Dbeglor
Well-Known Member
Wow, quite a rambling rant. Let's just focus on TX, given it's the most dominant market for trucks.Spend more now, so you could save more later? You're a car salesman dream. Might I offer you the undercoat protection package?
It's a joke, but seriously? Fuel savings, not getting your oil changed, it does add up (I've owned EV'S, hybrids and V8's alike), but asking somebody to see the payoff six or seven years later depending on their driving habits. Not to mention all the concessions made in between. Again you're assuming electricity prices exist in a vacuum along with credits. Do you know what you pay for kilowatt hour right now, do you think you're going to be paying that in five years? I would encourage you to read about the mark-up rate for electricity per kilowatt-hour on these third-party Chargers. One of the main reasons why third-party charging is just another racket, paying 200% (or more) per kilowatt-hour at a third-party chargers isn't something that's talked about the most first-time electric vehicle buyers.
I know it takes money to make money, but that's a hard sell for car buyers. Just imagine when the finance department sits you down and tries to show you a projected graph based on how much you drive and all these other factored in variables to justify why you're spending $20,000 more for your F-150. For some it does make sens with credits,100% at home charging, etc.
Also these credits? You think and you feel they should exist forever? More magic money out of thin air right, who pays those credits? Again that's not a good product strategy to rely on future credits, otherwise every new car would have a credit right?
Let me ask you why do you think credits exist in the first place, because they're trying to offset that out-of-pocket expense up front to get people to buy these cars. Secondly don't you think savvy companies like General Motors and Ford who lobbied for these credits aren't going to mark their product up accordingly knowing that that's how they're going to pitch a more expensive product to you? EV's were never any cheaper or more expensive then as they are now (Model S example). Or at least they shouldn't be, Ford. There shouldn't be any credits if the cost savings are there that you speak of, nor is the future of electric vehicles credit-based.
Again a great deal of EV cost savings are based on the premise the more you drive, the more you save, but at the same time you hear that most daily driving circumstances don't need more than a 200-mile range and the hypothetical cost savings shrink.
Electricity costs about $0.10/kwh here, which equates to about $0.04/mi at an efficiency of 2.5mi/kwh.
At $3.50/gal and 20mpg, an F150 costs about $0.18/mi, or $0.14/mi more. That's $2,100/yr for 15,000 miles. It's not hypothetical, it's black and white.
Even for the occasional time you need to use a public DCFC, that rate is still equivalent to about $0.14/mi.
Oil Changes x 4 equals $200/year. Brake replacement in five years is another $1,000. Those three things (fuel, oil, brakes) is $12,500 over five years, before accounting for any number of other mechanical service that will need to be done in the ICE version but not the EV version.
As the BBB is currently written, the Lightning will qualify for $12,500 in tax credits federally, and TX provides another $2,500, for a total of $15,000 off. This will be a point-of-sale credit in 2023, so you don't have to wait to file taxes, it's lopped off the top day 1.
So, a Lightning with an MSRP/Sale Price of $60k is actually $45k upfront, and $32,500 effective when comparing to the ICE version by a rational person.
There are hundreds of thousands of truck buyers every year that never tow or drive long distances regularly, and this is an easy sale. It will be done by the friend that already bought one, not the salesman in the dealership, because that salesman will be incentivized to sell the opposite to maintain service revenue for the dealership.
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