I've known several EV owners... the first 3 or 4 years they praise and think their electric vehicle is wonderful. After the warranty ends in 3 to 4 years the vehicle begins needing repairs which on average is more expensive than regular vehicles... at this point these EV owners stop bragging. If the vehicle breaks down when traveling that's the real eye opener because no small town can help them... their vehicle will need to be towed to a major city which damages the vacation. This is when the EV owners begin complaining to others about their electric vehicle. The biggest pain the EV owners feel is when they try selling their used EV realizing the gas vehicles maintain their value better... this means they pay more at first for new EV and receive less when selling the used EV vehicle. And those battery fires which might burn up the entire vehicle... who wants to lose all their camping gear or luggage or other supplies because the battery fire destroyed everything.
I own a truck repair shop, I made this argument about the Tesla Semi. All the fanboys claim that it isn't going to break because it doesn't have a "complex" diesel engine. Well the facts are that most of the repairs I get in my shop are not engine repairs. There is still the rest of the truck, suspension, steering, lights, air brake systems, heating and air conditioning, door latches and thousands of other stuff to break. Tesla can't even supply parts to repair it's cars. No way am I going to be able to get what I need to fix the Semi
Modern internal combustion engines from reputable manufacturers all but don't fail. It's all the ancillary stuff that packs up. And all of that ancillary stuff is in any vehicle, be it a '63 Beetle, W whatever Kenworth or a Tesla. OK, I'm not a heavy vehicle operator, but in 35 years of driving cars, the only major failure that I've had in relation to an engine is a failed head gasket on a W203 Mercedes. And my experience seems to be pretty normal. Yes, of course, if you're racing cars or bikes, you'll blow them up, but a "normal", "boring" car will wear out well and truly before the engine dies.
Yea, I went to trade school for auto/diesel. I started out working in a suspension shop. Made leaf springs from flat spring steel stock, etc. I did this because I figured the one thing that will "always be" on vehicles is, where it meets the road. My thought being, until they make them hover, a suspension "problem" will Always need fixed. 👍✌️
The Tesla semi truck is a joke. The companies that run them (Pepsi & Lays) make the drivers sign a lengthy NDA with loads of "or else" clauses. The truck gets about 1/2 the claimed distance. The companies had to drop millions into multi-megawatt 1600 VDC chargers they can only use during off peak hours.
@@cd0999 yeah, I worked for a sign shop. Big crane trucks. A local propane company paid us to convert 5 of our vehicles over to propane burners. Biggest mistake the company ever made. You can't beat diesel power. You just can't, yet.
I think most of this is a manufacturer's fault. I'd like to see them design so you can do an emergency drop on the battery in case of fire. Are there electric vehicles don't seem to have that many problems Nev s golf carts, grocery carts, I guess we'll have to wait for the hydrogen fuel cell Electric vehicles. What is shame gas cars have gotten ridiculously expensive to repair in no small part to what mechanics are getting and they're not even licensed in most States. Seems like the entirety of the car business is based on extreme greed incompetence disregard for the customer
@ncode03 NOT TRUE !!!!!⛔️⛔️⛔️ Designs change ,things become obsolete . I have several items , from Makita drills to vacuum cleaners etc , all fit for landfill only , as the batteries are OBSOLETE ! The products are FINE !
They mentioned the lack of technicians, especially in rural areas, and lack of suitable charging stations in metropolitan areas. I live in a rural area, and the nearest changing station to me is is 30 miles (48km) and the nearest dealer/service center is 65 miles (104km) away. One other thing that is rarely mentioned is due the EVs being substantially heavier than a gas powered vehicle is that tires wear out much more quickly. The average 50/60 thousand mile tires will only last 25 thousand if not less.
Rubbish I drove a toyota prius for the last three years of a 20 year taxi driving career and they didn't suffer from any excessive tyre wear - they suffered the same types of mechanical failures as every other vehicle does - flat batteries, blown light bulb, occasional flat tyre and other mostly minor repairs The biggest problem is the electricals are far too costly to repair - To fix the front end of a priyus was around AUS$15000 so the insurance companies decided to write them off rather than repair them
@@evangiles4403 Toyota prius not really all that much hevier than ICE as the battery is pretty small. It's the Full EV's and new drivers I thnik that love to floor it off the light that causes premature ware As Big Trucks are heavy and those tires seem to be ok but don't race off the light.
I don’t know of anyone who wants to work on an EV. I know of young people who are training or recently trained to be mechanics.- none of them want to work on evs. In fact one left because his employer - who had just finished getting them trained - insisted they go and get training for EV’s. Apparently they were not the only technician (mechanic) to leave!
@@suecharnock9369I have been driving Nissan leaf for the past 11 years, got into multiple accidents, never have problems to get it fixed in third party body shops and service centers, didn’t even need to visit dealer.
Low battery issues just like computers in gas cars to malfunction ,what happens if your EV has a low battery and goes into Packman mode and the self driving software starts running people over ,wakawakawaka!
It’s not that dangerous. I’m an electrician. There are clear SOP’s for disconnecting and isolating the battery. There is more Danger in you changing an outlet than working on an ev
@@TRcommanderif they were that much better we would already be using them. The only thing I trust less than a tech bro or yay science person is the Chinese government
I put 190k on my 1.2L petrol car from new, it's still going strong and the most expensive repairs were the timing chain that set me back around £350. Currently changing oil and filter every 3-5000 miles. The car is 19 years old and fun to maintain.
I was driving down the onramp leading to the freeway, it was a very sharp bend and I did not see the large rock that an earlier truck had somehow lost from his load. My Honda Civic only had 6" of ground clearance and the rock was 9" high. My car skidded right over it, and caused a massive scratch under my car, but nothing needed repairing/replacing. Do the same with an electric car and the battery will need replacing and that usually cost more than the car cost new.
If it doesn't explode, catch fire, lock you inside and or careen out of control. Just saw a quickly tarnishing Tesla Truck, barreling down 8mi. Laugh Every time I see it. Looks even worse with the staining, rusting, corrosion on the exterior. The front light bar is so tacky, it doesn't require fasteners.
@@Cakebatteredbecause of the repair costs of EV all insurances went up everywhere. My insurance almost double from last year and we had no accident. In England insurance went up even 10 yimes for EV
@@Cakebattered And my insurance will go up for it ! Nothing personal but why should my Insurance premium go up to pay for your electric toy ? This BS Govt Manipulation has Got to STOP. Speaking with my VOTE. Sadly California is a lost cause.
Sensors are made cheap and fail and there are interferences. My dash lights go off when going under a bridge and the lights come back on when driving back in the sun. I never know if the airbag will explode. 40K miles and the fuel pump hesitates. Good luck getting toyota to listen and the dealers are crooks. Not in recall is a scam.
😂 there are manual latches on the doors. Please inform your self before hating. Sit in the car. There are electric openers but also manual ones. We can meet in germany I can show you
@@marcbeebee6969 but does everyone know that or read the manuals witch are not included with lots of things anymore now you have to do emergency training to exit a car like a crashed airplane
@@ford351w83 its commen sense if you cant find them dont drive a car. Dont give me that sh**. I am german i have no patience for your tik tok view of world...
@@ford351w83 in a tesla the manual is digital on the screen. You can search doors. You need a more detailed description or did you see a school from the inside once before? Even the people in the ghetto know this. Reflect mate
@@ford351w83 you could never Drive German cars in the past twenty years without reading the manual. Cars are a complicated high investment you can take a hour to read the manual or you are not worthy.
465,000 miles on my V8 2003 Mercury Marquis. Less than $700 in repairs since new. Still runs and drives like new, and yes, I am only getting 14 mpg city/25 hwy, but I don't care.. keep your EV, I'll keep my V8 gas car.....
“Complexity for EV repairs” is a bit of a euphemism. The reality is “danger of EV repairs.” Small damage to the batteries can lead to thermal runaway days or weeks later, causing an extremely hot fire with toxic smoke, which will destroy anything nearby, even buildings.
Most likely what most mechanics are thinking: "Do I take a risk getting electrocuted or burning my garage" or "Do I play safe and tell the customer I don't work with EVs". The choice is obvious...
nah, they wont "build up" in lots... mainly as they have this nifty "self deleting" mode... can activate at any time... leaving an empty barren wasteland, neatly cleared.
. Even Joe Biden is getting away from the EV push he once had, his administration is going to push hybrids now . The Democrats have learned mentioning *"**#EVs**"* hurts him on the campaign trail !❗️!
Justin's already making money off it petrocan charging stations already being installed ,most expensive than all the other double on some other chargers wonder if he voted on any infrastructure funding for those ,I smell a rat and his name is Justin.
Why do those EV cars need software that always seems to fail? Cant they just build a simple EV that you turn a key that connects the power and off you go, like a large golf cart? Just make them simple and affordable and lots of people would buy them simple as that! instead they worry about having self drive, GPS screens, internet connection, blue tooth, voice command, electric door locks, power seats and other electronic gizmos, large digital dash display all the things that require miles of extra wiring along with too many sensors and computer boards that can fail, Cars like a Honda Fit, Chevy Spark, Toyota Yaris are small cars that have little or no sophisticated electronics or luxuries and they sell , You can hardly find any of those cars for sale, even a cheap EV with only a 150 mile range would sell lots of them, There are millions of people out there that dont drive a lot of miles everyday but need basic transportation like kids driving to high school every day , people that need a second car to run local errands, That was basically the idea of the original VW beetle make a vehicle that is basic transportation cheap enough for anybody to afford, They can always build 100,000 dollar pickup trucks later
SCOTUS striking down Chevron this year and effectively castrating the EPA could actually save the domestic auto market if they are no longer held to ridiculous standards
It’s like a cellphone. You need constant updates so the company can monitor and disable your device when they want you back in the showroom. I have never owned a cellphone for more than 3 or 4 years before it mysteriously died. My wife has an iPad going on 8 years now-never connected to a service. She only uses it with the house WiFi. Never a problem. Never cried to be updated. Battery lasts for days.
One major problem. Any computer that's sits in an controlled environment ok. Put a computer in a box drive around hot cold wet damp dry plus shook around on disgusting roads, it ain't good .
@@brianwhite6616 I was watching a documentary about this not too long ago. The narrator was talking about how electronics occasionally freeze -like your cable box, blue circle on your phone or computer. What happens when the electronics on the car freeze at a critical moment?
They are getting rid of many Tesla repair technicians. I know one that is highly skilled and was let go a week ago. They told him there is not a market for the car repairs. I guess they are just totalling the vehicles after minor or semi severe damage.
From what I've heard many EVs are getting totaled simply for having scratches on the battery covers. No intrusion into the battery compartment, just surface scratches...
Only five hours at slow chargers. My model y home charger charges at night at 45 miles per hour. At a Tesla supercharger charging takes about fifteen minutes.
Only because of their cheap design, lack of engineering, and drive for the all mighty dollar no matter the cost the cost being your car, your home, your life. I beleived in all the Hype initially of simple electric cars built to be Simple & bullet proof, alas with all the frail poorly deisgned gadgets. The lies started on day 1 and continues on to this day. I am glad they are expensive as they should be. I hope the Early Adoptors really loose their asses on this. What a Joke. Get Govt OUT ! People are so lazy and refuse to get their hands dirty or learn anything. Like how a spair wheel and Jack is really needed. How Dumb do you have to be. Lets go on a drive with no steering wheel !
They just don't make any sense. Their environmental credentials are at best highly questionable, they are proven to be expensive to buy, repair, insure and require more maintenance than most like to admit and the constant updating of new models adds to the already frightening rate of depreciation. The only thing about them which might be engaging for a while might be the rapid low-speed acceleration but the fun of that would wear off pretty quickly leaving you with a characterless, expensive commodity. They are effectively a lesson in how to blow large amounts of money very quickly with little enjoyment or pleasure in return.
Charge at home on off peak hours, don't have a long way to drive each day so you're always within it's range, buy used after it's hugely depreciated, sell after a year and get your money back. Then repeat yearly. Now you have a very low maintenance and running vehicle that doesn't depreciate. People just don't analyze situations very well.
There was no information available when the first EV’s were released. The only information available was what was fed to us by ev manufacturers. That held out the pro is that by the time support was needed it would be there.
Electronics can be easily manipulated or programmed exactly when to fail. That’s why older cars lasted. My 1974 Cadillac was a carburetor, engine, transmission, drive line, rear end-period! Electronic Nothing! If I was good at body work, I would probably still be driving that car today!
My 2023 Model S catastrophically failed after 5k miles. Rear drive unit failed and caused the whole car to shut down. Who builds a car with 2 separate drive units but can’t make it keep going when one fails? That means you don’t have redundancy and instead have double the chance of being stranded. Horrible engineering and design. Took 3 weeks to fix. Sold it within 1 week of it being fixed. My life and my family’s lives are too valuable to save a few pennies on gasoline.
A catastrophic failure might lock the drive axle so the other drive unit won't help you. I think the tesla drives have had its share of problems but are relatively simple, compact systems. Probably bad manufacturing.
I own a 2000 KTM electric dirt bike and a 2022 Chevy Bolt. I bought the Bolt because the KTM was the first dirt bike I have ever had that I didn't have to do constant maintenance on. Now it's 4.5 years old and the only parts I have had to buy are those I knocked off of it hitting trees. My Bolt's first "service" is at 150,000 miles! Of course my Bolt is not my only car. I NEVER intend to travel in it, but for an around town commuter car, I think it's the best car out there. It saves me tons of money. My battery is warrantied for 8 years. If I do have to buy a battery (which is unlikely) , that cost compared to maintenance on my ICE cars will be acceptable, but I don't expect that to happen. I was a Honda technician from 1971 until 2009. I'm retired now but have a shop here at home and probably work harder than when I was in dealerships. BTW, I also hold a U.S. patent on a free valve design for ICE energy transfer units. That's got to be the next big step for ICE. Keep an open mind.
I have towed a few of those EV bikes out of the desert, when they thought they would just keep going LOL for me i have extra gas easily stored those EV bikes are just dead weight
Nothing wrong with a blower as long as you don't beat the car. But if you need it just to move the car, it's junk. I bought my wife a new Renegade and instead of that pop bottle Turbo 1.3 they all have, (even the Trail Hawk) I drove out 150 miles, and got their "big" naturally aspirated 2.4 with the ZF 9 speed automatic. It's a very well built modern low RPM engine and it takes absolutely no effort for it to run the truck around, which is a surprise considering its size. But my 6 cylinder Pentastar is like that. She's also coupled with a full blown U-Connect system complete with NAV. The pop bottle would have to sound like a jet engine, all the time, to do the same thing. Best move I could've made. And we've had it 5 years now without so much as a check engine light. A really nice little Jeep.
How much computer use can there possibly be in an EV? A motor and a speed controller was all experimenters needed decades ago. But the enormous problem I've been asking is where all the chargers are. They're rare from what I've seen, and non existent at lodgings which means you can't travel overnight with an EV. A third of the U.S. population can't even charge at home because they live in rental property with no hope of installing a charger.
My GF was really pissed at Tesla as she had a problem while charging and could not get a support person to help time was 3:00 PST. Problem was related to a update by Tesla which changed the AMP setting to the original charge rate of 34. I had set to 24 amps. At the 34 amp setting it fried the wires. Fortunatly it did not cause a house fire. I did the repair and she rest the the charge rate to 24 amps. Tesla updates should not touch the charge settings.
Buy a Toyota for the same price cost to own car is payments and insurance. That doesn't change electric or gas cars. Drive a Toyota 400 miles, and take 10 minutes to refill and drive another 400 miles. Gasoline and oil changes are much cheaper and the cost of repairs can be done at thousands of repair shops. Toyota can get 200,000 miles if oil changes and air filters serviced.
Newest Toyotas are crap. Toyota got complacent and started mak8ng crap in the early 2000,. I had a 2004 4Runner and it ran fine for the first 30,000 miles, then everything started breaking and malfunctioning one after another. Factory radio/CD player fried, the dashboard fried, the center console info center, blinking in and off. Center diff gasket leaked, rear wheel bearings gone, after $3,600 of out of pocket costs, I got rid of the damned POS. I had purchased the sergice plan to it was in the dealer getting oil and filter changes right on the button. Never Toyota again. I bought a 2017 Ford F250 6.7 diesel years later and it has been very reliable and durable. 116,000 miles on it with just a few minor issues that got fixed right away. Never left me stranded. Hell with Toyota. Has anyone reqd about thr engine gunking issues? Thousands of Toyotas woth engine gunk and they claim it was from lack of oil changes. Customers with receipts showing all oil changes done at thr dealer! Then came thr frame rusting with people losing e tire front ends when thr frame crumbled into dust and the front axle slammed into thr ground. It cost Toyota $3 BILLION to settle th3 class action lawsuit to repair or replace the frames. This was after Toyota kept denying there was a problem and pushing people away until the frames cracked. Toyota makes junk now.
I'm at 336,000 miles, going strong in my 2011 4x4 RAV 4 four cylinder that still averages just under 25 mpg city/highway. I off road it quite a bit and knocked all of the plastic skid "plates" where an expensive battery would be if it were an electric. Picked them up an tossed them back in the car, no expensive repair needed. BTW it's paid off and good for another 100,000 miles. I like the idea of electric vehicles, my finances do not.
I'm sticking with old school cars with an engine. With a traditional car, the engine if properly maintained will last you for about 15 to 30 years. And if it's a Japanese car then it's going to last you for a very very long time. However, with a battery operated car, after about 5:00 to 6:00 or 7 years, you need to change out the battery and that is a very costly purchase and procedure. And the people that replace it have to be tech savvy. Because it requires someone with the knowledge of how to do it and not a mechanic
Insurance companies don't have a long term record on EVs. Once they have a ten year history on the actual cost of EV failure, these cars will become uninsurable, when this finally happens the whole EV market will collapse.
$.05 cost per mile for electricity vs $.25 per mile cost for gas alone. Also, no oil changes, tune ups, stolen catalytic converters. Eight year battery warranty. Many Tesla fleet vehicles 250,000 miles on original battery.
Electrical problems in cars have always been among the most expensive. Was there any program for training EV mechanics? All mechanics are in short supply at the moment. Software issues are getting to be major problems for all vehicles.
All of these are good arguments and yet you left out the big four: Range anxiety as these vehicles don't go very far and the battery degrades a little bit each year so you get less range than advertised. Weak infrastructure, there aren't enough charging stations, and of the ones that are there half of the units don't work unless you're at a Tesla station. And thirdly, the rare earth chemicals needed to make the batteries are in short Supply and are very expensive. People need to wake up and face reality. EVS are a fail. The best solution is a hybrid that can plug in and get about 70 Mi of range on the battery. Contrary to what climate cultists suppose, there's not enough power in the power grid to supply energy to run Vehicles if a large portion of the population has EVS, and keep in mind that fossil fuels power the power plants! Ps. As a former Tesla Model 3 owner I will never get another one .
I agree but I'm reading that the Hybrid's are just as troublesome as the EV's=same difference just gives you a second chance when the battery fails then they drive it to perdition on Gas~!!!
YEP, Toyota went with Hydrogen Fuel Cell instead with the Mirai. Guess what, only a few Hydrogen stations in S California and less in N California. I saw only one Mirai (of a friend) so far, but many many Tesla around me every day, count more than 20 in my neighborhood.
I don't think anybody is going to take an old car battery and use it in a multi million battery storage solution... The insurance company would not allow that...
@@humming-birdaerialimaging682I get what you're trying to say...but I also know you know what the original post is saying, and that this isn't a real answer.
I don't get it. The electric motor is very simple and reliable thing which should last around forever. Why it is expensive to repair EV? I get the batery, but the rest must be same or cheaper.
They still have a lot more going on than one would think. They still have coolant and brake fluid. And a tone of computer modules on board and sensors. Everything else will break around the motor and cost more than the car is worth. It’s the automotive industry. They don’t make money by selling long lasting vehicles.
Because of all the electronic gadgets and safety equipment. Take the toyota hilux champ truck they sell at 10.000 bucks and still make a profit. The western world painted itself in a corner with ridiculous high safety standards. The only thing you really need are driver and passenger side airbags and seat belts but our governments require all those ridiculous gadgets and electronic assistants that drive up the price and make it near impossible to fix your car.
Some people have obvoiusly given up fixing anything by the looks of it. We just lost a car dealership in our community. Now there is only Ford. The neareset one is 100 km away. It's really weird. Anyway, we're saving for a horse and buggy.
Agree. This green movement is one big hoax. I am for conserving the environment but not into the extreme environmentalism I see nowadays that is not really about conservation and lessening different kinds of pollution, but more about social engineering. Plus, carbon dioxide is not as bad as what these extremists portray it to be because of symbiosis. Plants need CO2 and yet they are fine with chopping off forests for their solar and wind farms and also for battery factories. Hypocrites and liars, all of them esp when they are censoring real scientists with an opposing narrative backed by evidence.
@@futurefirm No he is not. You clearly do not know what a conservative is. Elon Musk has described himself as a "moderate" and a "registered independent. He has also expressed libertarian views, believing that the government should rarely impose its will upon the people.
@@JohnSmith-ug5ciI know for a fact, he has agreed to donate 45 millions dollars a month to traitor trump using money he has conned from Tesla owners. That is proof enough for me. He is a CONservative in my book.
@@JohnSmith-ug5ci Nope, he has agreed to donate 45million a month to treasonous trump and has benefitted from that ill-gotten money by conning Tesla owners. That makes him a CONservative in my book.
Electric vehicles are a nightmare to maintain, ev manufacturers must take more responsibility in repairing EVs , every town and city must have several repair shops , they also must have as many charging stations as many as gas stations, I shouldn’t drive more than a couple of blocks to find a charging station. For a small amount as little as 100 per month a manufacturer must guarantee the battery for life. If an ev catches on fire the manufacturer must replace that vehicle, in extreme temperatures a battery mustn’t lose more than 1% a week , let’s assume tomorrow 90% of the cars on the road are electric, with number of charging stations unchanged, waiting time in these charging stations would take all day to charge the numbers of cars waiting to charge would be in the hundreds, and the cost to charge would be prohibitive not to mention blackouts in every city and town, this project is forced on us by impulse without adequate planning.
This is why you need a free market economy. Politicians, ideologues and corporate subsidy grifters have created and legislated this plague upon consumers. They have been paid handsomely by disenfranchised taxpayers. A market economy bankrupts/ends products with much smaller flaws.
@@MarceloGarcia9...and it punished the people responsible through lost credibility and discontinued contracts, such a Chipolte abandoning the fellows who gave them salmonella-contaminated food. More often government-corpoate collusion just causes more of such abuses to get covered up or even subsidized, as in the case of companies putting toxic additives in our food, a fact hardly considered by congressman or reported by corporate news. With such a track record, I daresay the free-market approach is still superior.
We have a 2007 Prius and a 2010 Prius. Both have been running great, no major repairs, 50 miles per gallon, nearly 500 mile range on a tankful. Agree with the comments about insufficient capacity for transportation system to handle large percentage of EVs. Not enough charging stations, takes too long to charge, and not enough energy on the grid to get it done even if those 2 problems were solved.
Replying to @markfrank187: "nearly 500 mile range on a tankful" of WHAT?? 1) pizza sauce? 2) shampoo? 3) baby oil? 4) veg oil? I GET IT NOW!! GASOLINE!!!!
60 percent do not read at a normally level. hard to train the uneducated. I turn my own wrench and finding a good mechanic is hard nowadays. I mean the kind with passion for their craft.
Create the infrastructure and then try to sell the product. The world is nowhere near ready for this. They need to be introduced much more slowly so they can evolve in a way that the problems can be overcome in an ordered and planned way.
The simpler a vehicle is the more reliable it is .My 97 year old single speed bicycle is testament to this. It let me down once when it had a puncture .It cost 7 shillings and sixpence when it was new, and I recently turned down an offer of £2000 for it. it costs pennys a year to run and in its lifetime has cost the price of a spanner a screwdriver and maybe 3 cans of oil for all the services it has had, EVER.I'm reasonable shure it will last the rest of my life then it will become the property of one of my grand children and last the the rest of their lives as well.
Another thing - our electrical grid is already stressed , and they want to dump millions of EVs onto the grid in addition to all of the existing everyday power demands? It won't wok, it just won't.
One EV fire required 50000 gallons of water to put out the fire. Several diesel powered water tanker trucks were used to haul the water to the fire scene.
These exact same arguments were made when the world switched from ice (frozen water) to refrigeration for food storage, we all know the winner of that contest. Markets adapt, the world goes on. I’m not a greenie but I am an engineer who enjoys repairing Tesla model 3s, I own 3 of them which I purchased very inexpensively and repaired myself using parts from my local service center. Great cars, fun and very inexpensive to drive.
I'm reminded of the FYX "don't miss out on the next big thing" commercial for the super bowl. How did that turn out. I don't know nor care how things work out for EVs in the long term, but for the love of personal finance, stop dismissing reasonable concerns over the latest big thing by pointing to the relative handful of successful inventions over history while ignoring the mountains of duds.
Too many bells and whistles. An EV should be dead-nuts reliable compared to a gasoline vehicle. Think about it: no fuel system, no ignition system, no engine cooling system, no exhaust or evap systems, no catalytic converter, no pressurized engine oil system, no transmission -- all provided the vehicle is designed properly, of course. The motor has essentially one moving part, and the solid-state motor drive has zero. Not much to go wrong, really. But, no...everything has to be grossly over-designed with useless or near-useless features, until it's unreliable and expensive to fix. If the EV industry concentrates on getting a vehicle from point A to point B and back, without the frills, then EVs may become successful in the long run.
The "stark reality" I've experienced in my BMW I3 is 4¢ per mile fueling cost, around 2.6¢ maintenance and repair. The only action needed in 114,000 miles which could be called a "repair" has been replacement of the VRLA 12 volt battery, it cost $122 at NAPA Auto Parts and I replaced it myself. The record shows the only cheaper way to get there is by bicycle, or walking.
The problem with both sides of this argument is there are always some of the user population that has a different experience with the same product. Your good experience is countered by the next person whose I3 was horrible for them. Same for ICE vehicles, there are people posting here about Camry’s but my experience with a Camry was bad because the engine blew up. Reality is the blue book reliability data for EV’s isn’t any better then ICE cars, its out there for all of us to look at. The point of this video (i think) is that EVs have not lived up to the hype about being better to repair.
Got a 2007 crv with 200,000 miles plus! Still going except for AC blowing hot air. It still takes me from point A to B. I just have to endure the hot summer heat but bearable with a fan for now. I can't complain too much.
What sort of government would actually force these expensive throw away monstrosities on its citizens? If we can't make our own choices, then privately owned vehicles will become a luxury for just a few wealthy people after 2035.
@@gefleigh4264 If that happens, the economy will collapse. EV mandates are unenforceable and unworkable. But as usual, the politicians failed to do their homework because it was more important for them to virtue signal and appear to be champions of the environment, and to be greener than anyone else on the planet.
I have a Peugeot 1.6 diesel, 2016 model estate, It does a minimum of 80mpg and 100mpg on a run, fully loaded with 4 adults. Why in the name of insanity would I want to switch to an EV???
I think that the only thing we miss is a EV car repair shop or have in the current repair shops a person, that can deal with a EV problem. Most of the parts are the same for EV/petrol cars, and for the battery, high voltage system and electric motor you need a specialist. So it could be a good business plan to have car repair shop that can handle EVs... All current cars are full of electronic systems, matrix lights, with modern CPUs to hande all the displays and software, etc. If somebody wants an easy and cheap to repair car, he should stay with 10 years old car...
Well, good for you. I am a retired heavy equipment mechanic, and I will NEVER EVER buy an EV!!!!! I work on all of my vehicles, and I understand them. I also live in the country in southeastern Idaho. No chargers near me, especially when I travel the roads less traveled, which I do a lot. I have an 02 Jeep Cherokee with 260,000 miles on it, a 2009 Dodge diesel 2500 pickup, and a 1923 Model T Ford "T Bucket" that I built from scratch. EVs are not the answer. The power grid of the USA would need to be DOUBLED to have enough power to charge millions of battery packs. Car manufacturers are loosing tons of money on these EVs. The vast majority of the population wants nothing to do with them. It is ok with me if you own/operate your EV. Why is it not ok if I stick to gasoline/diesel vehicles?
@@rp9674 So, we are in agreement! I do not have to buy an overpriced battery operated scooter. That is good for me. As far as the environment is concerned, it is real smoky here due to California being on fire. Since your EV needs no oxygen to operate, that leaves more for my 3 internal combustion vehicles to use. Great, because my big block Chevy engine in my T Bucket needs lots of air. My Dodge diesel 2500 4x4 long bed crew cab also uses quite a bit of oxygen. My 450 horses need to breathe. It is so nice of you to give me your unused oxygen. Thanks.
@@rp9674 Thanks, I will. I am going on a little trip tomorrow, about 600 miles. Sort of beyond EV range limits. I would have massive range anxiety if I owned an EV. I suppose if I could charge at home and had a reasonable commute to work, it would work. I am retired now, so no commute. I use to have to commute 120 miles round trip every day in the summer. I could not ride the crew buss because I always had overtime. I was younger then, it would kill me to do that now. Thanks for the civil chat. Like I said, I have an E Bike, and my better half has one too. We both love them. We still peddle, but the battery assist is wonderful.
In twenty years of owning an IC car, I only had two problems with the engine or gearbox. Didn't stop me from having other problems and visiting a mechanic once or twice per year.
I'm so delighted to see the EV fad circling the drain, and I was never buying one of those things, I love my V6 Accord. The video should have also covered the charging issues, and the billions Biden spent on charger stations and only a few were ever built, and then too the copper thieves cutting off the charging cables to sell the copper.
People were laughing at me when these cars first came out I was mentioning the cost and down time for repairs was going to financially take out a the owner..I also said that in the long run the electric car will not make the distance and the weather changes effects the performance of these vehicles...fast forward some of the people that own one are getting rid of them and going back to combustion vehicles
i remember a guy in the bay area in the 70,s made the news when he took a lawn mower engine and an electric motor with 5 or 6 car alternators one big fan belt and some car batteries in an old car and i think he was getting like 100 miles a gallon from the lawn mower engine keeping batteries charged and drove it for years
It varies from car to car, Teslas are like one off sports cars, like audis, etc. But the Hyundai ioniq ev uses pretty much every part they can from their hybrid and ice models, and doing that keeps the cost of parts down, and the older nissan leafs are super simple, and easy to work on. The cost of repairs on evs are a compound of issues, everything from auto manufactures making cars in general more difficult to work on, to them making their EVs with all one off custom parts that they cant use on any other model car. As a demonstration, go look at the cost to repair a Tesla door handle compared to any other EV (such as a older hyundai Ioniq). Maybe it sounds like im saying its not as bad as it is, i think rn it isn't, but its just going to get worse unless right to repair gets traction.
Its like EV are following the cellphone model, something wrong, throw it away and buy a new one. So much for helping the environment.
Exactly.
Boneyards are going to be full of these things.
Sir you got it.
@@aheimdahl5201 Here they don't want them because it's way too expensive to deal with the highly toxic batteries.
@@totallyjonesin I agree.
IMO the battery tech just isn't there yet.
And don't get me started on the battery replacement costs.
I've known several EV owners... the first 3 or 4 years they praise and think their electric vehicle is wonderful. After the warranty ends in 3 to 4 years the vehicle begins needing repairs which on average is more expensive than regular vehicles... at this point these EV owners stop bragging. If the vehicle breaks down when traveling that's the real eye opener because no small town can help them... their vehicle will need to be towed to a major city which damages the vacation. This is when the EV owners begin complaining to others about their electric vehicle. The biggest pain the EV owners feel is when they try selling their used EV realizing the gas vehicles maintain their value better... this means they pay more at first for new EV and receive less when selling the used EV vehicle.
And those battery fires which might burn up the entire vehicle... who wants to lose all their camping gear or luggage or other supplies because the battery fire destroyed everything.
I own a truck repair shop, I made this argument about the Tesla Semi. All the fanboys claim that it isn't going to break because it doesn't have a "complex" diesel engine. Well the facts are that most of the repairs I get in my shop are not engine repairs. There is still the rest of the truck, suspension, steering, lights, air brake systems, heating and air conditioning, door latches and thousands of other stuff to break. Tesla can't even supply parts to repair it's cars. No way am I going to be able to get what I need to fix the Semi
Modern internal combustion engines from reputable manufacturers all but don't fail. It's all the ancillary stuff that packs up. And all of that ancillary stuff is in any vehicle, be it a '63 Beetle, W whatever Kenworth or a Tesla. OK, I'm not a heavy vehicle operator, but in 35 years of driving cars, the only major failure that I've had in relation to an engine is a failed head gasket on a W203 Mercedes. And my experience seems to be pretty normal. Yes, of course, if you're racing cars or bikes, you'll blow them up, but a "normal", "boring" car will wear out well and truly before the engine dies.
Yea, I went to trade school for auto/diesel. I started out working in a suspension shop. Made leaf springs from flat spring steel stock, etc. I did this because I figured the one thing that will "always be" on vehicles is, where it meets the road. My thought being, until they make them hover, a suspension "problem" will Always need fixed. 👍✌️
The Tesla semi truck is a joke. The companies that run them (Pepsi & Lays) make the drivers sign a lengthy NDA with loads of "or else" clauses.
The truck gets about 1/2 the claimed distance. The companies had to drop millions into multi-megawatt 1600 VDC chargers they can only use during off peak hours.
@@cd0999 yeah, I worked for a sign shop. Big crane trucks. A local propane company paid us to convert 5 of our vehicles over to propane burners. Biggest mistake the company ever made. You can't beat diesel power. You just can't, yet.
Never will.@@leegoddard2618
Yep those ev are sure great for the environment when so many are being retired so quickly
more toxic land fill
Never mind the manufacturing environmental costs!
Exactly!!!
@@chriscunnane7596 DITTO!
Elon Musk is trash
How funny when a Tesla emergency repair engineer shows up in a dieselpowered van at the roadside 😂😂😂
Sometimes those vehicles gotta go long distances, the specialized mechanics can not be worried about *"Range_Anxiety"* .
Yep, EVs sucks.
I think most of this is a manufacturer's fault. I'd like to see them design so you can do an emergency drop on the battery in case of fire. Are there electric vehicles don't seem to have that many problems
Nev s golf carts, grocery carts, I guess we'll have to wait for the hydrogen fuel cell
Electric vehicles. What is shame gas cars have gotten ridiculously expensive to repair in no small part to what mechanics are getting and they're not even licensed in most States. Seems like the entirety of the car business is based on extreme greed incompetence disregard for the customer
That's the wakeup call.
@@paulwitmer7138 it's been like this for 20 years now, good morning, sweet prince.
LMFAO!!! Pretty Ironic isnt it. Hahah
A throw-away car. Guess they didn't think about how to dispose of these junk cars.
Doesn't very environmentally friendly.
And carbon fiber ,and lithium ion batteries are NOT RECYCLEABLE
@@georgevavoulis4758 Not true. Lithium easily recyclable. Very profitable to recycle.
I hear if you bury a EV a duracel battery tree will grow
Elon Musk is to blame
EV’s are like early cordless power tools, the batteries were built in and when the battery went bad, it was cheaper to just buy another tool.
I remember the 2000s battery power tools, it was hilarious.
The 'tools' do " just buy another" !
That's the globalist idea .
What year are you living in? Almost all battery powered tools nowadays are replaceable and made to be swapped easily
@ncode03 NOT TRUE !!!!!⛔️⛔️⛔️
Designs change ,things become obsolete . I have several items , from Makita drills to vacuum cleaners etc , all fit for landfill only , as the batteries are OBSOLETE ! The products are FINE !
@@ncode03right. And the high price of the replacement battery makes it very attractive just to buy a new one.
They mentioned the lack of technicians, especially in rural areas, and lack of suitable charging stations in metropolitan areas. I live in a rural area, and the nearest changing station to me is is 30 miles (48km) and the nearest dealer/service center is 65 miles (104km) away. One other thing that is rarely mentioned is due the EVs being substantially heavier than a gas powered vehicle is that tires wear out much more quickly. The average 50/60 thousand mile tires will only last 25 thousand if not less.
OH boy.
Rubbish I drove a toyota prius for the last three years of a 20 year taxi driving career and they didn't suffer from any excessive tyre wear - they suffered the same types of mechanical failures as every other vehicle does - flat batteries, blown light bulb, occasional flat tyre and other mostly minor repairs
The biggest problem is the electricals are far too costly to repair - To fix the front end of a priyus was around AUS$15000 so the insurance companies decided to write them off rather than repair them
@@evangiles4403 Toyota prius not really all that much hevier than ICE as the battery is pretty small. It's the Full EV's and new drivers I thnik that love to floor it off the light that causes premature ware As Big Trucks are heavy and those tires seem to be ok but don't race off the light.
One mistake working around a 2,000 pound lithium battery can kill you. Plus they're mechanics, not computer scientists.
I don’t know of anyone who wants to work on an EV. I know of young people who are training or recently trained to be mechanics.- none of them want to work on evs. In fact one left because his employer - who had just finished getting them trained - insisted they go and get training for EV’s. Apparently they were not the only technician (mechanic) to leave!
@@suecharnock9369I have been driving Nissan leaf for the past 11 years, got into multiple accidents, never have problems to get it fixed in third party body shops and service centers, didn’t even need to visit dealer.
Low battery issues just like computers in gas cars to malfunction ,what happens if your EV has a low battery and goes into Packman mode and the self driving software starts running people over ,wakawakawaka!
We repair ordinary digital cameras and they exit 320-volts, imagine an EV output?
It’s not that dangerous. I’m an electrician. There are clear SOP’s for disconnecting and isolating the battery. There is more
Danger in you changing an outlet than working on an ev
EV fans will look you in the eye and deny any of this.
Because they’re ashamed of their poor decision in buying an electric vehicle.
China already use 2 new battery, the iron phosphate and sodium. Both won't burn or explode.
@@TRcommander Sure... and China is one of the counterfeit capitals of the world. Hope they don't use a fake cell in your battery banks....
@@TRcommanderif they were that much better we would already be using them. The only thing I trust less than a tech bro or yay science person is the Chinese government
Yeah but everybody knows they're lying.
EXPENSIVE Throwaway Electronic toys
I put 190k on my 1.2L petrol car from new, it's still going strong and the most expensive repairs were the timing chain that set me back around £350. Currently changing oil and filter every
3-5000 miles. The car is 19 years old and fun to maintain.
I was driving down the onramp leading to the freeway, it was a very sharp bend and I did not see the large rock that an earlier truck had somehow lost from his load. My Honda Civic only had 6" of ground clearance and the rock was 9" high. My car skidded right over it, and caused a massive scratch under my car, but nothing needed repairing/replacing. Do the same with an electric car and the battery will need replacing and that usually cost more than the car cost new.
If it doesn't explode, catch fire, lock you inside and or careen out of control.
Just saw a quickly tarnishing Tesla Truck, barreling down 8mi. Laugh Every time I see it.
Looks even worse with the staining, rusting, corrosion on the exterior. The front light bar is so tacky, it doesn't require fasteners.
Your insurance company will cover the repair/replacement.
@@Cakebatteredbecause of the repair costs of EV all insurances went up everywhere. My insurance almost double from last year and we had no accident. In England insurance went up even 10 yimes for EV
@@Cakebattered And my insurance will go up for it ! Nothing personal but why should my Insurance premium go up to pay for your electric toy ? This BS Govt Manipulation has Got to STOP. Speaking with my VOTE. Sadly California is a lost cause.
@@ImLivinSDCa. votes Democrat because a majority have a lower I.Q.
Software. I hate it. The last thing I want is a big iPad on wheels.
Me too~!!!!!!!!!!!
Yes my pal got a big Mecadese its all electronic no key But
as he drives he touche button and the car slows down to 5 MPH he has to stop and restart
Sensors are made cheap and fail and there are interferences. My dash lights go off when going under a bridge and the lights come back on when driving back in the sun. I never know if the airbag will explode. 40K miles and the fuel pump hesitates. Good luck getting toyota to listen and the dealers are crooks. Not in recall is a scam.
Scary is how the batteries burst into flames without warning and the doors & windows won’t open trapping you inside
😂 there are manual latches on the doors. Please inform your self before hating. Sit in the car. There are electric openers but also manual ones. We can meet in germany I can show you
@@marcbeebee6969 but does everyone know that or read the manuals witch are not included with lots of things anymore now you have to do emergency training to exit a car like a crashed airplane
@@ford351w83 its commen sense if you cant find them dont drive a car. Dont give me that sh**. I am german i have no patience for your tik tok view of world...
@@ford351w83 in a tesla the manual is digital on the screen. You can search doors. You need a more detailed description or did you see a school from the inside once before?
Even the people in the ghetto know this. Reflect mate
@@ford351w83 you could never Drive German cars in the past twenty years without reading the manual. Cars are a complicated high investment you can take a hour to read the manual or you are not worthy.
465,000 miles on my V8 2003 Mercury Marquis. Less than $700 in repairs since new. Still runs and drives like new, and yes, I am only getting 14 mpg city/25 hwy, but I don't care.. keep your EV, I'll keep my V8 gas car.....
Yes these are very nice solid cars. That is why Ford stopped making them. They lasted too long.
My first and my last repair cost me over $ 28,000 dollars ... never again, we sold it
who brought it
Which sucker did you sucker into buying your BV car? 😮
Did you get your money back selling it. Even before EVs were knew to be 🤬I never had any intention of buying one.
Yeah, you drank to Kool-Aid. I will never buy an EV.
You could've bought a brand-new Honda Civic for $28K 🤪
“Complexity for EV repairs” is a bit of a euphemism. The reality is “danger of EV repairs.”
Small damage to the batteries can lead to thermal runaway days or weeks later, causing an extremely hot fire with toxic smoke, which will destroy anything nearby, even buildings.
Bingo, best reply i saw today!!!👋👋👋👍👍👍
Most likely what most mechanics are thinking: "Do I take a risk getting electrocuted or burning my garage" or "Do I play safe and tell the customer I don't work with EVs". The choice is obvious...
Not is they have LFP batteries like the standard range Tesla Model 3. Do your research.
Just a matter of time for EV leases to end and build up in lots
nah, they wont "build up" in lots... mainly as they have this nifty "self deleting" mode... can activate at any time... leaving an empty barren wasteland, neatly cleared.
Already started talk to FORD
My 1995 Nissan 200SX is still going strong after 190,000 miles, and it’s RELIABLE too, -in contrast to BV cars. 😅
Can you imagine what the cost of replacement batteries would have been over time had that Nissan been an EV?
And it's got nice button and dial controls. Not any of this touch crap distracting screens on modern cars....
My 2006 Nissan Altima has 122,000 miles and it is basic transportation. Gets me to work and home. Gets me to the stores and home. I'm good!
But it s not trendy and prolly white privilege
You can have that. Lol. Don’t test drive a Lightning cuz you’ll be very …..very…..tempted. Lightning is awesome!!!
Why because they were garbage 🗑 from the beginning
.
Even Joe Biden is getting away from the EV push he once had, his administration is going to push hybrids now .
The Democrats have learned mentioning *"**#EVs**"* hurts him on the campaign trail !❗️!
Elon Musk is garbage
Yes, it seems that we Americans have lost all common sense~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Went government gets involved you know they’re not good.
I'm from the government and I'm here to help.
@@Ricky40369 Acknowledge the source, please .
Ronnie Raygun. Forward to the past
Or is it,
Back to the Future.
DUMMYCRATS
Justin's already making money off it petrocan charging stations already being installed ,most expensive than all the other double on some other chargers wonder if he voted on any infrastructure funding for those ,I smell a rat and his name is Justin.
The car or the government 🤔 😂
$60 grand for a Kia/Hyundai Kona battery, no thanks !
I will drive my reliable 2018 Mazda 3 until the wheels fall off .... it never breaks down.
Same with my little Nissan Versa. Bought it new in 2017, great gas mileage, change the oil and drive … 175,000 miles, going strong
17 year old Ford Fiesta, still running good!
15 year old Smart ForTwo diesel 105,000 miles and still going strong 💪
I drive a 1967 Morris Minor.😊
Yeah@ My poor old 02' Chevy S-10 Blzr 4dr wgn! 230Kmi. Just new distrib.& normal maint.keep tranny fluid clean & use auxiliary tranny cooler.
That's why I will continue to drive my 2005 Toyota Camry. I will definetly buy another Camry at some point down the road.
2004 Camry XLE here.
Good car
Nice
Camry's are very reliable and last the distance
I was thinking about that being my final car but the newer Toyotas you have to be careful nowadays
Why do those EV cars need software that always seems to fail? Cant they just build a simple EV that you turn a key that connects the power and off you go, like a large golf cart? Just make them simple and affordable and lots of people would buy them simple as that! instead they worry about having self drive, GPS screens, internet connection, blue tooth, voice command, electric door locks, power seats and other electronic gizmos, large digital dash display all the things that require miles of extra wiring along with too many sensors and computer boards that can fail, Cars like a Honda Fit, Chevy Spark, Toyota Yaris are small cars that have little or no sophisticated electronics or luxuries and they sell , You can hardly find any of those cars for sale, even a cheap EV with only a 150 mile range would sell lots of them, There are millions of people out there that dont drive a lot of miles everyday but need basic transportation like kids driving to high school every day , people that need a second car to run local errands, That was basically the idea of the original VW beetle make a vehicle that is basic transportation cheap enough for anybody to afford, They can always build 100,000 dollar pickup trucks later
SCOTUS striking down Chevron this year and effectively castrating the EPA could actually save the domestic auto market if they are no longer held to ridiculous standards
It’s like a cellphone. You need constant updates so the company can monitor and disable your device when they want you back in the showroom. I have never owned a cellphone for more than 3 or 4 years before it mysteriously died. My wife has an iPad going on 8 years now-never connected to a service. She only uses it with the house WiFi. Never a problem. Never cried to be updated. Battery lasts for days.
But won't
One major problem. Any computer that's sits in an controlled environment ok.
Put a computer in a box drive around hot cold wet damp dry plus shook around on disgusting roads, it ain't good .
@@brianwhite6616 I was watching a documentary about this not too long ago. The narrator was talking about how electronics occasionally freeze -like your cable box, blue circle on your phone or computer. What happens when the electronics on the car freeze at a critical moment?
They are getting rid of many Tesla repair technicians. I know one that is highly skilled and was let go a week ago. They told him there is not a market for the car repairs. I guess they are just totalling the vehicles after minor or semi severe damage.
From what I've heard many EVs are getting totaled simply for having scratches on the battery covers. No intrusion into the battery compartment, just surface scratches...
Disposable cars
'5' hrs charging should say it all !
What!!!!!!????😮😮😮😮😮
Only five hours at slow chargers. My model y home charger charges at night at 45 miles per hour. At a Tesla supercharger charging takes about fifteen minutes.
Always make me laugh when people who know nothing about electric cars post comments. That makes them think they are experts
Wait till you get a bill for the unrepairable bill on a ev arc flashover.
So in essence, The Electric Hot Wheels are like paper plates..Use one time and discard.😂😂😂
why do you think sizzlers failed when it came out in the mid 70s, the insides turned green with a little age
IS THAT SO WRONG???
Only because of their cheap design, lack of engineering, and drive for the all mighty dollar no matter the cost the cost being your car, your home, your life.
I beleived in all the Hype initially of simple electric cars built to be Simple & bullet proof, alas with all the frail poorly deisgned gadgets. The lies started on day 1 and continues on to this day. I am glad they are expensive as they should be. I hope the Early Adoptors really loose their asses on this. What a Joke. Get Govt OUT ! People are so lazy and refuse to get their hands dirty or learn anything. Like how a spair wheel and Jack is really needed. How Dumb do you have to be. Lets go on a drive with no steering wheel !
They just don't make any sense. Their environmental credentials are at best highly questionable, they are proven to be expensive to buy, repair, insure and require more maintenance than most like to admit and the constant updating of new models adds to the already frightening rate of depreciation. The only thing about them which might be engaging for a while might be the rapid low-speed acceleration but the fun of that would wear off pretty quickly leaving you with a characterless, expensive commodity. They are effectively a lesson in how to blow large amounts of money very quickly with little enjoyment or pleasure in return.
They're an awfully expensive way to virtue signal, aren't they? Governments are delusional if they think their EV mandates are going to work.
You forgot about the satisfying roar of the speaker on some models! Lol
Yes, I assume a person has to be well off or Stupid to buy one~!!!
Charge at home on off peak hours, don't have a long way to drive each day so you're always within it's range, buy used after it's hugely depreciated, sell after a year and get your money back. Then repeat yearly. Now you have a very low maintenance and running vehicle that doesn't depreciate. People just don't analyze situations very well.
And the quick acceleration would lead to more tyre wear as well
Wow, if only there were people in the motor trade I.e mechanics, that could’ve predicted this and spoke out about it 🤷🏻♂️😂😂😂..
There was no information available when the first EV’s were released. The only information available was what was fed to us by ev manufacturers. That held out the pro is that by the time support was needed it would be there.
Watch scotty kilmer
No one really listens to the down side till things are failing all over.
EV's are disposable vehicles.
A very expensive one
I drive a 30 yr old suv without any electronics. It has never let me down.
All cars have some electronics.especially those only 30 years old.
You start it with a hand crank or some ?
Electronics can be easily manipulated or programmed exactly when to fail. That’s why older cars lasted. My 1974 Cadillac was a carburetor, engine, transmission, drive line, rear end-period! Electronic Nothing! If I was good at body work, I would probably still be driving that car today!
@@Cblla A starter motor does not need any electronics if the car is old enough.
Stop lying dude.
My 2023 Model S catastrophically failed after 5k miles. Rear drive unit failed and caused the whole car to shut down. Who builds a car with 2 separate drive units but can’t make it keep going when one fails? That means you don’t have redundancy and instead have double the chance of being stranded. Horrible engineering and design. Took 3 weeks to fix. Sold it within 1 week of it being fixed. My life and my family’s lives are too valuable to save a few pennies on gasoline.
All Evs are a joke suckers
A catastrophic failure might lock the drive axle so the other drive unit won't help you. I think the tesla drives have had its share of problems but are relatively simple, compact systems. Probably bad manufacturing.
You sound like a smart person~!!
I own a 2000 KTM electric dirt bike and a 2022 Chevy Bolt. I bought the Bolt because the KTM was the first dirt bike I have ever had that I didn't have to do constant maintenance on. Now it's 4.5 years old and the only parts I have had to buy are those I knocked off of it hitting trees. My Bolt's first "service" is at 150,000 miles! Of course my Bolt is not my only car. I NEVER intend to travel in it, but for an around town commuter car, I think it's the best car out there. It saves me tons of money. My battery is warrantied for 8 years. If I do have to buy a battery (which is unlikely) , that cost compared to maintenance on my ICE cars will be acceptable, but I don't expect that to happen. I was a Honda technician from 1971 until 2009. I'm retired now but have a shop here at home and probably work harder than when I was in dealerships. BTW, I also hold a U.S. patent on a free valve design for ICE energy transfer units. That's got to be the next big step for ICE. Keep an open mind.
So a $45,000 bolt that you can't travel far in.? 45k just to run errands around town? Wow! What is going on in America!?
I have towed a few of those EV bikes out of the desert, when they thought they would just keep going LOL for me i have extra gas easily stored those EV bikes are just dead weight
@@PAIDFOR50I just bought mine for $21995 where are you getting that price from?
Fact: EV owners love waiting for hours to charge their cars and love waiting weeks, months, or years for simple EV repairs.
I own both a combustible vehicle and an EV….it took me 10 minutes to charge my EV at the charging station.
Electronic junk on wheels,even the junk yards don’t want them.
2005 Buick....run forever...
@@greg5011I have a 2005 corolla manual trans. Same thing. 2 quarts to change trannie fluid. Good for another 200k :)
Not so environmentally friendly as we were told!!!
the same system as with the i phones
No right to repair!!!! On an OEM laptop. Good luck getting an out of warrant EV fixed.
Exactly. This.
Switch to petrol or diesel
what if it doesnt exist? what if it never did? how would you solve it?
I just want a manual transmission, an I-6 diesel, A/C that works and no electric parking brake and no super turbo assist anything.
Nothing wrong with a blower as long as you don't beat the car. But if you need it just to move the car, it's junk. I bought my wife a new Renegade and instead of that pop bottle Turbo 1.3 they all have, (even the Trail Hawk) I drove out 150 miles, and got their "big" naturally aspirated 2.4 with the ZF 9 speed automatic. It's a very well built modern low RPM engine and it takes absolutely no effort for it to run the truck around, which is a surprise considering its size. But my 6 cylinder Pentastar is like that. She's also coupled with a full blown U-Connect system complete with NAV. The pop bottle would have to sound like a jet engine, all the time, to do the same thing. Best move I could've made. And we've had it 5 years now without so much as a check engine light. A really nice little Jeep.
Yes, and you can drive it Forever~!!!!
How much computer use can there possibly be in an EV? A motor and a speed controller was all experimenters needed decades ago.
But the enormous problem I've been asking is where all the chargers are. They're rare from what I've seen, and non existent at lodgings which means you can't travel overnight with an EV.
A third of the U.S. population can't even charge at home because they live in rental property with no hope of installing a charger.
My GF was really pissed at Tesla as she had a problem while charging and could not get a support person to help time was 3:00 PST. Problem was related to a update by Tesla which changed the AMP setting to the original charge rate of 34. I had set to 24 amps. At the 34 amp setting it fried the wires. Fortunatly it did not cause a house fire. I did the repair and she rest the the charge rate to 24 amps. Tesla updates should not touch the charge settings.
Buy a Toyota for the same price cost to own car is payments and insurance. That doesn't change electric or gas cars. Drive a Toyota 400 miles, and take 10 minutes to refill and drive another 400 miles. Gasoline and oil changes are much cheaper and the cost of repairs can be done at thousands of repair shops. Toyota can get 200,000 miles if oil changes and air filters serviced.
Not true. My 2002 Tacoma and 2007 tundra only get its oil changed once a year. No issues.
Newest Toyotas are crap. Toyota got complacent and started mak8ng crap in the early 2000,. I had a 2004 4Runner and it ran fine for the first 30,000 miles, then everything started breaking and malfunctioning one after another. Factory radio/CD player fried, the dashboard fried, the center console info center, blinking in and off. Center diff gasket leaked, rear wheel bearings gone, after $3,600 of out of pocket costs, I got rid of the damned POS. I had purchased the sergice plan to it was in the dealer getting oil and filter changes right on the button. Never Toyota again. I bought a 2017 Ford F250 6.7 diesel years later and it has been very reliable and durable. 116,000 miles on it with just a few minor issues that got fixed right away. Never left me stranded. Hell with Toyota.
Has anyone reqd about thr engine gunking issues? Thousands of Toyotas woth engine gunk and they claim it was from lack of oil changes. Customers with receipts showing all oil changes done at thr dealer! Then came thr frame rusting with people losing e tire front ends when thr frame crumbled into dust and the front axle slammed into thr ground. It cost Toyota $3 BILLION to settle th3 class action lawsuit to repair or replace the frames. This was after Toyota kept denying there was a problem and pushing people away until the frames cracked.
Toyota makes junk now.
If no rust after 20 years it still works.
I'm at 336,000 miles, going strong in my 2011 4x4 RAV 4 four cylinder that still averages just under 25 mpg city/highway. I off road it quite a bit and knocked all of the plastic skid "plates" where an expensive battery would be if it were an electric. Picked them up an tossed them back in the car, no expensive repair needed. BTW it's paid off and good for another 100,000 miles. I like the idea of electric vehicles, my finances do not.
I'm sticking with old school cars with an engine. With a traditional car, the engine if properly maintained will last you for about 15 to 30 years. And if it's a Japanese car then it's going to last you for a very very long time. However, with a battery operated car, after about 5:00 to 6:00 or 7 years, you need to change out the battery and that is a very costly purchase and procedure. And the people that replace it have to be tech savvy. Because it requires someone with the knowledge of how to do it and not a mechanic
Insurance companies don't have a long term record on EVs. Once they have a ten year history on the actual cost of EV failure, these cars will become uninsurable, when this finally happens the whole EV market will collapse.
$15,000 for a new battery crazy!
It's not a new battery either. Tesla repairs the old ones and that's what you get for the replacement!!!
For a new Tesla battery it's about $20k.
@@covercalls88 Thats for the battery. How much extra to have it fitted.
@@WalterL-gz5zs yep, another cost to be considered. $20k is shocking enough to start
$.05 cost per mile for electricity vs $.25 per mile cost for gas alone. Also, no oil changes, tune ups, stolen catalytic converters. Eight year battery warranty. Many Tesla fleet vehicles 250,000 miles on original battery.
My daughters 2015 model S was a complete POS. Dumbed it after 18 months.
Electrical problems in cars have always been among the most expensive. Was there any program for training EV mechanics? All mechanics are in short supply at the moment. Software issues are getting to be major problems for all vehicles.
All of these are good arguments and yet you left out the big four:
Range anxiety as these vehicles don't go very far and the battery degrades a little bit each year so you get less range than advertised.
Weak infrastructure, there aren't enough charging stations, and of the ones that are there half of the units don't work unless you're at a Tesla station.
And thirdly, the rare earth chemicals needed to make the batteries are in short Supply and are very expensive.
People need to wake up and face reality. EVS are a fail. The best solution is a hybrid that can plug in and get about 70 Mi of range on the battery.
Contrary to what climate cultists suppose, there's not enough power in the power grid to supply energy to run Vehicles if a large portion of the population has EVS, and keep in mind that fossil fuels power the power plants!
Ps. As a former Tesla Model 3 owner I will never get another one .
I agree but I'm reading that the Hybrid's are just as troublesome as the EV's=same difference just gives you a second chance when the battery fails then they drive it to perdition on Gas~!!!
Toyota did tell everyone E.V's weren't practical and everyone laughed
But Government said...
YEP, Toyota went with Hydrogen Fuel Cell instead with the Mirai. Guess what, only a few Hydrogen stations in S California and less in N California. I saw only one Mirai (of a friend) so far, but many many Tesla around me every day, count more than 20 in my neighborhood.
I don't think anybody is going to take an old car battery and use it in a multi million battery storage solution... The insurance company would not allow that...
Seat on 800 volts battery going 100mph is not a good idea.
Anything electric is a disposable product! TVs, dishwashers, refrigerators, washers, smartphones, scooters, skateboards, tablets, laptops!😮
And ALL modern cars are highly electronic, not just EVs.
@@humming-birdaerialimaging682I get what you're trying to say...but I also know you know what the original post is saying, and that this isn't a real answer.
I don't get it. The electric motor is very simple and reliable thing which should last around forever. Why it is expensive to repair EV?
I get the batery, but the rest must be same or cheaper.
It’s like the early rechargeable tools, the battery was built in, and when it went out it was cheaper to just replace the tool.
Yeh but it have over 70 individual cells if 1 go wrong good buy car.
They still have a lot more going on than one would think. They still have coolant and brake fluid. And a tone of computer modules on board and sensors. Everything else will break around the motor and cost more than the car is worth. It’s the automotive industry. They don’t make money by selling long lasting vehicles.
Because of all the electronic gadgets and safety equipment. Take the toyota hilux champ truck they sell at 10.000 bucks and still make a profit. The western world painted itself in a corner with ridiculous high safety standards. The only thing you really need are driver and passenger side airbags and seat belts but our governments require all those ridiculous gadgets and electronic assistants that drive up the price and make it near impossible to fix your car.
When they tell you "We cant get the parts" and the cars only 4 years old .@@skileg10
Some people have obvoiusly given up fixing anything by the looks of it. We just lost a car dealership in our community. Now there is only Ford. The neareset one is 100 km away. It's really weird. Anyway, we're saving for a horse and buggy.
To keep the EV market going,they need to keep creating new suckers.
Electric vehicle owners should only be allowed to charge their cars using Solar and Wind oower otherwise it's just Pretend..🚘✔💯
LOL; thanks!
Agree. This green movement is one big hoax. I am for conserving the environment but not into the extreme environmentalism I see nowadays that is not really about conservation and lessening different kinds of pollution, but more about social engineering. Plus, carbon dioxide is not as bad as what these extremists portray it to be because of symbiosis. Plants need CO2 and yet they are fine with chopping off forests for their solar and wind farms and also for battery factories. Hypocrites and liars, all of them esp when they are censoring real scientists with an opposing narrative backed by evidence.
I've had my Model S for a while, charging for free with a solar array and smile when cruising past the gas stations. No issues.
Just you wait
You can't do that in 10 years old Tesla. Owning a 20 years old car is common now.
Park outside.
Owner: why is my EV lock?
Company: you didn't pay your monthly bill
I’m almost positive they can send a signal to disable the car for whatever reason.
@@grazz7865 one tractor firm do that now
you want a belt
no chance
buy one from blogs and it wont work
why no chip to tell clutch to work
so there
Well I'll just keep driving my 14 year old EV, and continue to enjoy all the $ saving it gets me.
Park outside.
EVERY EV on the market is a scam.
Elon Musk is a CONservative
@@futurefirm No he is not. You clearly do not know what a conservative is.
Elon Musk has described himself as a "moderate" and a "registered independent. He has also expressed libertarian views, believing that the government should rarely impose its will upon the people.
@@JohnSmith-ug5ciI know for a fact, he has agreed to donate 45 millions dollars a month to traitor trump using money he has conned from Tesla owners. That is proof enough for me. He is a CONservative in my book.
@@JohnSmith-ug5ci Nope, he has agreed to donate 45million a month to treasonous trump and has benefitted from that ill-gotten money by conning Tesla owners. That makes him a CONservative in my book.
@@JohnSmith-ug5ciUnless that very same gov't places orders his direction, then public spending is totally okay 🤭
Electric vehicles are a nightmare to maintain, ev manufacturers must take more responsibility in repairing EVs , every town and city must have several repair shops , they also must have as many charging stations as many as gas stations, I shouldn’t drive more than a couple of blocks to find a charging station. For a small amount as little as 100 per month a manufacturer must guarantee the battery for life. If an ev catches on fire the manufacturer must replace that vehicle, in extreme temperatures a battery mustn’t lose more than 1% a week , let’s assume tomorrow 90% of the cars on the road are electric, with number of charging stations unchanged, waiting time in these charging stations would take all day to charge the numbers of cars waiting to charge would be in the hundreds, and the cost to charge would be prohibitive not to mention blackouts in every city and town, this project is forced on us by impulse without adequate planning.
This is why you need a free market economy. Politicians, ideologues and corporate subsidy grifters have created and legislated this plague upon consumers. They have been paid handsomely by disenfranchised taxpayers. A market economy bankrupts/ends products with much smaller flaws.
The free market has given consumer listeria, and salmonella outbreaks
@@MarceloGarcia9...and it punished the people responsible through lost credibility and discontinued contracts, such a Chipolte abandoning the fellows who gave them salmonella-contaminated food.
More often government-corpoate collusion just causes more of such abuses to get covered up or even subsidized, as in the case of companies putting toxic additives in our food, a fact hardly considered by congressman or reported by corporate news.
With such a track record, I daresay the free-market approach is still superior.
@@MarceloGarcia9 A totalitarian government, which is fast becoming what most big governments are today, has caused more deaths.
We have a 2007 Prius and a 2010 Prius. Both have been running great, no major repairs, 50 miles per gallon, nearly 500 mile range on a tankful. Agree with the comments about insufficient capacity for transportation system to handle large percentage of EVs. Not enough charging stations, takes too long to charge, and not enough energy on the grid to get it done even if those 2 problems were solved.
Replying to @markfrank187:
"nearly 500 mile range on a tankful" of WHAT??
1) pizza sauce?
2) shampoo?
3) baby oil?
4) veg oil?
I GET IT NOW!!
GASOLINE!!!!
60 percent do not read at a normally level. hard to train the uneducated. I turn my own wrench and finding a good mechanic is hard nowadays. I mean the kind with passion for their craft.
i don’t want to deal with daily plugging and unplugging chore.
i bought a new 2014 Cadillac XT4
Create the infrastructure and then try to sell the product. The world is nowhere near ready for this. They need to be introduced much more slowly so they can evolve in a way that the problems can be overcome in an ordered and planned way.
Our reptilian overlords don't want the bugs worked out
They want us off the roads and in 15 min cities
I will have an EV when gasoline and diesel is banned, not before.
I will use a bicycle when petroleum is baned
Make sure you get short-term leases if you want to drive one.
The simpler a vehicle is the more reliable it is .My 97 year old single speed bicycle is testament to this. It let me down once when it had a puncture .It cost 7 shillings and sixpence when it was new, and I recently turned down an offer of £2000 for it. it costs pennys a year to run and in its lifetime has cost the price of a spanner a screwdriver and maybe 3 cans of oil for all the services it has had, EVER.I'm reasonable shure it will last the rest of my life then it will become the property of one of my grand children and last the the rest of their lives as well.
Another thing - our electrical grid is already stressed , and they want to dump millions of EVs onto the grid in addition to all of the existing everyday power demands?
It won't wok, it just won't.
Look at those caustic filthy battery fires. Defeats the whole perpose.
One EV fire required 50000 gallons of water to put out the fire. Several diesel powered water tanker trucks were used to haul the water to the fire scene.
No more backyard mechanics!
These exact same arguments were made when the world switched from ice (frozen water) to refrigeration for food storage, we all know the winner of that contest. Markets adapt, the world goes on. I’m not a greenie but I am an engineer who enjoys repairing Tesla model 3s, I own 3 of them which I purchased very inexpensively and repaired myself using parts from my local service center. Great cars, fun and very inexpensive to drive.
I'm reminded of the FYX "don't miss out on the next big thing" commercial for the super bowl. How did that turn out.
I don't know nor care how things work out for EVs in the long term, but for the love of personal finance, stop dismissing reasonable concerns over the latest big thing by pointing to the relative handful of successful inventions over history while ignoring the mountains of duds.
Too many bells and whistles. An EV should be dead-nuts reliable compared to a gasoline vehicle. Think about it: no fuel system, no ignition system, no engine cooling system, no exhaust or evap systems, no catalytic converter, no pressurized engine oil system, no transmission -- all provided the vehicle is designed properly, of course. The motor has essentially one moving part, and the solid-state motor drive has zero. Not much to go wrong, really.
But, no...everything has to be grossly over-designed with useless or near-useless features, until it's unreliable and expensive to fix. If the EV industry concentrates on getting a vehicle from point A to point B and back, without the frills, then EVs may become successful in the long run.
The "stark reality" I've experienced in my BMW I3 is 4¢ per mile fueling cost, around 2.6¢ maintenance and repair. The only action needed in 114,000 miles which could be called a "repair" has been replacement of the VRLA 12 volt battery, it cost $122 at NAPA Auto Parts and I replaced it myself. The record shows the only cheaper way to get there is by bicycle, or walking.
The problem with both sides of this argument is there are always some of the user population that has a different experience with the same product. Your good experience is countered by the next person whose I3 was horrible for them. Same for ICE vehicles, there are people posting here about Camry’s but my experience with a Camry was bad because the engine blew up.
Reality is the blue book reliability data for EV’s isn’t any better then ICE cars, its out there for all of us to look at. The point of this video (i think) is that EVs have not lived up to the hype about being better to repair.
Loved my little i3..... then went to a Model Y... Have been driving electric since 2014 and never had a single maintenance issue.
Got a 2007 crv with 200,000 miles plus! Still going except for AC blowing hot air. It still takes me from point A to B. I just have to endure the hot summer heat but bearable with a fan for now. I can't complain too much.
What sort of government would actually force these expensive throw away monstrosities on its citizens? If we can't make our own choices, then privately owned vehicles will become a luxury for just a few wealthy people after 2035.
and diesel powered
Politicians won't use them,!be forced onto us plebs 😢.
@@gefleigh4264 If that happens, the economy will collapse. EV mandates are unenforceable and unworkable. But as usual, the politicians failed to do their homework because it was more important for them to virtue signal and appear to be champions of the environment, and to be greener than anyone else on the planet.
wait till we get there
public buyers will rule what happens
force of people by numbers
Glad I bought a lightly used 2022 Camry a couple of months ago. It replaced my 2005 Camry with 220k miles.
Nice. What a reliable car ❤. Congrats for your purchase 😊
the list of arguments against is larger than the list for...like green energy...
Quick Battery swap on the go would be nice. It's all about the profit not saving the planet.
Unrepairable = No Maintainence
That's to be expected. Fledgling market products are always High at first ...
JUNK
Just one more reason right to repair needs to be a mandatory law, no loopholes. PERIOD.
As taxpayers we should not be subsidizing these absurdly impractical and uneconomic vehicles. Let the free market operate and this nonsense will end.
I have a Peugeot 1.6 diesel, 2016 model estate, It does a minimum of 80mpg and 100mpg on a run, fully loaded with 4 adults. Why in the name of insanity would I want to switch to an EV???
No way. We love Evs, and Elon Musk.
Love Elon! Hate his car company. Run by idiots and scammers.
No thanks. I'll keep driving my reliable 1988 Mercedes for the rest of my life.
Yes, My wife has instructions to bury me in my 1987 Ford F-250 which I have driven for 23 years~!!!!
I think that the only thing we miss is a EV car repair shop or have in the current repair shops a person, that can deal with a EV problem. Most of the parts are the same for EV/petrol cars, and for the battery, high voltage system and electric motor you need a specialist. So it could be a good business plan to have car repair shop that can handle EVs... All current cars are full of electronic systems, matrix lights, with modern CPUs to hande all the displays and software, etc. If somebody wants an easy and cheap to repair car, he should stay with 10 years old car...
Been saying this for DECADES.
A bunch of self-proclaimed experts who have never owned an ev. I've owned EVS for 5 and 1/2 years, save a lot of money, a very nice ride
Well, good for you. I am a retired heavy equipment mechanic, and I will NEVER EVER buy an EV!!!!! I work on all of my vehicles, and I understand them. I also live in the country in southeastern Idaho. No chargers near me, especially when I travel the roads less traveled, which I do a lot. I have an 02 Jeep Cherokee with 260,000 miles on it, a 2009 Dodge diesel 2500 pickup, and a 1923 Model T Ford "T Bucket" that I built from scratch. EVs are not the answer. The power grid of the USA would need to be DOUBLED to have enough power to charge millions of battery packs. Car manufacturers are loosing tons of money on these EVs. The vast majority of the population wants nothing to do with them.
It is ok with me if you own/operate your EV. Why is it not ok if I stick to gasoline/diesel vehicles?
we all share the air & environment, that's why. Very good for me, but you are forbidden from owning an EV, they're on for us rich people.
@@rp9674 So, we are in agreement! I do not have to buy an overpriced battery operated scooter. That is good for me.
As far as the environment is concerned, it is real smoky here due to California being on fire. Since your EV needs no oxygen to operate, that leaves more for my 3 internal combustion vehicles to use. Great, because my big block Chevy engine in my T Bucket needs lots of air. My Dodge diesel 2500 4x4 long bed crew cab also uses quite a bit of oxygen. My 450 horses need to breathe.
It is so nice of you to give me your unused oxygen. Thanks.
& the gas I'm not using, enjoy
@@rp9674 Thanks, I will. I am going on a little trip tomorrow, about 600 miles. Sort of beyond EV range limits. I would have massive range anxiety if I owned an EV. I suppose if I could charge at home and had a reasonable commute to work, it would work. I am retired now, so no commute. I use to have to commute 120 miles round trip every day in the summer. I could not ride the crew buss because I always had overtime. I was younger then, it would kill me to do that now.
Thanks for the civil chat. Like I said, I have an E Bike, and my better half has one too. We both love them. We still peddle, but the battery assist is wonderful.
In twenty years of owning an IC car, I only had two problems with the engine or gearbox. Didn't stop me from having other problems and visiting a mechanic once or twice per year.
I'm so delighted to see the EV fad circling the drain, and I was never buying one of those things, I love my V6 Accord. The video should have also covered the charging issues, and the billions Biden spent on charger stations and only a few were ever built, and then too the copper thieves cutting off the charging cables to sell the copper.
People were laughing at me when these cars first came out I was mentioning the cost and down time for repairs was going to financially take out a the owner..I also said that in the long run the electric car will not make the distance and the weather changes effects the performance of these vehicles...fast forward some of the people that own one are getting rid of them and going back to combustion vehicles
Bottom line. DON'T BUY AN EV!
1) high cost of repairs 2) shortage of repair techs 3) uncommon materials hard/ impos-sible to repair 4) significant inconveniences at dealerships.
You can keep EV junk
i remember a guy in the bay area in the 70,s made the news when he took a lawn mower engine and an electric motor with 5 or 6 car alternators one big fan belt and some car batteries in an old car and i think he was getting like 100 miles a gallon from the lawn mower engine keeping batteries charged and drove it for years
EV are not the future!
They are the new Pet Rock on wheels
It varies from car to car, Teslas are like one off sports cars, like audis, etc. But the Hyundai ioniq ev uses pretty much every part they can from their hybrid and ice models, and doing that keeps the cost of parts down, and the older nissan leafs are super simple, and easy to work on. The cost of repairs on evs are a compound of issues, everything from auto manufactures making cars in general more difficult to work on, to them making their EVs with all one off custom parts that they cant use on any other model car. As a demonstration, go look at the cost to repair a Tesla door handle compared to any other EV (such as a older hyundai Ioniq). Maybe it sounds like im saying its not as bad as it is, i think rn it isn't, but its just going to get worse unless right to repair gets traction.
Dixie cup cars.