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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 07:34 PM
  #2371  
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Originally Posted by SW17LS

EVs if anything have an even longer lifespan than ICE vehicles and as they age there will be lots of options to replace battery packs if those vehicles need them after 200-300k miles.
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https://supercarblondie.com/worlds-h...three%20times.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 07:35 PM
  #2372  
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Originally Posted by asj2024
I think batteries are a concern, even for hybrids. People had that as their number one concern about buying such vehicles (and I do too, with my Prius now in its 15th year and 172k miles!).

In hybrids, the costs to replace batteries is fairly low nowadays, maybe $800 to $1000 or so, but the much larger batteries of BEV have been reported to cost higher than $20,000, so it's def something to consider.

Right now, given that BEV are somewhat new and most cars have new batteries, data on when batteries fail is probably still rare and still somewhat anecdotal, but a quick search of youtube shows that it does happen. In one case, a guy with 100k on his had to replace 2 times already.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3E2bIbek-M

This one had to replace it after only 64k miles, which is pretty bad imo.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AO0aKsgcyYI

Anyways, to ICE people, battery life and cost of replacement is probably a big concern when they consider buying any electric vehicle (whether HEV, PHEV, or BEV). It's just one of those things that people will need to take a leap and finally learn that it's not THAT bad.
Your constant barrage of FUD has become incredibly tiresome I can cherry pick any car and find catastrophic failure including Toyota. I personally revived a Prius that had a totally dead hybrid battery the dealer wanted more than the car was worth to get it back into operation. $1,000 repair is your claim? Not even close the estimate was over $10,000.

Honestly this thread has become pointless it's become a platform to **** on EVs.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 07:43 PM
  #2373  
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Originally Posted by BayeauxLex
It has 1.5 million miles on it lol
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 07:46 PM
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Originally Posted by SW17LS
It has 1.5 million miles on it lol
On battery #4 and motor #14
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:04 PM
  #2375  
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Originally Posted by BayeauxLex
On battery #4 and motor #14
Battery #3 and motor #13. Remember it has 2 motors...and replacing an EV motor is nothing like replacing an ICE motor. Thats still 100,000 miles per motor and 400,000 miles per battery. Likely motors failed in pairs, so thats 185,000 miles between motor failures.

I guarantee the cost to run that to 1.2 Million miles is FAR less than it would have cost to run a comparable luxury ICE sedan to 1.2 Million miles. Thats roughly 2,300 tanks of fuel for one, at a cost of $138,000 if we assume $60 a tank. Assuming 40k on brakes which is about right thats 30 brake jobs which on my S560 cost about $2,000, thats $60,000 in brakes where a model S can go 100k miles without a brake job easily. Changing oil every 10k miles thats 120 oil changes at $115 a pop thats $13,800. Even on the million mile Lexus LS400 there were something like 6 transmission rebuilds...

Last edited by SW17LS; Mar 20, 2024 at 08:08 PM.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:10 PM
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Originally Posted by LeX2K
Honestly this thread has become pointless it's become a platform to **** on EVs.
I have to agree with this. Its ridiculous. This is supposed to be a place to duscuss EVs in general, not a place to constantly have this back and forth argument, and Hybrids aren't even supposed to be discussed in here, only EVs and PHEVs.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:20 PM
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Originally Posted by BayeauxLex
On battery #4 and motor #14
C'mon my friend 😂
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:22 PM
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Originally Posted by LeX2K
Your constant barrage of FUD has become incredibly tiresome I can cherry pick any car and find catastrophic failure including Toyota. I personally revived a Prius that had a totally dead hybrid battery the dealer wanted more than the car was worth to get it back into operation. $1,000 repair is your claim? Not even close the estimate was over $10,000.

Honestly this thread has become pointless it's become a platform to **** on EVs.
Didn't I say it was a concern to all electric vehicles? I know people ask me all the time about the hybrid battery (whether HEV or PHEV), and I have to admit to them that I'm very concerned as well.

I also did say it would still be rare in new cars, and that any cases would be anecdotal, and gave those vids as examples.

Nothing I said so far above is false or FUD. It's simply being honest.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:27 PM
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Originally Posted by asj2024
Didn't I say it was a concern to all electric vehicles? I know people ask me all the time about the hybrid battery (whether HEV or PHEV), and I have to admit to them that I'm very concerned as well.

I also did say it would still be rare in new cars, and that any cases would be anecdotal, and gave those vids as examples.

Nothing I said so far above is false or FUD. It's simply being honest.
There is no reason for you to be concerned about your hybrid battery. There are tons of Priuses around with 500k miles on their original batteries.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:30 PM
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Originally Posted by asj2024
Didn't I say it was a concern to all electric vehicles? I know people ask me all the time about the hybrid battery (whether HEV or PHEV), and I have to admit to them that I'm very concerned as well.

I also did say it would still be rare in new cars, and that any cases would be anecdotal, and gave those vids as examples.

Nothing I said so far above is false or FUD. It's simply being honest.
There's absolutely no reason for you to be concerned unless you keep your car over 15 years. The cost of batteries continues to get cheaper, that's easily proven
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:34 PM
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And even if you have to replace the battery, its 12 years old with nearly 200,000 miles on it, nothing lasts forever.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:49 PM
  #2382  
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Originally Posted by SW17LS
And even if you have to replace the battery, its 12 years old with nearly 200,000 miles on it, nothing lasts forever.
You didn’t address my question about affordability for low income folks and young people with their first car.

200k miles on 10yr old Civic or Camry is nothing and its just as efficient as it was new. Not so for EVs.
EV battery costs more than the car value itself to replace currently - I’m not talking about hybrids.

Again when your stuck in traffic tomorrow - look around and see how many old cars are around you. I still see bunch of 2nd gen GS every day and newest one is 20 YEARS old! My uncle’s daily is a 30yr old Towncar. The amount of old pickup trucks still running is crazy. There is a lot of people that rely on older / cheaper cars.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:52 PM
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Originally Posted by AMIRZA786
There's absolutely no reason for you to be concerned unless you keep your car over 15 years. The cost of batteries continues to get cheaper, that's easily proven
15 years? In the Prius it has been as low as 10 years, and of course battery failures do occur even earlier than that.

A battery failure is also not the same as a headlight failure, or something minor. It is a substantial expense, even for hybrids with small packs, and has always been a concern for incoming people, so I never make light of it when I discuss it.

Here is a site that actually does try to get some data out

https://www.recurrentauto.com/resear...batteries-last

Battery failure rate for BEVs seem to be 1.5% so far (although it is self reported, and so the data is soft), and varies between manufacturers. They do mention data is scarce still because of the newness.

Some common model years that are older seem to have higher rates of failure, which I think is expected since they are older:

2013 Tesla Model S (8.5%)
2014 Tesla Model S (7.3%)
2015 Tesla Model S (3.5%)
2011 Nissan LEAF (8.3%)
2012 Nissan LEAF (3.5%)

7% failure in a car that is only 10 years old is NOT insignificant.

Last edited by asj2024; Mar 20, 2024 at 09:01 PM.
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 08:54 PM
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Originally Posted by RNM GS3
You didn’t address my question about affordability for low income folks and young people with their first car.

200k miles on 10yr old Civic or Camry is nothing and its just as efficient as it was new. Not so for EVs.
EV battery costs more than the car value itself to replace currently - I’m not talking about hybrids.

Again when your stuck in traffic tomorrow - look around and see how many old cars are around you. I still see bunch of 2nd gen GS every day and newest one is 20 YEARS old! My uncle’s daily is a 30yr old Towncar. The amount of old pickup trucks still running is crazy. There is a lot of people that rely on older / cheaper cars.
There will always be ice vehicles on the market for the foreseeable future. Also last year I was driving through Compton, one of the poorest cities in SoCal, and there were lots of chargers, mustangs and cars that had rims more expensive than what my car is even worth. Same in East Oakland 🤣
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Old Mar 20, 2024 | 09:03 PM
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Originally Posted by asj2024
15 years? In the Prius it has been as low as 10 years, and of course battery failures do occur even earlier than that.

A battery failure is also not the same as a headlight failure, or something minor. It is a substantial expense, even for hybrids with small packs, and has always been a concern for incoming people, so I never make light of it when I discuss it.

Here is a site that actually does try to get some data out

https://www.recurrentauto.com/resear...batteries-last

Battery failure rate for BEVs seem to be 1.5% so far (although it is self reported, and so the data is soft), and varies between manufacturers. They do mention data is scarce still because of the newness.

Some common model years that are older seem to have higher rates of failure, which I think is expected since they are older:

2013 Tesla Model S (8.5%)
2014 Tesla Model S (7.3%)
2015 Tesla Model S (3.5%)
2011 Nissan LEAF (8.3%)
2012 Nissan LEAF (3.5%)
Those are all early model BEV'S using older battery packs. In other words, ancient technology. Nissan Leaf battery packs were all air cooled. All modern BEV'S battery packs are thermally managed, which is key to prolonged life. You're going to find battery pack failure to be much lower in modern packs
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