|
|
|
|
|
by jgilias
1947 days ago
|
|
I for one believe that the weight/power/size/speed tradeoffs have a lot more to do with: - the need to have place for kids with safety seats in the back - the need to have place for a stroller/a snowboard/a few suitcases/something else in the trunk - the need to use the car to travel at highway speeds and dynamics at least occasionally. I don't see any of this being changed by having an EV. Even as a second car. Especially the last point. |
|
Sure, a lot of American cities in particular are not built very conveniently and often have lots of "necessary" trips on/across "highways" or roads that run at highway speeds that probably shouldn't if you were to intelligently (re)plan those neighborhoods. But that's a somewhat unique worst case to American (lack of) imagination and decades of profit-motivated dismantling of public transit options.
[1] Most accountants and engineers will even suggest that you should already be doing that even with ICE vehicle primaries that are capable of such trips, the associated costs of wear/tear add up on a primary vehicle and it often is far more cost effective for short-term rentals.