Yoused
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to make his base happy, tariffs must be either 14% or 88%Could be 0%, could be 1800%
to make his base happy, tariffs must be either 14% or 88%Could be 0%, could be 1800%
Why not...... 420%?to make his base happy, tariffs must be either 14% or 88%
So, this is an old model at this point (I deliberately bought the last of the current gen, planning to either upgrade or keep this at the end of 3 years when the EV situation in australia shakes out, and/or the Rav4 plug in hybrid arrives or new model rav4 has had a couple of years for the bugs to shake out), but now I’ve driven it for 1500km and it has had its first check up…
Fixed price servicing of $260/yr, cheaper purchase price, ability to do >1000 km in a day if i want and fill anywhere... much faster queue if there is one at the pump/charger, also much nicer interior than a model 3 (real leather seats, real buttons for HVAC, indicators, etc...)
IMO something has to give here though, I had high (maybe too high?) hopes for my Tesla but in the end shut off/stopped using automation entirely because it spent more time watching what I was doing than assisting with driving and it was all due to overregulation.
So it appears we are going to slide back/more towards the wild west for vehicle autonomy in the states...
Are you in a location where you can charge at home? If not, the comparison is fair (fast charging is not any cheaper than gas here in the USA either), but charging at home is the real boon with an EV IMO, and that’s where fuel cost savings can come into play as it’s AC charging that is cheap, not the DC fast charging.
Below totally not intended to be combative, etc. - i really did look into EV very seriously but it just doesn't make financial sense in my particular case due to both known depreciation costs and considered risks.
PHEV Toyotas not available here, so I did all the sums on full EV comparison (both Tesla Model Y and Polestar 2 as they were the closest things to what i wanted available in the local full EV lineup). Not going to lie though, even if the Model Y was significantly cheaper i would not buy, can not abide by the interior and UI decisions, Elon, etc.
Works out (for me, my financial situation - YMMV):
~10-15k more expensive or thereabouts for similar car, plus 4k charger install plus the local rate for power = it's a bit of a wash (like $2k cheaper for charging at home vs. paying for fuel on the hybrid when more expensive purchase price is taken into account - AND the lack of tax incentive on the hybrid is also taken into account), but hybrid still comes out in front. Plus i am filled in like 3-5 minutes.
Especially over a 3 year fully novated lease. Additionally, i can pay for gas pre-taxable income (due to salary sacrifice of the entire lease), i can't claim power with the rules as they currently are here. That was based on $2.50/L fuel cost, currently i'm paying about $1.55-1.60/L.
The Toyota retained value vs. EV (of any brand) with very expensive battery replacement cost at 8-10 years anticipated just kills it.
YMMV (depends on charging costs, fuel costs, what you can pay pre-tax, etc.) but the big killers are higher initial purchase price for equal car and depreciation on EV mostly. Tesla for example are a total bloodbath depreciation wise. Based on existing 3-5 yr old RAV4 prices here, I'll probably get 40-45k (purchase 62k) back on this thing after the end of a 3 year lease and the residual is about $26,000.
No way in hell I'll only lose 15k on a Tesla model Y over 3-5 years.
But definitely, 3-5 years down the line i'll be hoping for a PHEV (awaiting 1-3 years into the 2026 RAV4 Prime model refresh) that gives me 100-150km EV range; that will get me to and from work every day (via home charging) with no fuel use and still have the convenience of a regular fill up if i need to do a long trip without any planning required. PHEV having batteries half the size will have much lower battery replacement cost and hopefully much lower depreciation.
Gas/hybrid/PHEV is not going anywhere in Australia in a hurry. We just don't have the chargers available and distances between towns are huge.
Couldn't agree more, I charge at home 100% of the time now and there's nothing more convenient from coming home from a long day and just plugging in and forgetting about it, then being all ready for the next trip.We wouldn't own an EV without having L2 home charging, that's a massive game changer in terms of convenience, and while - for us - the different in "fueling" costs aren't that high on the BEV value proposition. That being said, home charging is a good bit cheaper vs. gas prices around here (about 1/4 the equivalent per mile costs for an SUV in our preferred market segment).
This is a wise decision IMO. I tried the EV road trip thing and it was frankly a nightmare for me, even though I thought I had it planned out pretty well is was very different on paper than the real world, I spent as much time charging, waiting, seeking stations than I did vacationing. YMMV but hybrid is a much more sustainable and predictable solution for long trips. Having one ICE and one EV in our household is a perfect solution.My wife and I also considered the above options going forward for the driving we like to do. She's now had her Toyota hybrid for two years. Typiclcal mileage is 38-39 miles per gallon (both highway and city driving). That has worked out pretty well and gives us a range of around 520 miles. I recently purchased a hybrid and is so far yielding around 520 miles of range on a 13 gallon tank of gas.
We're planning a few photo road trips in remote areas of the western US (similar to central Australia, maybe?) during the summer and expect EV charging stations to be on the scarce side in some areas. That pretty much drove the hybrid decision. And not having to worry about charger availability and charging time (including at home).
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