- Banned
- #91
More like road to “I’ll use Tesla with a subscription”. lolRoad to profitability. As long as the reliability is high. Most people only use them when traveling.
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More like road to “I’ll use Tesla with a subscription”. lolRoad to profitability. As long as the reliability is high. Most people only use them when traveling.
More like road to “I’ll use Tesla with a subscription”. lol
Thanks for mathing that out for us but it still proves their point that an ICE vehicle would be cheaper to fuel with those rates. Which is a shame, they are really shooting themselves in the foot.The ever present misconception that an electric car is so efficient because gas contains 33.7kwh per gallon. The difference between pure fact and the reality of how energy extraction actually works.
20mpg at $4/gal = $0.20/mile
2mi/kwh at $0.68/kw = $0.34/mile
Do the math and that equates to $6.80/gallon, not $22.
They are just taking into account the units of energy in a kWh versus a gallon of gas and comparing the price of each based on unit of measure.Your math is WAY off. Assuming my R1t would get 20MPG with a gas engine and I get 2.5mi/Kwh, it would take 8 KWH to go 20 miles. Even at $0.68/Kwh, that's $5.44. I agree that's not great but far from $22. How did you even arrive at that?
I have no problem paying higher than gas rates for the occasional road trip with fast charging. My home charging rates are a fraction of what I would pay for gas, plus the reduced maintenance saves both money and time compared o an ICE vehicle.Thanks for mathing that out for us but it still proves their point that an ICE vehicle would be cheaper to fuel with those rates. Which is a shame, they are really shooting themselves in the foot.
I'm glad you're in a good spot to pay higher fuel costs, but given the fact that gas prices were a huge factor in swinging a national election, I think they would do more for the cause by keeping those prices as dirt cheap as possible until they hit a wider market tipping point.I have no problem paying higher than gas rates for the occasional road trip with fast charging. My home charging rates are a fraction of what I would pay for gas, plus the reduced maintenance saves both money and time compared o an ICE vehicle.
Because you didn't use a gallon! You used a quarter of a gallon. You said so yourself, 8kw and it cost you $5.Your math is WAY off. Assuming my R1t would get 20MPG with a gas engine and I get 2.5mi/Kwh, it would take 8 KWH to go 20 miles. Even at $0.68/Kwh, that's $5.44. I agree that's not great but far from $22. How did you even arrive at that?
Please tell us about the mythical 100% efficient engine that only used a quarter gallon of fuel because of its perfect energy extraction. You’ll be one of the richest men on the planet when you bring that to mass production.Because you didn't use a gallon! You used a quarter of a gallon. You said so yourself, 8kw and it cost you $5.
No he is making a real life comparison of the value of the energy. That is what matters if the premise is it is too expensive to drive an EV over ICE.Because you didn't use a gallon! You used a quarter of a gallon. You said so yourself, 8kw and it cost you $5.
You are mixing the efficiency of the vehicle with cost of the fuel.
Indeed the cost per mile is ultimately the measure on the ground. I think dcfc providers just do the simple math and will charge to the cost of gasoline unless competition intervenes.No he is making a real life comparison of the value of the energy. That is what matters if the premise is it is too expensive to drive an EV over ICE.
People also seem to be missing the fact that an R1T equivalent ICE truck would get like ˜8-12mpg.I have no problem paying higher than gas rates for the occasional road trip with fast charging. My home charging rates are a fraction of what I would pay for gas, plus the reduced maintenance saves both money and time compared o an ICE vehicle.
It depends on where you live and how you charge, but for me TCO is skewed heavily in favor of EV.
While that is correct, that would be if you're converting gas into 1 Kwh of ENERGY. that is not the way to truly convert mil/Kwh into MPG. Most cars can go >25miles on 1 gal of gas, but EVs only ~2 miles on 1 kwh.One gallon of gas is 33.7kwh. just multiply the two numbers.
The Tesla supercharger in my area is 0.41 for NON-TeslasThat increase in price is close to TESLA rates.
RareThe Tesla supercharger in my area is 0.41 for NON-Teslas