Yeah, I think there was a tendency to assume that we'd inevitably have some kind of battery breakthrough very soon that would just solve everything.
While I'm in the same boat, where I assume/hope my current car is the last combustion vehicle (or at least purely so) that I'll own, I also spend a lot of time going very far - and also going fairly deep off-highway - and I'm unsure where I necessarily fit in with EVs.
I've come to terms with the reality that - just like with the switch from horses to combustion engines - the switch to EV will require a fairly fundamental change in the way that travel looks, I still can't really wrap my head around how to solve the outright range problem. Luckily, I should be able to stick with my current vehicle for quite some time and fairly easily increasingly shift away from using it for anything under 40km round trip or so, but I do wonder what happens with folks in similar circumstances who necessarily physically aren't able to bike/walk/etc as readily as I may be.
Yeah, we do a lot of traveling/camping/ski trips/off the grid sort of stuff that just don't really fit into a 400 km range - especially given that a) you'd never want to 'drive with the gas light on' for the last 50-100k of that range and b) I'm pretty sure that 'real world' ranges don't quite stack up to manufacturer claims, just like MPG estimates. Even just the trip to my parents' house would be a pain in the ass, especially since their electrical isn't upgraded.
An 800k range is kind of my tipping point. It's slowing getting there, but it hasn't been a quick process.
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The thing I'm really interested to see with EVs is how the cheap used car market plays out.
Basically everyone driving an EV right now is either upper-middle class or outright rich, and can make the choice to make the switch based on financial math or virtue signaling or just because they think it's cool. Virtually nobody is driving a 10 year old EV.
But eventually the crowd that are still driving 1998 Pontiac Sunfires they picked up for $1500 are going to have to make the switch and I'm absolutely fascinated to see what that looks like, how well EVs age, how cheap resale values get, whether they end up being crappy iPhones that are totally unreliable past 8-10 years, whether we'll see an epidemic of lower-middle class families who scrape together $10k for a 10 year old Tesla and then immediately get hit with a $20k battery replacement.