11-01-2013, 12:01 PM | #67 | |
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I was goofing on his last face lift regarding the scalpel bit. He drives a black suburban or did when I lived in Turtle Creek. He eats at Lucky's Dinner often and I would see him. |
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11-01-2013, 12:27 PM | #68 | |
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Mercedes sees the writing on the wall and is working with Telsa. I suspect many other companies are also. Once Telsa completes their supercharger network, other companies will buy in to share the technology. This is a game changer. |
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11-01-2013, 05:07 PM | #69 | |
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The average cost per charge is based on 11 cents per kilowatt-hr where I live (the national average is 12 cents) and I used Tesla's website charging calculator. The maintenance cost is estimated for an F10 based on my actual maintenance costs for my E90 through 194,000 miles; I then normalized the maintenance estimate for 100,000 miles. Tire cost is what I experienced for my E90 (again normalized for 100,000 miles). Fuel cost for the F10 is an estimated 26 MPG times 3.50/gal. My E90 gets 27 average on my commute. The F10 might do a bit better than 26 MPG, but the price per gallon is below the national average too. What's not in my numbers is the F10 has a turbo, which probably will require more maintenance than my E90 did. Also, my maintenance costs are a bit low since I do all my own work, so I'll call it even. As a sanity check I calculated the per-mile operating costs and it came out to 48 cents/mile (based on an average car price of $30K), the IRS deduction for business use is 55.5 cents per mile, so my per-mile cost estimate is reasonable. What I like the Tesla for is that the fuel cost remains steady. The national average of electricity per kilowatt-hour stays pretty constant over the years, where gas price fluctuate wildly in comparison. If the numbers worked out better, I'd seriously consider one for my daily driver. I have a few other vehicles for road trips. If Tesla comes out with a 3-series priced car with 200 miles range, then I'd consider it and the battery risk. Last edited by Efthreeoh; 11-01-2013 at 05:22 PM.. |
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11-01-2013, 05:15 PM | #70 | |
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But if you are only buying a 70K car because it's fucking cool, then none of this rational discussion really matters. I'd just say the number of potential buyers of the Tesla because the car is just fucking cool may be a limiting factor in the company's overall sales. Considering the battery has the equivalent of 2 gallons of gasoline, it's a damned good piece of engineering to go 200 -250 miles per charge, but it is a limited purpose car in some respects. |
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11-01-2013, 05:26 PM | #71 | |
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Your calculations show a delta of about $7k in favor of the BMW, but the vehicle costs are nearly $15k apart. I understand the comparison if we're talking about utility the car provides and potential savings, however if those are the only measures then why not make a similar comparison between a 5 series and a well-equipped Accord? If the comparison was between a $70k BMW, and a $70k Tesla, that delta would swing in favor of the Tesla up until a battery replacement. That said, past certain miles you're outside of warranty with either so the potential for costly repairs (even if you do the work yourself) increases. More so with the BMW simply because there is more to break. I think your estimated maintenance on the BMW over 100k miles is low, but perhaps this is slanted by your good car experience history. I'd be surprised if the majority of 5 series owners made it 100k with only $2,200 in maintenance. Anyone buying an extended warranty is out more than that already. I think in your case, with your particular comparison, you've represented your numbers accurately. However the comparison overall may not be indicated of a standard business case. Given that we're comparing cars that at the start are $15,000 apart, and by the 100k mark that difference has shrunk to half of that actually appears to speak well for the Tesla. |
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11-01-2013, 05:28 PM | #72 | |
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11-01-2013, 06:59 PM | #73 | |
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Hmmmm......your definition of cool or those of that demographic is much different then mine. Tesla S might be cool among Toyota Prius crowd not among most general people or enthusiast crowd.
However, I doubt anybody drools over it There are more people who drool over cars that make Tesla S look uncool such as Audi R8, M5/M6, CLS/E AMG, RS5/RS7, Viper SRT 8 or GTS, Stingray C7, Porsche 911 GT3, Maserati Granturismo S......etc....etc. Also, cursing in your post does not make your argument valid. In fact it diminishes it. Quote:
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11-01-2013, 07:08 PM | #74 | |
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I guess I am in a different category then cause I love taking road trips in my cars. Just recently took a road trip from Houston to California total of 3600 miles round trip over 2 weeks.
It was lots of fun great bonding time with my son as it was just two of us and, lots of site seeing and things you would just simply miss flying over the land in few hours. If you plan it out right it can be an adventure with lots of fun family time. You should try it sometime......great fun P.S. I got 26.9 mpg on 3600 mile trip in my tuned E92 not bad for a car around 400hp/400 lb-ft appx. and the drive felt so stress free thanks to great driving dynamics of the car. Quote:
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Last edited by Kayani_1; 11-01-2013 at 09:51 PM.. |
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11-01-2013, 08:04 PM | #75 | |
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11-01-2013, 09:46 PM | #76 | |
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All that said, my ideal situation is to get the ICE technology half again improved efficiency up to 90% and it would serve us all well IMO. Last edited by Efthreeoh; 11-02-2013 at 07:19 AM.. |
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11-01-2013, 09:49 PM | #77 |
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Is personal attacks all you have when your point is weak in a discussion and you don't get your way........growup
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11-01-2013, 10:03 PM | #78 | |
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11-01-2013, 10:19 PM | #79 | |
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Really, I think some are just missing the point completely and judging from the examples must just be from a different demographic or live somewhere different. This isn't a car that requires analysis via spreadsheet. When the next model comes out that is being billed as the more practical, affordable alternative then sure, compare away. NO ONE who buys this car does an analysis on cost per mile any more than the people who bought the original roadster at 2x the price did. Even if you exclude the group of people who can't afford to buy a 5 series or E class but can somehow come up with enough $$ to lease one, there's still plenty of 1%'ers to keep them busy building cars for the next couple years. As far as cool factor, again some of you guys have no clue and spend too much time reading car magazines. I'm fortunate enough to live in a very affluent area. An area that is the polar opposite of the pretentious flash of places like Miami. Maserati's, Aston Martin, Bentleys are daily sightings and are far less unique than the Tesla is and, believe it or not, attract far less attention. Probably won't be that way forever but "cool" to the group of people that can write a $100k check for what will likely be a 4th or 5th car has nothing to do with 0-60 times or even sticker price. The guy I know who's getting one around the end of the month is dumping his S63 AMG for it and he's a guy who has owned more cars than most people will in 2-3 lifetimes. He likes the way it looks, he's driven it and by the time you get to that level, you're looking for something new. Time will tell whether it sticks. |
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11-02-2013, 02:11 AM | #80 |
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I'd much rather do the less expensive airfare (in both money and more importantly time) and spend more time actually doing stuff rather than sitting in a car...but that's just me.
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11-02-2013, 08:07 AM | #81 | |
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Why wouldn't the Tesla S be a car one analyzes with a spreadsheet? I think it is exactly a car to be analyzed by a cost of ownership calculation. The S is the first electric car that comes close to offering sufficient range to possibly use it as a primary car. It is a 4-door sedan with a 3-row seating option for a larger family. The Tesla company is supposedly building a network of supercharger stations across the country on major interstates to support the use of the car for long-distance travel. So the car is being offered not as some rich-dude toy, or electric-vehicle curiosity tidbit, but as a legitimate replacement for an ICE-powered vehicle. All the information provided on Tesla's website is geared toward convincing the buyer why owning an EV is a financially viable option. In fact, the Tesla website has very little "green technology" crap on it and is fully geared toward the cost of ownership to use an EV instead of a petrol-powered car. So if one were considering switching from a petro-powered car to an EV, it's a natural consideration to evaluate the cost benefit of switching to EV. What Tesla's website doesn't say is, "Hey, we've built a fucking really cool car, so just buy it because it's really fucking cool." Originally the S was being offered with three battery sizes in 45, 60, and 85kWh, all priced about $10K apart from each other. Tesla apparently hasn't recognized enough orders for the 45kWh version and has decided to drop that "trim" level. Apparently the 140-mile range is not a viable alternative for people considering EVs (dang, there's that comparative shopping thing again!). The 60kWh trim offers usable range for a semi-reasonable price of just north of $60,000. My thought was I'd never buy a $60,000 car for the commute I put my car though, which is 170 miles/day and about 33,000 miles a year. However, considering the Tesla S's supposed lower operating costs for fuel and theoretical near-zero maintenance cost (I thought), the total life cycle cost equation could balance out with a high purchase price vs. low operating cost. Hence the need to layout the calculations and compare the numbers. Sure, there are much less expensive cars that will fit the bill for my commute at a far less total life-cycle cost, but the trade off is generally $15K - $25K cars are not vehicles one would want to spend 20 hours a week commuting in. And for my particular commute that starts in the boondocks with excellent back-country roads (BMWs were made for) and heads to a large city with all the traffic that garners, my preference is to have a nice driving car to help entertain me during the commute. My E90 fits those needs perfectly, but it would not have been my 1st choice. The issue was my car was 18 months and 22,000 miles old when I changed commutes, which considering the deprecation hit, it was not best economical choice to change vehicles at the time. Yup, the Tesla S is not in the same class as a 3-Series, but it's the only car Tesla offers right now, so it is the one I used to compare switching to an EV. Hence the need to layout the calculations and compare the numbers. Most wealthy people I know do cost benefit analysis on most aspects of their lives; it’s why they became wealthy… Last edited by Efthreeoh; 11-02-2013 at 08:21 AM.. |
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11-02-2013, 08:15 AM | #82 |
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It's a status car. I don't find it cool, but among some people it's cool and that's why they buy it. The other day i sat in one of those cars, and quickly disliked the way i was surrounded by tech stuff. But what really kills this car and other EV cars for me are the very low energy density of batteries and the 1 gear transmission. To be fair though the car gives a good amount of effortless-power for in-town accelerations and the exterior is much nicer than my XJ.
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11-02-2013, 09:06 AM | #83 | |
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No flame, just wanted to make a point. |
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11-02-2013, 11:30 AM | #84 |
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Did you have an opportunity to really hammer it? Was it the 90 P model (P being performance)? If not, take the opportunity to try one of those if you get to. The acceleration is pretty substantial. The sensation feels slower because you're not getting that nice ICE growl, but I found myself reaching speeds way quicker than I thought I was, probably due to the quiet nature of the acceleration.
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11-02-2013, 07:13 PM | #85 |
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I understand but how do you plan on parking the plan at every key point of interest between California and Houston. Some of those cool and unique good local flavors of food places in small towns and many interesting things that are not commercialized and part of fun attractions.
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11-02-2013, 10:40 PM | #86 | |
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You dont know anyone with a Tesla nor are you surrounded by them. Your problem is thinking Tesla owners cross-shop with those cars. They don't. The Tesla is bought in addition to the Viper, Porsche, Mas, Ferrari, etc. already in the garage. |
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11-02-2013, 10:42 PM | #87 |
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LOL. Very true. It's a shame I don't care enough to pay attention to forum IDs. After going back and checking that thread, you're absolutely right.
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11-02-2013, 10:52 PM | #88 |
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For the record, only poor people take road trips. Take a look at the Forbes link posted above. It's the most common car in the wealthiest areas of the county.
No one who lives where we do has any reason to drive through corn fieilds in Podunk, USA. We don't care that the Tesla can't make it to Wally World in one shot. If we were forced to to drive cross-country for some bizarre reason, there's always the Range Rover or S-Class. Or flying. |
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