• @[email protected]
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    -11 year ago

    People really overstate the maintenance difference. It’s basically oil changes, which with synthetic oils are a 2-3 times per year thing depending on driving amounts. In electrics, you have a massive battery that’s going to dictate the value of the car at around the ten year mark, an ice car can be 7-10k, but electric is either 0 or pay 15k to have a car maybe worth that much or slightly more.

    • SeaJ
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      31 year ago

      Are your tires and brake pads bald as fuck? Neither of those are cheap and have to be done every few years on ICE vehicles.

      You are horribly underestimating battery lifespan. They are warrantied for 10 years. They average about 300k miles before dropping to 80% of their original charge. If you are fine with that, many are fine to go longer.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Tires wear the same on battery cars. Brakes are similar, though they were less due to regenerative braking, they also need to be bigger for the heavier weight.

        • SeaJ
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          31 year ago

          Significantly less for brakes. That regenerative braking does the vast majority of the work unless you are slamming on the brakes often.

        • @dogslayeggs
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          11 year ago

          Brakes wear way way less on EVs. You basically never use the brakes. Yes, the EV is heavier, but the regen is strong enough to slow down a car in all but the hardest of braking circumstances.

          There are also timing belts, engine seals, coolant flush and fills (there’s a debate on whether that is worth it), transmission fluid, oil filters, air filters, spark plugs, and the lead acid battery. None of those are really a thing on EVs except the battery, but it’s much smaller and cheaper.