Absolutely. I agree. Given what's available right now, for the money, it was between the Soul EV and the '15 Leaf. It was close but really the difference was the better range; the other improvements helped, of course, but the ability to get a real world ~100 miles highway was enough to sway us.
I found the exact opposite. I had one payment left on the Leaf and the dealership looked at the residual value of it and told me I'd be better off making the last payment and returning it to Nissan (and I chose to do so).
We've gone to the Soul EV side and after a few hundred miles, we're glad we have.
First off, we really liked our Leaf and we seriously considered leasing a 2015 but after looking at the Soul EV Plus, we leased it instead. It's clear that Kia did its research and created a car to compete...
I think the point of the D is that Tesla isn't ceding the performance aspect to BMW's i8, the Model S's only real competitor and the D becomes a halo super car, interesting in that it is a sedan.
If you look at the specs, http://www.caranddriver.com/bmw/i8"...
I just picked up a Cadillac ATS on lease for 3 years (still need an ICE sadly) and, after thinking hard about the Model S, decided against it because it is too large and expensive. I'm hoping to return the Caddy in three years for the Model E.
Would I put $5k down to reserve it? Nah. I have...
I haven't driven the S but I've been in one of the beta cars with the working display. It could definitely be distracting but it's no gimmick - the interface is freaking awesome! Really, much better than anything out there now, including GM's new interface. The only complaint I had was the speed...
I agree. By definition, if you buy or lease a Leaf you are an early adopter of new technology and the larger the dataset the larger the edge cases and that's how technology gets better; the edge cases are the more interesting data points. It sounds as though Nissan is in this for the long haul...
Correct. Although the chargers across from the courthouse, on Santa Clara, are free (ChargePoint) and the parking spaces are free, even during the week. You don't need a permit for those. During the week, there's a three hour parking limit, though.
We live in a condo building in downtown San Jose and we do not charge in our building. San Jose has city parking lots that have charging stations and street charging stations that we use. San Jose doesn't charge EVs for parking (street or garage), if you have a permit ($35 I believe and the...
Exactly right. Why do you have to go through a middle man (dealer) to buy a car? I should be able to order what I want, with the options I want, and have it delivered to my door. That way I'm not inconvenienced and I don't have to pay the middle man cost. They could sell it to me direct, cut...