'This is by far the best vehicle I’ve ever owned'

http://alabamanewscenter.com/2016/07/06/birmingham-electric-vehicle-owners-find-happiness-plug-not-pump/
Birmingham electric vehicle owners find happiness at their plug, not the
pump
July 6, 2016  Mike Perrin, Alabama Clean Fuels Coalition

[images    / contributed
http://alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Paul-Franks.jpg
Paul Franks enjoys the technology in addition to the fuel cost savings that
come with his Tesla Model S electric vehicle

http://alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Blair-Farley-charger-2.jpg
Blair Farley can use a ‘chargepoint’ setup at her parking garage at Alabama
Power if she ever needs a boost during the daytime. Normally, she charges
her Nissan Leaf at home after 9 p.m. to take advantage of an electricity
bill discount.

http://i0.wp.com/alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Farley-home-charger.jpg

http://i2.wp.com/alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Farley-Nissan-Leaf.jpg

http://i1.wp.com/alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Leaf-plug.jpg

http://i0.wp.com/alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Tesla-2.jpg
Paul Franks’ Tesla Model S 70D has ‘trunk’ space in both the front and rear
of the vehicle as the two electric motors are located underneath the vehicle
at the axles

http://i0.wp.com/alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Tesla-charging.jpg
Paul Franks charges his Tesla Model S 70D in his garage, using a 220 outlet

http://i0.wp.com/alabamanewscenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Tesla-controls.jpg
Tesla dashboard  The Tesla, such as Paul Franks’ Model S 70D, has a
sophisticated 17-inch touchscreen that provides all sorts of information,
including the distance to ‘superchargers’ located along your route
]

Blair Farley wanted an electric car so much that she moved into a house so
she could plug it in. Paul Franks wants his car to stay as up to date as his
smartphone.

The Alabama Clean Fuels Coalition discovered that these two Birmingham-area
residents are a part of a growing trend in Alabama and across the nation –
people who are shunning the gasoline pumps, taking advantage of a discount
on their electric bills by driving electric vehicles and praising the use of
clean alternative fuels.

“Gas prices are inching up again, as they always do,” said Mark Bentley,
Alabama Clean Fuels Coalition executive director, “and people all across our
state are finding ways to save money and help keep our air cleaner. Blair
and Paul have unique views on electric vehicles based on their own
experiences. The Alabama Clean Fuels Coalition is the place to turn if you
want to know more about great alternative energy vehicles.

“In the past, the high cost of electric vehicle batteries was a hindrance in
EV sales,” Bentley said. “Since 2009, battery costs have fallen 71 percent
and the cumulative sales of plug-in vehicles has risen to in excess of
450,000 nationwide. In Alabama, all EV sales – hybrid, plug-in hybrid and
battery electric – have risen 13.7 percent since 2013 with pure battery
electrics such as Tesla and Leaf model sales increasing 55.6 percent.

“Major automobile manufacturers are now incorporating – or are planning to
incorporate shortly – electric vehicles as a major part of their product
offering,” Bentley said.

Farley, a research engineer at Southern Company, leases a Nissan Leaf SV. “I
got to drive all kinds of electric vehicles in my work and do research
around them, and I really wanted one,” she said. “The car I had was the one
I got when I graduated from high school, so my first car choice was to lease
the Leaf. I lived in an apartment and as much as I tried to convince them to
get a charging station, I couldn’t get one. So, I moved into a house for it.

“I am incredibly enthusiastic about electric vehicles,” Farley said. “I plug
it in outside my home, so it’s visible. My friends probably hear more about
them than they care to, but I get a lot of questions about it. They do think
it’s pretty cool, and I take them for rides to show off the acceleration.”

Franks is CEO of ThinkGard [
http://thinkgard.com/
] in Pelham, and has about 25 years in the high-tech industry. “I enjoy the
technology part of the Tesla,” said Franks, who leases a 2016 Tesla Model S
70D. “I looked at all the different electric vehicle models that were out
there that were true EVs. I wanted something that was longer range,
something that had more of the tech than just the standard EVs today. Tesla
struck a chord with me. I took a test drive while I was on a business trip
in Atlanta and probably six months later I bit the bullet and got one. It
was not just that it was an EV, although that’s what I wanted, it was more
the technology in the car and the advancements coming in the future.

“I kind of look at it like my iPhone,” Franks said. “The smartphones get
better with every update. Tesla is getting better with every update. The
problem is that you can only go so far with software updates before you have
to do a hardware update. They are going to need more sensors and cameras
when they come out with the total self-driving model. By leasing, I can turn
this one in and upgrade to a newer model with the latest hardware and let
Tesla deal with the resale.”

By driving an electric vehicle, both Farley and Franks get a discount on
their power bills for charging the cars between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m. each day.
The discount from [utility] Alabama Power is not just for charging the car,
it is on the total electric bill. Farley said she schedules her dishwashing
and clothes drying for after 9 p.m. to take advantage of the deal.

“The Alabama Power EV rate gives me cheaper electricity from 9 p.m. until 5
a.m., shifting the load to the off-peak hours,” Farley said. “I tend to
charge the car at night, but I could override that and charge whenever I
want. I tend to plug it in and not think about it.”

Farley said her work research has taught her that 75 percent of the U.S.
population drives 40 miles a day or less. “My commute is 32 miles,” she
said. “A lot of people don’t know how long their commute is. We tend to
associate how long we spend in the car with how far it is and that’s not
true. When I charge my car, I only need it to be as ‘full’ as the next trip.
I never charge it from zero to ‘full.’ If my next trip is to the grocery
store, then I just need it to be charged for 2 miles. My charger gets 20
miles per hour on a charge, so it takes about two hours for a full
round-trip commute.”

Franks’ more expensive Tesla has the technology to map out trips showing the
location of superchargers, the free stations that charge batteries in
minutes rather than hours. Franks said long-distance travel requires a
little more planning than in his previous vehicles – but that’s part of the
fun.

“I have the Model S 70D, which means it is the 70-kilowatt-hours battery,”
he said. “If I went to a station and ‘filled’ it up, the rated range is 240
miles. I would say that probably, driving in Alabama where it’s fairly hilly
and where it’s warm and I run the air conditioner, it’s more like 220 to 225
miles. The beauty of Tesla is they have superchargers all over the place. 

When you’re charging, it will tell you – even on your phone with their app –
when it’s done or when you have enough to get to the next charger.”

Franks said his EV saves money on fuel costs and maintenance but he doesn’t
see it being an overall money-saver. “Anybody who tries to justify buying a
vehicle to save money, I don’t care if it’s a gas motor, EV or whatever, it
just can’t be done,” he said. “There is no return on investment on this car
because they are so expensive. That is something that will happen far down
the road (as prices fall). To sell my friends on this EV, I tell them you’re
buying a car that is getting better every single mile down the road. They
are learning more and more to upgrade the vehicle. Once you buy a car, it’s
done, it’s your car. With the Tesla, they are going to upgrade it. It may be
software or it may be the hardware, but they are going to upgrade.

“This is by far the best vehicle I’ve ever owned. By far.”

Tesla has announced plans to sell a new model that starts at $35,000 that
could be cheaper with incentives. In the future, Farley said, price will
bring more EV models onto Alabama roads.

“I see larger batteries with more capacity and longer range,” she said. “The
charge times will come down, too. I think we’ll see lots of models, a lot of
plug-in hybrids and lots of full-electric vehicles. I don’t think there will
be a single model to fit everyone’s needs. Some companies are also working
on plug-in pickup trucks, too. The top three selling (traditional) vehicles
in the U.S. are all pickups, so it’s definitely a large market out there.”

Franks said other manufacturers are showing interest in the EV market.
“We’re starting to see manufacturers, who were laughing at Tesla at first,
starting to get serious about electric vehicles now,” he said. “From the
things I’m reading, I think by 2020 EVs will be just as cheap to buy as gas
versions. By then, I bet it will seem that every other car on the road is an
electric car.”
[© 2016 Southern Company]




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use: 
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/Birmingham-AL-EV-owners-find-happiness-at-their-plug-not-the-pump-tp4682878.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
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to