple solution for those people. Not every solution will solve every problem for every person. Only a moron would expect that.

          • @cantsurf@lemm.ee
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            131 year ago

            This is just not a practical day-to-day solution. Most people don’t have a parking spot right outside their window that they can reliably use for charging. There is often a sidewalk that the cord would have to cross, creating the opportunity for someone to trip and sue you. There is often landscaping between buildings and parking, creating the opportunity for the landscapers to accidentally run over your cord with their lawnmower. Some asshole is going to walk by and unplug your car and then you may be late to work.

            Sure, you could it, but it’s not a practical solution.

      • @Alpha71@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        TBH if your daily mileage is only 30 or so miles, then you can do all of that on an electric bike.

          • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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            01 year ago

            I hear that biking in the snow isn’t actually bad. This is hearsay because it doesn’t snow much where I am.

            You wear your winter coat and snow pants, and get studded tires.

            You don’t have to worry about getting stuck going up an icy hill (because if its too icy to drive up, you can walk up it), granted not likely to be a problem in Wisconsin.

            You don’t have to worry about getting stuck due to low clearance (like the snow between the ruts that hatchbacks and minivans get stuck on) because you can just pick up your bike.

            Also if a pedestrian slips while crossing the road, you probably won’t kill them if you can’t stop in time.

            I guess the wind could be intense. What’s your experience been?

            • @marx2k@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              Consider doing any of this in -20F even without the wind chill. Now consider the battery on that bike in those temps.

              I’ve had it be so cold outside that the door lock latch on my entryway door for my garage was growing ice crystals. This isn’t a door that’s on the outside. This is the door on the entry from the garage to the house.

              Now imagine trying to bike anywhere with that and what is essentially a salt/beet sugar slurry in the roads with no one giving you right of way it even being able to see in front of them because they’re either drunk, on the phone, only cleared a 3" hole in their windshield or “you just came out of nowhere” ;)

              But hey, the summers here are kickass

              • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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                11 year ago

                Hey thanks for more context I appreciate it.

                -20F (-30C) is quite cold. How often is it that cold during commuting hours? It’s hard to read too much into anecdotes re house latches freezing because there are so many peculiarities of individual houses. Range will definitely be reduced though.

                I could see the ice melt slurry being messy and gumming up the bike’s mechanics for sure. Not something I have experience with.

                Yeah separate infrastructure makes biking a lot safer and so more attractive.

                • @marx2k@lemmy.world
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                  11 year ago

                  It’s actually not as bad on average as I conveyed

                  https://weatherspark.com/countries/US/WI

                  I think a lot of it is wind chills, especially where I am since Madison, WI sits between two lakes.

                  It might be better on a regular fat tire bike and not EV here, though in the last few years EV has become insanely popular around here.

        • @niucllos@lemm.ee
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          51 year ago

          You should be able to, but US non-car infrastructure is so abysmal that there’s a strong chance you can’t safely unfortunately

        • circuitfarmer
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          31 year ago

          I currently bike or walk most places, but I also know that’s not a common situation in the US. For me the car is only used for anything far enough away.

        • @Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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          31 year ago

          Ignoring how that would work even under ideal circumstances, do you propose that large portions of the country use a bike when it’s below freezing? Because that’s a non-starter, and no one will take you seriously.

    • @MisterD@lemmy.ca
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      121 year ago

      And you think this was an accident? Car companies have been stalling every charging station they can. This is why Tesla went on their own.

      • circuitfarmer
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        21 year ago

        Oh I don’t doubt there is a lot of dirty pool involved. Tesla’s hands are nowhere near clean either. But it doesn’t change the fact that, at the end of the day, shit’s not anywhere near ready.

    • @joshhsoj1902@lemmy.ca
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      21 year ago

      This isn’t an unsolvable problem though given demand.

      Assuming you’re in an appartment with dedicated parking, it’s not crazy difficult or expensive to install some lvl 2 chargers, the real blocker here is demand, if residents aren’t demanding it the building isn’t going to supply it.

      If you’re stuck with street parking, you’re right, your use case isn’t best suited for EVs right now. But this case also isn’t a huge portion of vehicle owners, so it doesn’t seem like justification to stop rollout.

      • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        51 year ago

        Ignorant on the levels, but I thought I read it WAS crazy to install all that infrastructure. Gas stations apparently struggle to get it done.

        Maybe I read about the next level

        • @vithigar@lemmy.ca
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          61 year ago

          Level 3 fast chargers (the kind you would want at a gas station) are legitimately difficult to arrange infrastructure for in some areas. Multiple 200+ kW loads are not something that many properties are wired for. It’s an enormous investment.

          Level 2 chargers are basically trivial to install in comparison and can be supported just about anywhere with two phase service. They’re much slower than level 3 chargers, but are a great option for any place that people stop with the intent to stay for an hour or more. Workplaces, restaurants, shopping malls, etc.

      • circuitfarmer
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        1 year ago

        I’d be curious to see real stats about how many folks in the US have a car and any practical access to a charger, even if somehow we convinced landlords everywhere to install chargers or the govt footed that bill entirely. I suspect it isn’t the minority you think given the current housing situation in the country.

        Even so, we seem agreed that a massive infrastructure improvement would be needed to make this at all practical. It looks a lot like pie in the sky to me.

        Of course the elephant in the room is that the battery technology is the more overarching issue. I don’t need a gas station in my parking lot because it takes me about 3 minutes to fill the car with gas. If it took 3 minutes to charge an electric car, they would be closer to parity. Currently they are far, far away.

        Is it possible to get around some of that issue by changing tactics / planning ahead for longer trips and trying to secure a full charge by then? Possibly, but not practically. I’d also argue that technologies that ask people to change established behavior without benefit tend to fail (and there is no direct benefit to the consumer with an electric car).

        • @joshhsoj1902@lemmy.ca
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          01 year ago

          I’m not sure I agree there is a massive infrastructure need. The average American could keep their EV charged today with a standard 120v outlet.

          I don’t have numbers for how any car owners park their car overnight somewhere that has access to a 120v plug, but it would surprise me if it was less than 50%.

          Batteries are fine today and I lay getting better, fast charging is nice to have, but definitely not needed.

    • @frezik@midwest.social
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      11 year ago

      65.8% of Americans own their house. EV sales rates aren’t anywhere near that. Lack of being able to charge at home is not the primary issue.

      • @brlemworld@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        I’d be curious to see how many apartment dwellers are buying brand new vehicles as well. I suspect it’s at a rate lower than home owners.

      • @Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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        11 year ago

        While your larger point is valid, it’s missing some important context. I haven’t seen the data, but I suspect that it says 65% own (vs renting) their primary residence, not that 65% own a single family house suitable for home charging. This figure would include houses with street parking only, off-street parking unsuitable for charging (e.g. carport, or a detached garage without electricity), and critically, condos. Condos often have the exact same restrictions as apartments, even if you own the living space. In the opposite direction, it doesn’t count the rented homes where you could charge.

        Now, all of that being said, you are correct that it’s not the only (or perhaps even the biggest) obstacle to moving entirely to EVs. Countless gas vehicles are sold daily to people that could absolutely charge at home. But it does freeze out a large market segment, whom I suspect are more interested in EVs in the first place.

    • @asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      You don’t need to have chargers on site. You just need charging locations that are fast enough. Teslas already charge from empty to almost full in about 15 mins.

      • scops
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        21 year ago

        It’s 0 to 200 miles in 15 minutes in ideal conditions. Really good, but no reason to set unreasonable expectations.

        In my experience, it’s closer to 45 minutes to go from 15-20% to 90% in my Model 3. The supercharger’s fastest charge is when the battery is less than half full. After that, it slows down to protect the life of the battery pack. If all you need is enough charge to get home to your own charger, it’s entirely possible that you can be in and out in 10-15 minutes.