I've been looking at maybe getting a used RAV4 EV. I liked the one I saw a lot, but have to go back next week to drive it; I'm looking forward to that.
But the over-$20k price seems high for a car with no fast charge or warranty, and known issues with reliability and dealer support. I'm seeking to understand why this is and whether it will change soon.
Consider: the updated 2017 Ford Focus EV now offers 115 mi range and D.C. quick charge for $20k net of rebates. Similar price/specs for updated Leaf, Kia Soul EV, and soon the Hyundai Ioniq and updated VW eGolf too...for a brand new car with warranty and dealer support.
And the Chevy Bolt offers double the range for only a third more money.
(And another $8-10k and we're in shouting distance of a used Tesla, but I digress.)
I'd rather have the RAV4 than either---more room and power than the Focus, better stereo and seats than the Bolt---but I'd need to add $3-4 k for JdeMO quick charge, $1-2 k for Toyota or CarMax warranty, still not really be road trip capable, and still not know if I'd get the milling noise of death or if a dealer would fix it.
If Tony Williams' proposed extra battery pack kit were available right now, such that I could have a low-mile RAV4 EV upgraded to 60kWh-ish capacity, with JdeMO and warranty, for an all-in price similar to the net price of a base Bolt (assuming there's a bank willing to finance a used car for a third over its book value), then I'm just crazy enough that I'd totally do it. (The 115-mile cars are down on power, and the Bolt's a hoot but its seats are torture.) But he's said it will be a while before he can get to that project, and that leaves many unknowns...and meanwhile the number of RAV4 EVs on the road, the chances for hassle-free support for them, and, I assume, their value will decline.
As a lifelong fan of gutsy motors and station wagons (lifted or lowered, a wagon's a wagon), I'm trying to talk myself into it, but I dunno. It would certainly meet my strange desire for an obsessive automotive project, but I'm not sure that's a good thing when it's my daily driver/primary family car.
But the over-$20k price seems high for a car with no fast charge or warranty, and known issues with reliability and dealer support. I'm seeking to understand why this is and whether it will change soon.
Consider: the updated 2017 Ford Focus EV now offers 115 mi range and D.C. quick charge for $20k net of rebates. Similar price/specs for updated Leaf, Kia Soul EV, and soon the Hyundai Ioniq and updated VW eGolf too...for a brand new car with warranty and dealer support.
And the Chevy Bolt offers double the range for only a third more money.
(And another $8-10k and we're in shouting distance of a used Tesla, but I digress.)
I'd rather have the RAV4 than either---more room and power than the Focus, better stereo and seats than the Bolt---but I'd need to add $3-4 k for JdeMO quick charge, $1-2 k for Toyota or CarMax warranty, still not really be road trip capable, and still not know if I'd get the milling noise of death or if a dealer would fix it.
If Tony Williams' proposed extra battery pack kit were available right now, such that I could have a low-mile RAV4 EV upgraded to 60kWh-ish capacity, with JdeMO and warranty, for an all-in price similar to the net price of a base Bolt (assuming there's a bank willing to finance a used car for a third over its book value), then I'm just crazy enough that I'd totally do it. (The 115-mile cars are down on power, and the Bolt's a hoot but its seats are torture.) But he's said it will be a while before he can get to that project, and that leaves many unknowns...and meanwhile the number of RAV4 EVs on the road, the chances for hassle-free support for them, and, I assume, their value will decline.
As a lifelong fan of gutsy motors and station wagons (lifted or lowered, a wagon's a wagon), I'm trying to talk myself into it, but I dunno. It would certainly meet my strange desire for an obsessive automotive project, but I'm not sure that's a good thing when it's my daily driver/primary family car.