acensor
Well-known member
In an other thread i wrote...
"...I hate to admit it, but in ONE sense at least it has proven rather expensive to operate:
As a buyer rather than leaser, I like other buyers , have taken a huge hit on depreciation."
I've seen 2012 MiEVs about same age, milage, condition as mine i got in April 2013, that have come off lease selling for about $9000....and I'm into mine for about $18,000 evrn after my tax credit.
Don't get me wrong...
I love our MiEV. Although with hindsight I think I would have leased rather than purchased. Or with true psychic future sight maybe even have waited 2-3 years.
Hindsight is 2020, and in a sense moot...but it is interesting and can be useful in going forward.
So today if someone admires my car and expresses serious interest in getting into a new EV I generally recommend they look at the Chevy Spark and that they lease it.
I do NOT send them go hunt for a new MiEV. (I do suggest they might want to hunt for a used MiEV at a bargain price less than 10,000.)
I've driven a Spark EV. (Currently AFAIK still only available in Oregon and California, and selling very well, and unlike the MiEV was, being very aggressively promoted and sold by the Chevy dealership here.)
The spark is noticeably better at acceleration and top speed, has very significantly better range. That in turn means in my usage I would not have to be so hesitant to use the heater. And as far as I can tell the engineering is very well done.
Ironic that the guys who originally killed the electric car, may turn out to be a leader in EVs.
Today if shopping for a new EV, I would lease the spark. Then wait to see what's out there three years from now. Or I might wait for the Chevy Bolt. For the very few of you who don't know already that's "Bolt" not "volt.". The bolt is Chevys new 200 mile EV.
.....
So what might YOU do today if you didn't have your EV? Or if yiu could go back in time to the day you purchased?
What do you tell others who express any semi seroius interest in an EV or plugin hybrid?
"...I hate to admit it, but in ONE sense at least it has proven rather expensive to operate:
As a buyer rather than leaser, I like other buyers , have taken a huge hit on depreciation."
I've seen 2012 MiEVs about same age, milage, condition as mine i got in April 2013, that have come off lease selling for about $9000....and I'm into mine for about $18,000 evrn after my tax credit.
Don't get me wrong...
I love our MiEV. Although with hindsight I think I would have leased rather than purchased. Or with true psychic future sight maybe even have waited 2-3 years.
Hindsight is 2020, and in a sense moot...but it is interesting and can be useful in going forward.
So today if someone admires my car and expresses serious interest in getting into a new EV I generally recommend they look at the Chevy Spark and that they lease it.
I do NOT send them go hunt for a new MiEV. (I do suggest they might want to hunt for a used MiEV at a bargain price less than 10,000.)
I've driven a Spark EV. (Currently AFAIK still only available in Oregon and California, and selling very well, and unlike the MiEV was, being very aggressively promoted and sold by the Chevy dealership here.)
The spark is noticeably better at acceleration and top speed, has very significantly better range. That in turn means in my usage I would not have to be so hesitant to use the heater. And as far as I can tell the engineering is very well done.
Ironic that the guys who originally killed the electric car, may turn out to be a leader in EVs.
Today if shopping for a new EV, I would lease the spark. Then wait to see what's out there three years from now. Or I might wait for the Chevy Bolt. For the very few of you who don't know already that's "Bolt" not "volt.". The bolt is Chevys new 200 mile EV.
.....
So what might YOU do today if you didn't have your EV? Or if yiu could go back in time to the day you purchased?
What do you tell others who express any semi seroius interest in an EV or plugin hybrid?