Hello fellow Hackers who read News,<p>My wife and I are about done with our ICE cars that are both coincidentally reaching their end of life. We're thinking about trading in the cars and taking advantage of 2023 tax credits towards an EV or Plug-In Hybrid. My only reservation with going all-out on a full EV car is we like to road trip around the South (Ozarks, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, etc) and we live in a decently sized city the Midwest; we're not confident that our region and where we like to travel has a reliable charging network. A lot of opinions I've seen on Reddit, for example, seem to be mostly from people out West or North East where there are very strong charging networks.<p>EV and Plug-in Hybrid/Traditional Hybrid owners who drive around the Midwest and Rust belt, what do you think?<p>Also, I'm fine with encouraging a general discussion on the state of EV adoption in the US or elsewhere in 2023 because I know that will just naturally come up in child comments.<p>Please no flame wars on car preferences. Thank you and have a great day!
If you do a lot of short range commuting and have a way to charge it at home, a PHEV could work - but good luck trying to buy one right now.<p>Otherwise get a hybrid or Tesla, period. There are nice non-Tesla EV cars available but the charging infrastructure, even in high EV-density states, is unreliable. This should improve in the next 3-5 years but you can not currently depend on the chance of finding working CCS fast chargers to justify any non-Tesla option for road trips in many parts of the country. Also note that very few non-Tesla fully electric vehicles are currently eligible for the tax credit due to not being built in, or batteries sourced from, North America. Edit: [3]<p>I recently came back from a 1800 mile road trip across the central western USA in a Tesla Model Y and never had a moment of concern about the charging infrastructure, including rolling into a Supercharger at 4 AM with 2% state of charge and just knowing that it would work. There are definitely areas, mostly west of the Mississippi, with significant pockets without good Supercharger coverage[0] although with an adapter you can also charge Teslas at CCS stations or even at RV parks.<p>If you want to see how your situation might work, A Better Route Planner[1] and PlugShare[2] are good resources for being able to specify your car and route and see how an EV may work for you. But honestly, just get a Model Y Long Range with the full $7,500 tax credit and enjoy!<p>[0] <a href="https://www.tesla.com/findus?v=2&bounds=57.514620727135494%2C-47.257325406250004%2C16.54981615720707%2C-151.27588009375&zoom=5&filters=supercharger" rel="nofollow">https://www.tesla.com/findus?v=2&bounds=57.514620727135494%2...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://abetterrouteplanner.com/" rel="nofollow">https://abetterrouteplanner.com/</a><p>[2] <a href="https://www.plugshare.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.plugshare.com/</a><p>[3] <a href="https://fueleconomy.gov/feg/tax2023.shtml" rel="nofollow">https://fueleconomy.gov/feg/tax2023.shtml</a>
I don’t live in a fly over state but I do own a Ford Escape PHEV (probably the most affordable option for a PHEV). Range wise, a PHEV would go further than a typical ICE by a large margin. On a full tank, I can easily go 400 miles+ driving 75 mph+ for most of the drive. Mind you, I’m on a 11 gallon tank. If I stay local, I usually hit a combined 100 mpg. Which means with my electric and gas usage, I fill up my tank every 1K miles. I have free charging at work and it’s one way about 25 miles which means I almost never use gas for my work commute.<p>I think one thing people don’t talk enough about is how much increase quality of life the EV portion brings. Idling for a drive thru? Zero gas. Napping in your car during lunch when it’s 90 degrees outside? Well it’ll be a cool 70 inside your car with zero gas or engine noise. The driving feel of a PHEV is also significantly better, instant torque and the electric to engine crossover is so smooth that you don’t even notice it. Also regen break saves a ton. I was stuck in an unforeseen traffic jam for about 5 miles with stop and go traffic. I barely used more than 5 miles of electric range since regen recovered so much energy.<p>Edit: Almost forgot to mention the best part about having a hybrid or PHEV! There is no on/off engine that all new regular gas cars have.
I have driven 100k miles cross country in my 2018 Model S since 2018 and have never encountered a down supercharger (and primarily supercharge vs charging at one of my homes). It’s why we only buy Teslas (despite the shenanigans). YMMV. My friend with a Bolt doesn’t road trip after how hard it was to get it from where he bought it near DC down to Central Florida.<p>A plug in is a great compromise if you’re not ready to commit to a full EV and have range anxiety. The charging story will improve over time.<p><a href="https://supercharge.info/map" rel="nofollow">https://supercharge.info/map</a><p><a href="https://www.plugshare.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.plugshare.com/</a>
I live in the west so I won't comment on charging networks. However, I currently drive a PHEV, so leaving some thoughts more generally about things I learned when I started:<p>- EVs are most energy efficient at slower speeds (varies by temperature, but in my experience, in the range of 30-45 mph) whereas ICEs are most efficient at highway speeds (65 mph). The energy consumption at different speeds varies enough that in-car range estimates can be off by a lot.<p>- Some PHEVs can recharge the EV battery from the gas engine; others only can recharge the EV battery from being plugged in. Check before buying.<p>- Using heating / A/C will reduce EV range noticeably. This is much more noticeable than ICE (where heating will reuse heat from the engine, and A/C is powered by the alternator).<p>- The PHEVs I've seen don't support DC Fast Charging at all. You can only use L2 chargers or the provided (slower 110V) AC adapter.<p>- For an EV, DC Fast Charging plugs tend to lock for "safety". A malfunctioning charger can leave you stranded.<p>- Nobody seems to be selling new PHEV Sedans except Toyota (who released a new Prius Prime this year; not eligible for tax credit under new rules and its charger only goes 16A which is slow even for L2 but would be fine for overnight-charge-at-home-and-commute-to-work use). Honda and Hyundai discontinued PHEVs in 2021, 2022 respectively to focus on just selling EVs and ICEs.<p>- The tax credit rules changed for cars put into service after April 18th, 2023. Cars must "meet critical mineral and battery component requirements". In particular, certain Teslas are eligible again, only certain PHEVs (currently no sedans) meet the new requirements. [0][1]<p>[0] <a href="https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/credits-for-new-clean-vehicles-purchased-in-2023-or-after" rel="nofollow">https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/credits-for-new-clean...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://fueleconomy.gov/feg/tax2023.shtml" rel="nofollow">https://fueleconomy.gov/feg/tax2023.shtml</a>
You could probably get away with a Tesla no matter where you live in the U.S.<p>If you don’t like Teslas a PHEV makes a lot of sense. You will charge for most daily driving but still have the ability to road trip.<p>CCS charging networks are not there yet.
I live in a flyover state, bought a Tesla in 2020. In my area they’ve added barely any new Superchargers at all since I bought the car.<p>I’m sure it’s different in CA/TX/NY, but I’ve been really surprised at how stagnant the charging network has been. I would take a hard look at at the Supercharger network in your region as it exists today and assume that’s what exactly you’re going to have for the next 5 years. Don’t factor in future expansion.
A hybrid has no more range issues than a gas car.<p>Electric?<p>Depends on what one means by “road trip.”<p>One thing if a road trip is about A to B on interstates, and you like to stop awhile every few hours because it’s on the itinerary.<p>If a road trip is three digit state highways without much plan, that’s a different thing when it comes to electric vehicles.<p>Though I can see how finding chargers might be part of the adventure.<p>And I can see how finding chargers might bring up the subject of divorce.<p>All depends on how and why and where you travel.<p>Good luck.
If you’re going to road trip in an EV you have to plan out your charging in advance. Luckily there are apps for that, PlugShare in particular. You should have adapters so that your car can charge at RV parks. Charging will force you to stop which is both good and bad. It’s better if you can stop at interesting places. Again that takes planning.
Depends on the charging network your car has access to (CCS or Tesla), and how much pain your willing to put up with to charge (eg: is spending hours at a Level 2 6Kw charger acceptable?).<p>Perhaps another aspect to consider is whether you might go electric with one vehicle, and plug in hybrid with the other.
I can't speak on the Midwest charging network, but if you have any range-related concerns, I doubt you can go wrong with a '23 Toyota Prius Prime PHEV, getting 44 mile range on Electric-only and 550-600 mile range overall with 127 MPGe.
$15 bucks you live in KCMO.<p>If you are into Midwestern pride, I'd wait until Factory Zero opens and buy one of the GM electrics. Can't get more homegrown than Detroit, and by then the CCS chargers at Walmart will have opened.
Are getting two new cars or trading both in against one new one?<p>If two then one EV and one PHEV might make sense as you could skimp on the battery a little.