That is MSRP. After incentives it's under $20,000.
Yes, I said incentives are just that. Artificial skewing of price. There's no guarantee that will be here tomorrow. Compare MSRP to MSRP, not MSRP to fake price.
I have one that's 12 years old with 157,000 miles on it. No trouble yet.
And my current gasoline vehicle if 14 with 220,000 on it. No trouble yet. (it does get all of it's scheduled maintenance, I hate sloppy suspension.) I've known plenty of these vehicles that went for 300k or more, and the only reason that they stopped driving them was because the mechanical structure of the vehicle simply wore out. I have a list of people that want mine because it's a manual transmission, so I'm not worried about what to do with it when it does decide to go.
My last one was 20 when it shit the bed, the only reason I got rid of it was someone hit it and destroyed the B-pillar area.
The battery warranties are 150,000 miles or 10 years.
Which is why I stated that modern (gasoline) cars can last 15 or more years. I see plenty on the road that are 20, and a decent amount still from the 90s. At some point, if you want to keep your electric on the road for that long, you're going to be spending several thousand on a battery pack. Yours has degraded, and is on borrowed time at 157k. Cells like to just quit without warning, it's how batteries work.
The point here is that electrics are a crap deal for many drivers, and both the cost without incentives and the range is going to have to change dramatically before they can become a viable alternative for anything other than a short commuter verhicle.
Yes, I said incentives are just that. Artificial skewing of price. There's no guarantee that will be here tomorrow. Compare MSRP to MSRP, not MSRP to fake price.
What part of THAT IS MSRP is difficult to understand?
Which is why I stated that modern (gasoline) cars can last 15 or more years.
If you're going to judge how long a car lasts by the warranty, how long is the warranty on your gas car? Most people are getting 300k or more miles out of their Tesla and Prius batteries with no issues. But even if you had to replace the battery every 150,000 miles, it's still cheaper than gas. A $10,000 battery replacement puts fuel and battery cost at 10 cents per mile, which is still the equivalent cost of a gas car getting 32 mpg.
The point here is that electrics are a crap deal for many drivers,
For very, very few. In fact, the only way it's a crap deal is if you need to drive more than 500 miles in 8 hours or less on a regular basis.
What part of THAT IS MSRP is difficult to understand?
The MSRP on a base model leaf is 28k. What are you referring to?
If you're going to judge how long a car lasts by the warranty, how long is the warranty on your gas car?
It was 10 years. But the engine doesn't have an expiration date like batteries do. As long as I keep the oil changed and do some basic maintenance, it's going to last indefinitely. Batteries do not do that.
For very, very few. In fact, the only way it's a crap deal is if you need to drive more than 500 miles in 12 hours or less on a regular basis.
149 miles.
The MSRP on a base model leaf is 28k. What are you referring to?
Yes. Now compare that with the MSRP of any sedan with similar features and interior space.
It was 10 years. But the engine doesn't have an expiration date like batteries do.
Batteries don't expire any more than engines do. They just wear out slowly, just like an engine.
149 miles.
In 8 hours you can drive the base model Leaf 445 miles, including charge time with fast charging.
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