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Range anxiety is enormously overrated. With an EV you wake up every single day with a 100% full charge. This is rarely mentioned for god knows why. Also, for the rare long range trips you drive your non EV.



>you drive your non EV

that's assuming people have more than one car. a person can get a rental car, this is added mental task that you're asking a person to do. if you're requiring the user to think/work you're going to lose a lot of users.


"rental car"

That's the marketing angle that will be played, obviously for people here in a general socioeconomic sense there's no problem affording an EV and no problem getting a rental at the drop of a hat anywhere on the planet. Like claiming those airplane thingies will never catch on because people don't like renting cars and we are all familiar with suddenly having a transoceanic or cross continent travel dropped in our laps so we'll all be forced to live on houseboats or something. I mean, everybody travels all the time, so no body should be permitted to own a car that isn't for travelers, right?

The marketing push we can all look forward to is exhaustive explanation via legacy TV commercials and perhaps product placement on sitcoms, etc, that only poor people can't afford to rent a car for weird long trips and being poor isn't cool, so that'll kinda take care of itself.


i don't think it would get that far. we're living the intersecting of type of cars and ownership of cars. if it's a play on status i see Uber and such services dominating this marketing space. why rent and drive yourself, only the poor drive themselves.


> With an EV you wake up every single day with a 100% full charge.

Unless, like many people in my city, you park on the roadside because your 19th and early 20th century houses don't have carparks.


This is a big problem in many European cities. Many people in cities (and just about all in city centres) don't live in a house, they live in a flat. And while the newer ones in very large cities often do, most older apartment buildings don't have parking garages. I think my neighbours would be mildly annoyed if I were to lay a 30m power cable from my third floor window to my (hypothetical) EV somewhere close to the house. Not to mention the strangulation issues for those nasty pedestrians on the sidewalk in between house and car.

Having an EV-only inductive charging parking spot every here and there might help in the future (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_charging#Electric_ve... - it's coming), but probably will neither be cheap to retrofit nor very practical.

This is an issue that needs to be solved for EVs to become practical here.


> With an EV you wake up every single day with a 100% full charge.

Unless you forget to plug the car in the night before.


That's a minor UX hurdle. The car can beep at you if it isn't plugged in, like it beeps of you leave the lights on.


Well you can down vote me all you want but it's not a UX problem that's been solved so far and it's a legitimate factor in range anxiety.

Unlike switching the lights off you have to get out of the car to plug it in.

If the car is going to beep before you get out then it's not a reminder for something I've forgotten,as with lights left on, it's just irritating UX noise, like the "don't forget your mobile phone" message. After a very short time I go blind to that.

If it's an alarm on a mobile/smart watch it's still a tedious chore to have to plug in a car when it's raining or I'm in a rush or I've parked in a spot without a charge point.

People _will_ forget to charge their cars, just as they forget to charge their phones and they will be late because of it.

If purely electric cars are to be brilliantly convenient everyday repacements for fossil fuels they'd be better with either some kind of induction charging, fast charging that doesn't take hours or hydrogen fuel cells.

If we had better ways of splitting hydrogen we could "fast charge" anywhere water and electricity is available.


You need a Tesla robotic charger snake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMM0lRfX6YI :) (it's only a prototype for now).

But no, it's not a huge issue. New cars seem to come with apps nowadays, so as you said your car can just send you a notification to your phone if you haven't plugged it in five minutes after arriving back home. And maybe another one if it's still not plugged in before you go to bed.

Unavailability of charging (see sibling comment) is a bigger issue that won't be as easy to tackle. But reminding users to charge their car isn't what's hindering EV adoption. You can be late if you forget to fill up your petrol car, too. That can easily take ten minutes if there's a bit of a queue.




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