Turnover
Well-known member
Put 200 mi range in it and I'll learn to love it!
adriaanm said:Someone just posted a teaser video with the new colors on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/BayLeafs/permalink/929383627119299/
Supposedly, the big reveal will be in 8 hours.
mtndrew1 said:I am genuinely excited about this. A 120+ mile plus EV for Leaf prices could be a major game changer in the space.
GetOffYourGas said:It's great to see the progress here.... I just hope this is enough to compete with the second-generation Volt. I'm also looking forward to seeing what other BEV makers will do in response.
BernieTx said:GetOffYourGas said:It's great to see the progress here.... I just hope this is enough to compete with the second-generation Volt. I'm also looking forward to seeing what other BEV makers will do in response.
I think the Volt and the Leaf should both do fine, as well as the new Toyota Prius, and the Tesla's. Lots of good options to reduce gasoline usage. The biggest concern is weather the market for BEV's/PHEV's can grow enough to become profitable, to encourage continued investment.
GetOffYourGas said:I hope you are right. Note that I was referring to the very near future. I have no doubts that the Leaf 2.0 will be much more successful than the current one, even with 30kWh.
I think long-term, the BEV/PHEV market will have no trouble becoming profitable. The question in my mind is rather whether it will grow enough to support a viable/profitable public charging infrastructure. This is what is needed to move past the commuter BEV, and/or need for a generator a la PHEV/EREV.
BernieTx said:GetOffYourGas said:I hope you are right. Note that I was referring to the very near future. I have no doubts that the Leaf 2.0 will be much more successful than the current one, even with 30kWh.
I think long-term, the BEV/PHEV market will have no trouble becoming profitable. The question in my mind is rather whether it will grow enough to support a viable/profitable public charging infrastructure. This is what is needed to move past the commuter BEV, and/or need for a generator a la PHEV/EREV.
It seems there are a lot of compliance cars, selling at a loss and only available in CARB states. My concern is that perhaps the market expects the BEVs at prices too low to allow for profitability. Regarding public charging infrastructure, it seems to me that a 107 mile car is still a commuter BEV, and the current infrastructure is already sufficient in many localities.