https://www.sfgate.com/cars/article/Family-man-feels-right-at-home-in-Chevy-Bolt-13476299.php
Family man feels ‘right at home’ in Chevy Bolt

[images  / Brian Feulner
https://s.hdnux.com/photos/77/36/65/16641389/5/920x920.jpg
David Hochschild of Berkeley drives a 2017 Chevy Bolt

https://s.hdnux.com/photos/77/36/65/16641398/5/1024x1024.jpg

https://s.hdnux.com/photos/77/36/65/16641403/5/1024x1024.jpg

https://s.hdnux.com/photos/77/36/65/16641396/5/1024x1024.jpg

https://s.hdnux.com/photos/77/36/65/16641399/5/1024x1024.jpg
]

David Hochschild is a commissioner with the California Energy Commission,
where his work focuses on advancing renewable energy in California.
Hochschild grew up in San Francisco but now lives in Berkeley with his wife,
Cynthia, their daughters, Rosa and Sonia, and their dog, Pepper.

My first automotive love was a sleek, green 1978 MGB convertible that I got
in my late 20s. It was a beautiful, curvy, temperamental car with equal
supplies of character and electrical problems. Now I am in my late 40s and I
have fallen in love again, this time with an electric car — the Chevy Bolt.

I had never aspired to own a Chevy, but I had been waiting for a mainstream
electric car to hit the market and loved the idea of charging a car with
solar panels on my roof instead of having to go to a gas station.

So I got on the waiting list for the Tesla Model 3, but by the time I signed
up, I was ranked number 300,000. It appeared that it would be a few years
before a Tesla would be available, so when the Chevy Bolt debuted a year and
a half ago, I took my daughter down to the dealership to try it out.

At the Chevy dealership, they didn’t know much about the car, besides
letting me take it for a spin. My expectations were low, but when I got in I
suddenly felt right at home.

I am 6 feet 3 inches tall and was surprised that I fit nicely with plenty of
room to spare. That the car manages to feel roomy while being compact is a
tribute to the design team — and it was easy to park.

The Bolt is slightly shorter than a Toyota Prius, which is a valuable
feature as I am often trying to squeeze into increasingly scarce parking
spaces downtown.

Back during the pre-kids period of my life, I was fully content zipping
around the Bay Area in a two-seater convertible. These days my wife and I
are ferrying our daughters and their friends around non-stop, so I was happy
to see that the Bolt’s back seats were plenty big, as was the trunk.

But let’s be clear — as much as I love my Bolt, it does not look like a
Tesla.

The Bolt may be modern, well crafted and comfortable, but it is not sleek.
However, when stepping on the accelerator, it becomes clear that the name is
nonetheless deserved. This car has real punch, and while sitting inside the
Bolt’s quiet interior with only the whisper of the electric motor, it is
easy to suddenly find yourself hitting 90 mph on the freeway before you
realize it.

Aesthetics aside, my principal concern about buying an electric car was
range, so I smiled when I read a Wall Street Journal review that referred to
the Chevy Bolt as “Prozac for range anxiety.”

With its 238-mile range, the Bolt gets me where I need to go. I live in
Berkeley and work in Sacramento, and I can do that 150-mile roundtrip
without charging up. And when you do need to charge, the handy PlugShare app
shows where all the closest electric vehicle chargers are around you.

Today I can say that the longer I’ve had the car, the more I enjoy it.
Twenty years ago, just after I bought my beloved green MGB, I was at a
stoplight on Stanyan Street at Golden Gate Park, when a beautiful woman on
the street saw the car and asked to get in and take a ride around the block.

I recognize this is unlikely to happen to me in the Bolt — or if it does
happen, it is more likely to be a group of electrical engineers. But driving
my family around in the Bolt, especially as we pass the lines at the gas
station, I have never been happier.
[© sfgate.com]


+
https://newsroom.porsche.com/en/company/porsche-fastcharge-prototype-charging-station-ultra-high-power-charging-technology-electric-vehicle-16606.html
Ultra-high-power charging technology for the electric vehicle of the future
12/13/2018 ... prototype for a charging station with an output of up to 450
kW yesterday in Jettingen-Scheppach ... suitable for electric models of all
brands with the European standard Type 2 variant of the widely used Combined
Charging System (CCS), and is now available for use free of charge. A
Porsche ... 90 kWh achieved a charging capacity of over 400 kW on the new
charging station, allowing for charging times of less than 3 minutes for the
first 100 km range ...
https://newsroom.porsche.com/image/teaser_700x395x1_5/4d735915-5750-4fdc-b096-a21d36dd9b3f.jpg




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


{brucedp.neocities.org}

--
Sent from: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to