http://www.revivinggaia.com/green-blogs/area/usa/washington/evs-are-just-better-vehicles-in-almost-every-way/
EV’s are Just Better Vehicles, in Almost Every Way
January 14, 2014  by Roy L Hales

[images  / Brad Gibson
http://www.revivinggaia.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/unnamed-32.jpg
Brad’s son Taiyo and their dog, Freeway, in the back of Brad’s Nissan Leaf

http://www.revivinggaia.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/unnamed-12.jpg
Brad, Mariko & Taiyo Gibson camping

http://www.revivinggaia.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/unnamed-11.jpg
The Gibson’s Nissan Leafs charging in their garage: Brad’s (l) & , Mariko’s
(r)
]

Brad Gibson was so disturbed by the documentary “An Inconvenient Truth,”
that he decided to never buy another car that burned gas to commute. He and
his wife Mariko would share their 2005 Subaru Outback XT until they found an
alternative. As they were both working, that meant that Gibson could only
use it part of the week. He pedaled the 40 miles to and from work twice a
week, which was not always pleasant in rainy Washington State, and caught
buses. At one point, his father offered to give them a second car, Gibson
said no. Though not in the top 1% of America’s wage earners, he was in the
top 10%. If people like him were not prepared to make changes, how could
they expect anyone else to?

He had to wait nearly five years before a practical, mass-market EV became
available, in the form of the Nissan Leaf.  In 2010, having never been in an
EV before, Gibson took a chance and ordered one.  He took delivery in June,
2011 and was delighted to discover it was a real car.  It had acceleration
and handling that rivaled or bettered any gasoline cars in the same price
range.

He soon came to the conclusion that EV’s are better vehicles. Gas cars are
an antiquated technology. They rattle and sputter and are so inefficient!
Brad bought the Leaf for Mariko, but quickly took over as the principal
driver.  She ended up driving the Subaru for two more years, when they
decided that he Leaf was working out so well, that he decided that he would
never buy another car that burned gas, period.  And in an effort to cut
their addiction to gasoline, they would try going all-electric, with a
second Leaf in June 2013.

Mariko loves driving electric.  She prefers it over the very nicely equipped
Subaru Outback she had been driving.  Now the Subaru sits in the driveway. 
The Gibsons keep it for trips that are beyond the scope of their Leaf, but
have only used it once in the last six months.  Brad has come to the
conclusion that his gas car is not worth the expense. They would be better
off renting a gas car, should they ever need one, and so he plans to sell
their Subaru.

Thanks to the development of the Electric Highway, Gibson could easily drive
across the border to Vancouver, south into Oregon or east to Wenatchee. The
only challenging route left is west into the Olympic Peninsula, where there
aren’t any fast (Level 3) charger installations.

There are some inconveniences, like the half-hour stop Gibson has to make at
one of Seattle’s Level 3 charging stations when he drives over the mountain
passes, but these are relatively inconsequential when weighed against the
advantages in terms of the environment and how much money his EV saves him.

Looking through a recent $2,500 “major service” bill to maintain his Subaru,
he noticed that is was all for parts that do not exist in his Leaf.  With
the EV, paying for maintentance on timing belt replacements, transmission
maintenance, fuel injectors, gasket replacements, oil leaks, exhaust systems
and the like are a thing of the past.  Even brake pads, which are used very
lightly in EV’s, rarely need servicing since the majority of braking on an
EV is done magnetically–in addition to saving on brake pad and rotor wear,
this “regenerative braking” recaptures the energy of the moving car, charges
the battery and extends driving range.

Gibson notes that it’s not that the exhaust system on a gasoline car has
been replaced by something else on an EV, it’s that it doesn’t exist at all
on an EV.  This means it can’t break, and there is no maintenance.  So many
things that we have become accustomed to maintaining, from various air
filters to mufflers, or performing regular oil changes simply no longer
happen with EV’s.  This makes EV’s incredibly reliable, and very cheap to
maintain.  Gibson has yet to pay any maintenance costs on his either of his
Nissan Leafs.

The most significant cost advantage has come from the drop in his fuel bill.
No more $50-$60 bills at the fuel pump each week.  Instead, Gibson says his
monthly power bill has increased by about $35-40.  Instead of paying $2,500
a year for gas, he is paying $452 for the electricity that goes into Leaf.

Brad Gibson believes the beginning of the end of the gasoline car will be in
2017. That’s the year that Tesla is expected to release Model E, a $35,000
vehicle that can travel 200+ miles on a single charge. The whole EV industry
is preparing for this. Nissan has developed a battery that will all allow
the Leaf to go twice as far between charges. BMW’s I-3 has been developed
with an eye to keeping the Model E’s threat to the M3 in check.  Gibson
thinks that once you have a selection of competitively priced EVs capable of
going the same distances as conventional cars, that gas cars are to doomed
to become a historical footnote.

Why?  Gibson replies, “Because EVs are much better vehicles.  They handle
better.  They accelerate more quickly and much more responsively. The
economics are better–they’re cheaper to run and cheaper to maintain.  They
are both safer and more reliable.  And on top of all of that, they’re much
better for the environment.”
[© revivinggaia.com]
...
http://cleantechnica.com/2014/01/14/electric-vehicles-just-better/
Electric Vehicles Are Just Better




For all EVLN posts use:
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=evln&sort=date

Here are today's archive-only EV posts:

EVLN: Audi R8 e-Tron Electric Supercar Nearly Ready For Production
EVLN: Atlantis Casino Resort Spa EVSE in south Reno, NV
EVLN: $8k Sway Three Wheel Electric Leaner
EVLN: 2 Zoe EVs committed to forrest.co.uk housing business fleet
+
EVLN: TED 5000 Monitors Leaf EV Electricity Usage


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-The-Gibson-s-Nissan-Leaf-EVs-are-Just-Better-than-ice-tp4667594.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to