nicobie
100 MW
For a lot of people the tax credit won't work because they don't make enough to owe taxes. It's just a credit on the tax you owe.
That really needs to change.
That really needs to change.
From only a little personal experience, that's reserved usually for people who sold or made enough money over the past year- and didn't move it around in savings/401Ks- to have to be called earned income. Most I know that fell under that was people who bought property and sold their old homes, or had huge job changes that netted some real pay-raises enough to rise in social class. The only people I know who did that bought an Outlander PHEV and used the credit to offset their end of year funds from buying a new home and car back in ~2019.Hillhater said:Sure, but I would guess if they dont earn enough to pay tax, they probably are not in the market to buy a new car anyway.
EVs, and all new car purchaces, are still the domain of the wealthy (relatively !) class.
Out of curiosity, what income would be needed , to take advantage of that $7.5k tax credit ?
Hillhater said:I assume you know that you can buy a new Nissan Leaf for <$20k ( after tax credit) !
https://insideevs.com/car-lists/cheapest-ev-200-mile-range/
Hillhater said:I assume you know that you can buy a new Nissan Leaf for <$20k ( after tax credit) !The Toecutter said:..... If they do produce an inexpensive offering, they will be bucking the automotive industry trend towards upsizing/upselling to pad more margin, ........
https://insideevs.com/car-lists/cheapest-ev-200-mile-range/
calab said:Could but can you right now?
Seems like cars are few and far between on the new car lots and used car lots.
As a matter of fact, like I mentioned earlier somewhere, the lots are full of crappy fuel mileage trucks and large suv's.
What I was thinking of that someone could do is buy an old car and fix it up, swap in a crate engine its easy to install and mate it with a known excellent transmission, Tremec's will last forever. Not sure how much a mechanic would charge, but you'd have wheels in a known condition of new with no worries.
Yes, i have done that in the past..much fun.calab
........
What I was thinking of that someone could do is buy an old car and fix it up, swap in a crate engine its easy to install and mate it with a known excellent transmission, Tremec's will last forever. Not sure how much a mechanic would charge, but you'd have wheels in a known condition of new with no worries.
In all honesty- and I don't remember where I found this, so don't quote me- but it is better for the environment to buy older cars and rebuild them to work again than buying new electrics. I also shouldn't read anything about LS swapping small roadsters, I have a GM T5 sitting around that I could use for it and the last thing I need is another project.calab said:Could but can you right now?
Seems like cars are few and far between on the new car lots and used car lots.
As a matter of fact, like I mentioned earlier somewhere, the lots are full of crappy fuel mileage trucks and large suv's.
What I was thinking of that someone could do is buy an old car and fix it up, swap in a crate engine its easy to install and mate it with a known excellent transmission, Tremec's will last forever. Not sure how much a mechanic would charge, but you'd have wheels in a known condition of new with no worries.
I actually have. The real 'cost' to wiring is that engine heads don't want to learn electricity, and even if they do quickly find out that wiring is time consuming and the initial cost is expensive. A box of OEM Deutsche connectors will easily run close to a $100 and you have to test, cut wire, crimp terminals, test, lace into plug, test again, loom, and probably test once you've done a final fit. Al of the Skid Factory has a great video series on it on YT and he lays out excellently why it's expensive.Hillhater said:Give it a try yourself..
..then report back how “easy peasy”, economical, reliable, and “off the shelf” ..every thing is.
Have you ever “thrown in “ a new wiring harness , re-instrumented a dash, ?
How about repaired/ replaced interior trim ?
This is the type of work specialists do, and they charge specialist rates !
You a find that $15-20k for a new , warranted , car ...becomes attractive.
We're starting to see tablets used as dashboards but only now are they being rated for temperatures cars see. One dude I knew had a tablet PC as his gauge cluster and found out too late that most tablets can't handle extreme temps. Even arduino ECUs have problems with vibrations until they're cosmolined.calab said:Brakes are easy peasy, throw in some extra coins for some custom dash gauges, I seen some sweet lcd based I believe from the likes of Banks but I could be wrong.
This discussion is why i'm frustrated in the likes of Casey Putsch and his Omega Car, which he intentionally made to be as aerodynamic and as eco-friendly as possible. 100MPG diesel that out-accelerates a Viper, though I'm not sure if he ever provided hard numbers on it's Cd or weight, and has never shown how he made the body composite as far as I know. It's exists tho, and lots of what he's said is true:The Toecutter said:Even a $20k car is quite expensive, when the vast majority of the population lives paycheck to paycheck and doesn't even have $1,000 in savings. I could afford such a car outright today if I wanted it, but people that can do that are well under 20% of Americans. I did spend $8k on a Milan SL velomobile, cash, last year. Best $8k ever spent. If I had the resources, I'd love to build a one-seater car with no bicycle drivetrain designed around a replica of its body. In mass production, such a thing might have a cost comparable to a scooter, and performance like a high-end motorcycle. It would be so light and aerodynamic you could make it out-accelerate virtually any production car using cheap ebike parts. You wouldn't need more than a 3-4 kWh battery pack to have competitive range to most mainstream EVs when cruising down the highway, which would then make every 110V outlet the equivalent to ChaDeMo or Level II, and every 220V outlet the equivalent to a Tesla Supercharger. And it could carry your groceries, keep you dry during your commute to work, and maybe even have climate control if an appropriate design for such a system were to be made. I think there would be a decent-sized niche for such a thing, even moreso if gasoline goes into the stratosphere regarding cost, or even becomes unavailable outright.
I agree. However, the average price of a new car is $47,000. That is no doubt in part due to people buying quarter million dollar supercars - but the average used car (where you typically do NOT see people buying supercars) is $29,000. And people are still buying them, given how low inventories are.The Toecutter said:Even a $20k car is quite expensive, when the vast majority of the population lives paycheck to paycheck and doesn't even have $1,000 in savings.
They are not going to be in trouble for years. Here's what going to happen short term:speedmd said:Tale of two cities? Is Legacy auto in trouble? Starting too look so.
I will say it again.....john61ct said:This is why fuel prices should be maintained at high levels.
The extra funds raised used to accelerate a mandated transition until it can become permanent.
They're not going to be.john61ct said:This is why fuel prices should be maintained at high levels.
Yes, for two reasons.99t4 said:Does anyone think this will decrease gas prices?
Sure but are the "ignorati" going to even know about the augmented supply? And that the augmented supply is supposed to drive down the price? By definition, the ignorati won't know this and will not make the connection or understand the logic.JackFlorey said:If they DON'T lower prices once they get more supply, even the ignorati will start thinking "wait a minute - is this some kind of a scam? Are they keeping prices high ON PURPOSE?"
I think "president released oil reserves" is simple enough to get to them.99t4 said:Sure but are the "ignorati" going to even know about the augmented supply?
CONSIDERABLE SHOUTING said:We're starting to see tablets used as dashboards but only now are they being rated for temperatures cars see. One dude I knew had a tablet PC as his gauge cluster and found out too late that most tablets can't handle extreme temps. Even arduino ECUs have problems with vibrations until they're cosmolined.