10/26/2010 9:37:43 AM
^you are right. GM is betting big on the costs of batteries dropping. If they stay high, then this car will probably go away.I loved the idea of a prius. I was almost sold on buying one, until I drove it. NO WAY I would ever own one now. When I first pulled out into traffic out of the dealer lot I thought I had the ebrake on. Its like driving a lawnmower on the highway.
10/26/2010 9:51:55 AM
I know its not for everyone. Same goes for the Volt. But they have sold over 2 million. Last year, they sold about 400k in the U.S. alone.The Volt is coming in with huge production numbers compared to the prius. By the second year out, GM is 'expecting' to be producing more Volts than the Prius was selling in year 7 of production.
10/26/2010 9:59:32 AM
10/26/2010 10:24:15 AM
^I was coming from an accord V6, and I later found I was in econ mode, switching to power mode really improved pickup. But yeah, I was looking around to see what was wrong.Yeah, they just arent for me. I think over time you will see acceleration improve with these and then Ill give them another look. But its clearly not a big deal to some.[Edited on October 26, 2010 at 10:41 AM. Reason : .]
10/26/2010 10:39:31 AM
that would make a big difference, then...when you have no expectations of power, no power is just fine
10/26/2010 10:45:08 AM
10/26/2010 11:46:43 AM
10/26/2010 1:17:11 PM
10/26/2010 1:40:04 PM
10/26/2010 2:15:12 PM
The leaf is not a hedge. 40 miles a charge is enough to eliminate the vast majority of driving for most people. If you were to dry 40 miles a day, for 365 days a year, that would give you close to 15,000 miles you would not be using gas. And then the Volt owners still have a usable car when the charge goes out. The Leaf, while it might be a solution, is only partial, because people not going to be able to get where they want whenever they want. This is not a problem with the Volt.People have always thought electric cars were ridiculous, not due to the fact that they are electric, but because they wonder what happens when the charge runs out. There needs to be a bridge technology, and the Volt is it.The Leaf actually requires people to make a lifestyle change. The Volt does not.[Edited on October 26, 2010 at 5:09 PM. Reason : .]
10/26/2010 5:07:03 PM
^+1
10/26/2010 5:56:09 PM
10/26/2010 6:47:44 PM
10/26/2010 7:21:59 PM
10/26/2010 8:01:46 PM
10/26/2010 8:38:03 PM
^ I think it was pretty damned close. It was around 20k in 1997. A Honda Civic could be bought for 11k.From what I read, the Prius plug-in hybrid is going to be over 40k. And let's face it, the battery pack on the Volt is about 8k. Thats the bulk of the price right there. Its not like they are making a killing on this car. The components just cost a bundle because this has never been done before.And you are correct on the Leaf. It will only take about 17 hours to fill it up from a standard outlet, so I guess if you dont mind sleeping at a gas station when it peter's out, that would be great.I'm guessing the Volt is going to outsell the Leaf and every other electric car produced in the next 5 years.[Edited on October 26, 2010 at 9:58 PM. Reason : .]
10/26/2010 9:56:06 PM
Yeah maybe a 2 door POS civic cx hatchback for 11k ( i have one...FWIW).
10/26/2010 11:47:46 PM
First generation Prius' were sold at a loss, because the cost to make them was higher than what anyone would be willing to pay for one. If Chevrolet was smart and not bankrupt, they would be selling their cars at a loss too.
10/27/2010 12:10:29 AM
10/27/2010 12:49:47 AM
Yeah if these things develop a following the price will certainly come down.
10/27/2010 1:05:00 AM
phat
10/27/2010 1:06:54 AM
nissan demod the same lame feature on the leaf
10/27/2010 8:03:04 AM
FWIW, I think every generation of the Prius are so ugly looking cars. I know its aerodynamically dictated, but ugh!
10/27/2010 9:10:34 AM
10/27/2010 2:53:42 PM
10/27/2010 2:57:14 PM
10/27/2010 3:42:36 PM
a civic in 97 outside of the cx is more than 11 grand. I don't know if I was clear when I pointed that out last time.
10/27/2010 3:49:33 PM
10/27/2010 3:55:53 PM
http://www.carsdirect.com/1997/honda/civicI was using this as a guide. I am having difficulty finding the range for a Prius, but quite honestly, if what someone mentioned above is true, that the Prius was a money loser, then it isnt fair to compare the Prius/competition price ratio to the Volt/price ratio, since the Volt will be making a small profit (apparently, very small). So its not worth arguing.There isnt any real comparisons you can use for what the Volt is doing. Its just too different. Too early to be able to determine if its going to be a success, if the prices are going to come down, and if it will be widely adopted. But if you think its going to fail due to pricing alone, your wrong. If the car fails to be adopted, I suspect it will be to 1) the price not coming down over time, and 2) the price of gasoline/oil stabalizing or decreasing for a long period of time [dont think this is going to happen].
10/27/2010 4:00:28 PM
10/27/2010 4:10:10 PM
So the vast majority of people don't drive more than 40 miles per day, but ON THE OFF CHANCE they drive more than twice that distance they should spend an additional $8,000?Again, if the vast majority of America drives less than 40 miles a day, why would the vast majority of America spend $8,000 more on a car that does the exact same thing. It's not like it's a BMW or Lexus. It's a Chevy.
10/27/2010 4:29:42 PM
Ok. You're not making your argument any better. Just agreeing to disagree at this point, because I'm not wasting anymore time on you.This is a fair review that touches on a lot of issues:http://www.thedetroitbureau.com/2010/10/first-drive-2011-chevrolet-volt-2/
10/27/2010 4:37:40 PM
10/27/2010 4:44:05 PM
10/27/2010 4:49:18 PM
That was my bad. I looked at the 'total' on the same wikipedia page. They have sold 2 million world wide.The fact that the cars have declined in the U.S. in the last 2 years is a no brainer. Pretty much all cars have declined in the past 2 years because a lot of people are out of work. I dont think it is a reflection on the car, but on the economy.
10/27/2010 4:49:40 PM
10/27/2010 5:03:10 PM
I agree with Stein here.The Volt just doesn't cut it.I'm 1000x more interested in the Leaf. It's effectively 13k cheaper for me after taxes, and would account for 95%+ of my driving time. We can keep a second car (Subaru Forester) for trips and skiing and camping, which gets decent mileage and can actually be used to haul stuff (people, gear, trailer).I just hope Nissan releases their Level3 chargers in the US. 30 minutes recharge time to 80% capacity, means 30 minutes gets you ~80 miles.
10/27/2010 9:50:12 PM
I just feel like the architecture of the volt is flawed. Sure a larger battery will take you farther (and the leaf farther yet) but when it runs out (which chevy is banking on by this design) the gas to charge the bank and provide electricity for an electric motor obviously doesnt cut it. Its apparntly worse than modern four cylinders in this mode.To me its a really expensive bridge between the leaf and a prius. Jack of all , master of none? If its priced comparable to a prius or an insight its not so bad. What technology/production advancement makes the volt cheaper to produce that doesnt carry over to the other hybrids?
10/27/2010 10:11:09 PM
qntmoverlord posted this in the electric cars thread...it's moderately relevanthttp://www.motorauthority.com/blog/1050863_electric-car-drives-375-miles-at-55-mph-recharges-in-6-minu
10/28/2010 7:52:26 AM
There are absolutely still a lot of advances in battery technology and other areas of storage (possibly super capacitors) that could make this a lot better than it currently it. I think with all the electric cars coming on the road in the next 3 years, we'll finally start to see the kind of advances that will make these cars mainstream.
10/28/2010 9:18:01 AM
[Edited on October 28, 2010 at 9:18 AM. Reason : double]
10/28/2010 9:18:37 AM
10/28/2010 9:41:23 AM
10/28/2010 9:50:55 AM
Well, in fairness, demand generally drives innovation. There has not been the demand for large capacity lithium cell batteries. This will drive the need for innovations in both the battery field and competing storage technology. Having vaporware cars doesn't drive people to focus research on an application that doesn't exist.
10/28/2010 10:20:27 AM
yes. The volt is the first and only time anyone has wanted high density portable energy storage,
10/28/2010 10:43:11 AM
^ Need to restate everything I just typed in this post...1) High density does not equal high capacity. Two different issues, with different challenges. 2) The problems and costs associated with building high capacity batteries with the Volt are entirely different than that of portable electronics (you can't just go out an buy another battery/ it has to support many more cycles than portable batteries (higher quality design to make cells last).3) I think the large scale builds of practically applied large capacity batteries will drive advancements in battery design not needed as badly in portable electronics.[Edited on October 28, 2010 at 12:34 PM. Reason : .]
10/28/2010 12:24:48 PM
10/28/2010 12:56:33 PM
^ It was a cost problem. They wanted to put in a Diesel from the start. That was what was rumored. Even a turbo was mentioned. The problem came down to cost, as I recall. It would have made the car that much more expensive, and it is a design change they may be able to introduce as the price to manufacture the car comes down.The engine as it connects/does not connect to the drive train is quite complex. I am not going to articulate it probably correctly, but this is as best as I can state it... During the electric range, the GAS engine has zero connection to the drive train. The electric motor propels the car. When the electric mode goes to a 30% charge remaining, the generator cuts on. Under certain loads, the engine will connect to the drive train and provide assistance to drive the wheels. I suspect this is because the maximum output of the engine to charge the battery will not be enough to maintain the state of charge on the battery, so it has to convert some of that energy to the drivetrain. I also believe that the engine mostly stays at the same RPM range, but will increase its speed if the driver gets a bit more sportly, and more current is needed to keep the batteries at a 30% state.So, as one article states, the car is electric some of the time, and a hybrid some of the time.One other interesting item on the Volt is that it only uses 10.5 kWh of the 16 kWh battery. It uses the remaining cells unused, so that as the battery deteriorates with cycles, the software opens up more cells so that effective range isnt diminished. I think I read yesterday (maybe in the article I mentioned above), that after 8 years, they will expect a diminished range of 10-30%. I suspect the Leaf will be far worse off, because I believe they have to use all 22 kWh to get the highly variable range that drivers will get with the car. That will start to diminish, I suspect pretty soon after delivery.For me, although its not at a great price, the car is the only option for me if I want a single car solution and drive electric. I wouldnt even consider the Leaf. I dont want 2 cars to do a single function (unless the second car is going to be somethng like a truck). its silly to buy a Leaf, albeit cheaper, just to have to buy and insure a second car, because the leaf can't do the job.[Edited on October 28, 2010 at 1:18 PM. Reason : .]
10/28/2010 1:14:28 PM
So the all electric range is really only 28 miles?EVEN BETTER!
10/28/2010 1:59:45 PM