If we condone the arguments below, then maybe the enemy of EV's is us?

A Plug-in Hybrid would serve this lady's driving just fine.  She gets
maximum EV mileage and she gets maximum range when needed.  Lets not let
the perfect be the enemy of the good-enough.   A Chevy Volt was designed
just for this lady!

> The problem is that, especially in the more sprawling metropolises,
their lives are built such that a car with only a two gallon "tank" just
isn't any use to them.
> I have a good friend who lives in Surprise, Arizona, a suburb of
Phoenix. She works in downtown Phoenix, about 20 miles away... But she
also not infrequently has to go to a satellite office in Mesa, which is
another 20 miles on the other side of Phoenix. That works out to an 80
mile round trip, which is starting to get iffy for the Leaf. And this is
Phoenix, so that means air conditioning in the summer isn't optional,
especially when outside temperatures are well above 110°F -- and that
_definitely_ makes it iffy.

She can get to each of those places on 100% electric in a Volt.  And if
she simply plugs into 120v outlets at each, she can be fully repelnsiehd
for each leg of the trip too.  Instead of saying an "EV can't do this" we
should instead be focusing on all employers to provide rows of 120v
outlets for these people.  Cost to fill a Volt is about $1.60.

>.her in-laws live in Surprise, which is about fifteen miles north of
Goodyear and about 30 miles by freeway from Phoenix. She not infrequently
needs to get her kids to or from school in Goodyear to their grandparents
in Surprise -- and, of course, do this at the end or start of the
schoolday and without any time to "gas up." Even if she's only working in
Phoenix that day, that's pushing it for the Leaf -- and a recipe for
disaster if that happens to coincide with a trip to Mesa.

Get a Volt Plugin-Hybrid.   Done.

> And, of course, in nearly all situations, leaves her without any "Murphy
factor," without any room for contingencies, or options like going out of
the way to some interesting place for lunch, or a quick trip to the
airport to pick somebody up, and so on.

Get a Volt Plugin-Hybrid.   Done.

> Now, on the one hand, you could suggest that maybe she should live
closer to work and her in-laws should move closer to her. For all sorts of
reasons not worth discussing here, neither is an option, I can assure you.
You could also suggest that maybe she could get an electric vehicle and
her husband can keep a gasoline vehicle...but he actually works at the
same office as she does, and their child-taxi and similar duties are
shared equally. Juggling who gets the electric and who gets the gas would
get awkward, especially if something came up at the last minute...and does
them little good if the one has to go to Mesa the same day the other has
to go to Surprise; whoever gets stuck with the EV gets stuck, literally,
by the side of the freeway in hundred-plus weather waiting for a tow.

Get TWO Volt Plugin-Hybrids.   Done.

> And she's not at all an atypical case for somebody in the Valley of the
Sun. Pretty much the norm, in fact -- especially amongst those with the
disposable income that, until just very recently, has been required to
even consider an electric vehicle.

So, Get a Volt Plugin-Hybrid.  Which is now less than the average cost of
a gasoline car... Done

> So she and the millions like her who live here really aren't realistic
candidates for an electric vehicle, no matter how sweet the cars so often
are nor the convenience of starting each day with a full "tank" without
having to go to the gas station.

Yes they are, if one matches the EV car to the Driver's need.  There IS a
model that can do all she wants.  There are FORTY (40) on the market.
Surely one will meet her needs.

> Now, when realistic ranges, with the air conditioning running full blast
in the Phoenix summer and the rest, get solidly in the 200+ mile range,
and especially the 300+ mile range, and for "kid-friendly"
minivans...well, at that future date, you probably won't be able to stop
her from buying one.

We shoot ourselves in the foot if we  let people continue to think they
need 200 mile range for everyday use.  Especiallly when that 200 mile
advantage almost DOUIBLES the cost of the car.  (Every trip above
described was less than the 40 mile EV range of a Volt..  And if she plugs
in while parked (the new-coming-norm), then an EV will suit her perfectly.

> Until then?

Not then, NOW.  We need to stop waiting for the perfect when what we have
now is good enough to satisfy 90% of everyone's driving needs and a
plug-in Hybrid can meet 100% of them.

> Best to focus on those -- such as my parents -- for whom today's EVs are
a match made in heaven. They're still the minority, at least where I
live...but it's a rapidly growing minority with every new generation of
vehicles.

Finally, we agree!

Bob Bruninga, WB4APR

On Jun 6, 2015, at 6:52 PM, Robert Bruninga via EV <[email protected]>
wrote:

> One way to describe the new Paradigm that EV’s bring to daily living
> to the typical gas driver is to say something like this:
>
>
>
> “Imagine if every day you came home and parked, you could stick a hose
> in your gas tank and get 2 gallons every night for only $1 a gallon.”
>
>
>
> Well, that’s exactly what you get with an EV when you come home and
> plug it into just your standard 120v outlet.  Overnight, in 12 hours
> at 10 cents per kWh, you pick up 50 miles range for only about $2 of
> electricity.  And the car is FULL the next day.
>
>
>
> Maybe then the gas folks will finally get it.
>
>
>
> Bob Bruninga, WB4APR
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