She'll get the Pacifica PHEV and she'll like it
Guitarsoup said:
She'll get the Pacifica PHEV and she'll like it
The Ioniq 5 looks cool but the Ioniq 6 looks like @$$...and I have a Model Y so obviously I'm into ugly cars. Why did they make the front & back the same exact angle?htownag08 said:
Just curious if anyone has had experience with the Hyundai EV line? In the market for a new vehicle and this will primarily be a commuter car as we have a mini-van for any major road trips with the kiddos. I have circled Tesla Model Y right now but keep seeing the Hyundai Ioniq 5/6 popping up on reviewer lists.
Curious if anyone has had experience or could provide insight as I weigh options. Test driving the Tesla Friday and a Hyundai on Saturday.
TIA
drumboy said:The Ioniq 5 looks cool but the Ioniq 6 looks like @$$...and I have a Model Y so obviously I'm into ugly cars. Why did they make the front & back the same exact angle?htownag08 said:
Just curious if anyone has had experience with the Hyundai EV line? In the market for a new vehicle and this will primarily be a commuter car as we have a mini-van for any major road trips with the kiddos. I have circled Tesla Model Y right now but keep seeing the Hyundai Ioniq 5/6 popping up on reviewer lists.
Curious if anyone has had experience or could provide insight as I weigh options. Test driving the Tesla Friday and a Hyundai on Saturday.
TIA
Haha. I first saw the Ioniq 6 on the freeway and did a double take thinking someone put a 911 wing their Sonata.WoMD said:drumboy said:The Ioniq 5 looks cool but the Ioniq 6 looks like @$$...and I have a Model Y so obviously I'm into ugly cars. Why did they make the front & back the same exact angle?htownag08 said:
Just curious if anyone has had experience with the Hyundai EV line? In the market for a new vehicle and this will primarily be a commuter car as we have a mini-van for any major road trips with the kiddos. I have circled Tesla Model Y right now but keep seeing the Hyundai Ioniq 5/6 popping up on reviewer lists.
Curious if anyone has had experience or could provide insight as I weigh options. Test driving the Tesla Friday and a Hyundai on Saturday.
TIA
You mean like the (most recent, but awhile back now?) eclipse that looked like dog*****
And yes, that's a horrific design that should never left the drugged out drunken mind of whatever designer came up with that garbage, potentially as a joke.
You're missing a couple of big things.GAC06 said:
Don't really see the point of PHEV. If the goal is fuel efficiency, a regular hybrid gets you mostly there without hauling as big a battery around. If the goal is simplicity, performance, and freedom from gas stations, an EV is the ticket. If I needed range beyond what EV's offer regularly I'd get a regular ICE or hybrid, not a plug in
Not in Austin, but I see Model Xs often; they're easily confused w/ the Y on the freeway, the front has a little grill, the rear door handles are on the front of the door, and there's a spoiler that pops up. Also don't like the doors.chet98 said:
Hey Tesla guy, what ever happened to the Model X with the gull wings? I'm in Austin so see more Teslas than I can count (including the cybertruck, speaking of hideous vehicles) but I swear I never see an X. Unless I confuse it for a Y since they look somewhat similar I think.
Before I bought my M3, I was mostly worried that those gull wings would break the moment that the warranty was up. I actually haven't seen too many complaints though. Maybe because their owners aren't bumming around r/teslaloungechet98 said:
I'd imagine the novelty of the X's doors would wear off pretty quickly.
EMY92 said:That's all great, but not so easy in a rental when you are completely unfamiliar with the interface. It's tough enough getting a rental from any brand you're not used to, but most ICE vehicles are close enough where you can figure out 90% of the stuff. EVs are different enough that you may only figure out 60% of the stuff while you have it.Guitarsoup said:1939 said:
Had a Tesla rental the other day and hated it. The regen braking damn near gave me whiplash, the key situation is dumb, and not having any buttons sucked. Also I'm hoping that I just couldn't figure it out, but the AC would only do auto mode, I couldn't adjust the fan speed for more than a few minutes at a time.
You can turn off regen braking, if you want. But you can also just never touch the brake pedal, too. You can have it mild, as well. It is one of those things you get used to.
My phone is my key, which is pretty fantastic in practice. Walk up to my car, open the door, get in. No hassle no fob. I have auto deadbolts at home, so I don't actually carry any keys unless driving my 98 Landcruiser and that just has the one key on a keyring.
If I want the fan on high, I just set the car at 60 degrees. Gets too cold, switch to 68. Additionally, with the app, I can set the temp I want the car to be at before I get there and get a push notification when it it there. Park in the sun all day, hit the button on your phone to turn on the AC and it will be cool and feel great when you get in. Snowing outside? Turn on the heat and seat heaters before you get in. Pretty easy.
hph6203 said:
All the inconvenience without any of the benefit. Same cost to fill up per mile (roughly), takes longer, and shorter range. Pretty significant misrepresentation of the ownership experience.
I'm guessing because they are copying Audi and Mercedes? Both those makers have more than one model where they slope off the front and rear with same angle. It's been a pretty prevalent design for a few years now.drumboy said:The Ioniq 5 looks cool but the Ioniq 6 looks like @$$...and I have a Model Y so obviously I'm into ugly cars. Why did they make the front & back the same exact angle?htownag08 said:
Just curious if anyone has had experience with the Hyundai EV line? In the market for a new vehicle and this will primarily be a commuter car as we have a mini-van for any major road trips with the kiddos. I have circled Tesla Model Y right now but keep seeing the Hyundai Ioniq 5/6 popping up on reviewer lists.
Curious if anyone has had experience or could provide insight as I weigh options. Test driving the Tesla Friday and a Hyundai on Saturday.
TIA
YouBet said:I'm guessing because they are copying Audi and Mercedes? Both those makers have more than one model where they slope off the front and rear with same angle. It's been a pretty prevalent design for a few years now.drumboy said:The Ioniq 5 looks cool but the Ioniq 6 looks like @$$...and I have a Model Y so obviously I'm into ugly cars. Why did they make the front & back the same exact angle?htownag08 said:
Just curious if anyone has had experience with the Hyundai EV line? In the market for a new vehicle and this will primarily be a commuter car as we have a mini-van for any major road trips with the kiddos. I have circled Tesla Model Y right now but keep seeing the Hyundai Ioniq 5/6 popping up on reviewer lists.
Curious if anyone has had experience or could provide insight as I weigh options. Test driving the Tesla Friday and a Hyundai on Saturday.
TIA
steve00 said:
I have an EV, and it is superior to a gas car for my commute and tooling around town. In all of my long drive scenarios, my gas car is better.
satexas said:steve00 said:
I have an EV, and it is superior to a gas car for my commute and tooling around town. In all of my long drive scenarios, my gas car is better.
Is having two cars depreciate at the same time, instead of just one, helping you with those EV vs Gas savings?
Asking for a friend.
If you can or want to have one EV and one ICE that serve all your driving needs, then yeah get any EV for daily driving and use ICE for road trips.steve00 said:
I agree that the Tesla charging network is larger and faster than any other network.
Where I disagree is on how much that matters to the average EV owner. 80% of charging happens at home. Charging at work is hard to quantify as clearly, but seems to be around 15% from what I can find.
That doesn't leave much room for the better Tesla public network to add value.
And I say all this as someone who charges 0% at home. I am a renter, so I won't spend the money to install home charging. I charge 99% at ChargePoint chargers at my office. It is obviously not as cheap as charging at home, but it is effortless. A couple times a week I park closer to the office door, and I always have a charged car.
All I'm saying is that anyone who says the Tesla charging network makes it a slam dunk to buy a Tesla over some other brand is wrong. The network is a plus, but there are lots of pros and cons when comparing Tesla vs other options.
Most of my trips are just within Texas and we took a new one this weekend. Kingwood (NE Houston) to Fredericksburg for a wedding. I charged to 100% night before. Tesla wanted me to drive to the supercharger in Johnson City. As we got closer to Austin, my wife wanted to stop at Target to get something because she's a middle-class white woman and it's a Target. Just happened to be that the Target at the exit to Johnson City had a Supercharger. So plugged it in there and she shopped.cav14 said:If you can or want to have one EV and one ICE that serve all your driving needs, then yeah get any EV for daily driving and use ICE for road trips.steve00 said:
I agree that the Tesla charging network is larger and faster than any other network.
Where I disagree is on how much that matters to the average EV owner. 80% of charging happens at home. Charging at work is hard to quantify as clearly, but seems to be around 15% from what I can find.
That doesn't leave much room for the better Tesla public network to add value.
And I say all this as someone who charges 0% at home. I am a renter, so I won't spend the money to install home charging. I charge 99% at ChargePoint chargers at my office. It is obviously not as cheap as charging at home, but it is effortless. A couple times a week I park closer to the office door, and I always have a charged car.
All I'm saying is that anyone who says the Tesla charging network makes it a slam dunk to buy a Tesla over some other brand is wrong. The network is a plus, but there are lots of pros and cons when comparing Tesla vs other options.
But for many others that really want/need one vehicle to do serve all their driving needs and want that vehicle to be an EV, then Tesla is the only way to go. Because it takes just that one road trip that you only take one time a year to find out why all OEMs have jumped the CCS ship and gotten onboard the Tesla ship.