After playing with mine yesterday (mine is carbon fiber too), I put it back on the shelf in the corner of shame.
My favorite electric car story was when "Car and Driver" did a test drive of a Tesla. The writer picked the car up from a dealer in Manhattan and was driving it home to Connecticut. It was summer time and he had the AC running. He got about 100 miles and got a "recharge needed" warning while on a super highway. By the time he got to an exit, the car totally shut down. He was in contact with the dealer who sent out a service vehicle. That arrived and the batteries in the Tesla were so low they wouldn't charge or the software wouldn't allow them to charge. They had to flat bed it back to the dealer.
Bottom line is he got about 110 miles out of a charge that was rated at 250 miles. But that 250 mile rating didn't include real world things like AC/heat, brake lights, headlights, radio and so on.
I also wonder if the "carbon footprint" of an all electric vehicle includes the "carbon" produced manufacturing the batteries and then safely disposing of them when they die. I've asked several dealers a get a nice "talk around the question" style answer.
There was a study done a few years ago on a prius (I think) and a Hummer H2 had a smaller carbon footprint. It included manufacturing to 5 yrs of 12k/yr drving. I hate prius drivers.Also the carbon footprint to produce the electricity to recharge the battery's be it at home or while away.
At my local Hospital there are 4 dedicated Charging stations/parking spots in the most prime location. Followed by doctor parking, then 2 handicap spots. Go figure.I guess electric cars have their place for some folks
Yeah, that's what my Cherokee (can I say that and still be PC and without culturally appropriating?) does. I track mileage in a spreadsheet and it floats from the high 16s to the high 18s. On one trip,mostly freeway driving without traffic, I got 20mpg plus, but that was an exception.
Overall I think the people that buy into the battery/hybrid car idea really don't understand what is really going on in terms of their, the cars, "carbon footprint". The manufacturers and dealers don't provide enough, honest, information about their environmental "miracles" for the average person to be able to form in informed opinion. Maybe one day it will work, for real, if solar panels can provide power at night. Yes, I know about battery storage but that involves inverters and batteries, more carbon footprint. Another hidden number.
Hasn't been my best week. The other day I went to use my trusty, somewhat old, Milwaukee 1/2" battery drill and some of the magic smoke leaked out the motor vents. To be honest, it's well over ten years old and has had heavy use as a spot polisher when I was doing bumpers not to mention drilling some holes that were, shall we say, at the edges of capacity for it.
Today I went to use the leaf blower to clean out the gutters before the storm we're supposed to have tonight/tomorrow. It started, stalled, started, stalled, rinse and repeat until my arm got tired. Tried carb cleaner and ended up needing starter fluid to get it to fire at all. I hate the non-adjustable carbs on everything today. It's a POS Crapman and I think I'll replace it with something battery powered. I only use a blower for the gutters, deck and flower beds so a battery blower should be able to handle that and the Mrs could actually use it as well.
Then I test ran the generator, again because of the storm coming. It started right up, ran about two minutes and shut right down. What the hey? Turns out it was totally out of gas. At least I don't have to replace that....yet.