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Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Greg
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- May 8, 2021
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- Brevard, NC
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This article came up in my Apple News feed. I don’t have an opinion about Vice’s or the writer’s objectivity.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/3ab...batteries-in-the-world-to-power-our-huge-cars
Rivian is squarely in the author’s crosshairs. What’s curious is that M3 and MY are his baselines. Why not Chevy Bolt or Nissan Leaf that, I think, use even smaller batteries?
If one’s only use case for their truck is to carry 4 adults or less and some belongings, Rivian, Lightning, Silverado and Cybertruck are overkill and his argument of inefficient use of scarce resources has some merit. And I grant that, ICE or Electric, trucks are often grossly underutilized.
The author doesn’t factor into the article that each of these companies are trying to swing a base to electric and need a higher margin option to get the ball rolling. He simply dismisses anything not M3 or MY as wasteful. No one, including Tesla, did this by releasing econo model first. Even Tesla bailed on what would have been their cheapest M3. Speaking of Leaf, look where Nissan is in their transition compared with competitors. BTW, R1T has the highest e-mpg of any of the truck examples he uses. How about a little credit for that?
I replaced a truck that got 19mpg on a good day. I often did things with it that a sedan or crossover, including M3 or MY, couldn’t do. I have similar tasks and more planned for my R1T. The point is that the automotive world is and will be more than just people and grocery movers for a wide variety of reasons. Electric trucks, even if a truck is just a market’s preference without a real need for many, should get some credit for a step in the right direction. We do need to address the scarcity of the resources that make up batteries but the market needs to be convinced that electric is not only capable of being cleaner but actually as capable as , more fun and, yes, potentially more luxurious than their ICE counterparts.
I intentionally omitted eHummer comparison. Hummers, e or otherwise, are IMO just obnoxious and good at a very limited set of things that very few people do. Author can rail on those all day
This will not be the first call out of needs for battery resource “efficiency” so I expect we’ll need to be prepared to defend our Rivians.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/3ab...batteries-in-the-world-to-power-our-huge-cars
Rivian is squarely in the author’s crosshairs. What’s curious is that M3 and MY are his baselines. Why not Chevy Bolt or Nissan Leaf that, I think, use even smaller batteries?
If one’s only use case for their truck is to carry 4 adults or less and some belongings, Rivian, Lightning, Silverado and Cybertruck are overkill and his argument of inefficient use of scarce resources has some merit. And I grant that, ICE or Electric, trucks are often grossly underutilized.
The author doesn’t factor into the article that each of these companies are trying to swing a base to electric and need a higher margin option to get the ball rolling. He simply dismisses anything not M3 or MY as wasteful. No one, including Tesla, did this by releasing econo model first. Even Tesla bailed on what would have been their cheapest M3. Speaking of Leaf, look where Nissan is in their transition compared with competitors. BTW, R1T has the highest e-mpg of any of the truck examples he uses. How about a little credit for that?
I replaced a truck that got 19mpg on a good day. I often did things with it that a sedan or crossover, including M3 or MY, couldn’t do. I have similar tasks and more planned for my R1T. The point is that the automotive world is and will be more than just people and grocery movers for a wide variety of reasons. Electric trucks, even if a truck is just a market’s preference without a real need for many, should get some credit for a step in the right direction. We do need to address the scarcity of the resources that make up batteries but the market needs to be convinced that electric is not only capable of being cleaner but actually as capable as , more fun and, yes, potentially more luxurious than their ICE counterparts.
I intentionally omitted eHummer comparison. Hummers, e or otherwise, are IMO just obnoxious and good at a very limited set of things that very few people do. Author can rail on those all day
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