2015; Plug-Ins & Electric Cars, the fastest growing segment
Despite cheap gas, Plug-ins and electric cars were the hottest, 2015, USA car segment; growing 30%, but still just 0.8% of the total car market.
Autoline Daily News: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIypU4Uz5gw |
At peak popularity, hybrids were around 3% of new sales, and diesels at 1%. If plug in sales growth continues, they should surpass the diesels next year.
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I believe its the biggest growing sector here too, 1.3% of market share, with around 85,000 so called "plug in" cars registered now, up from 3500 in 2013.
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Interestingly, this article contradicts the 13 year conversion claim... "Then along came the combustion engine. But it took the automobile and tractor nearly 50 years to dislodge the horse from farms, public transport and wagon delivery systems throughout North America." "Robert Thurston, a U.S. steam engine expert, opined in 1894, no less, that horses are not only "self-feeding, self-controlling, self-maintaining and self-reproducing, but they are far more economical in the energy they are able to develop from a given weight of fuel material, than any other existing form of motor." https://thetyee.ca/News/2013/03/06/H...ung-Big-Shift/ |
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Plug in cars have only been currently available for 6 years, and 200+ mile BEVs are starting to come down from the luxury segment. |
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Pure electric car registrations are up 73% V's January last year in the UK. Big increase.
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The Bolt was third in plug in sales for January, which tends to be a low month for the segment without the pressure of tax season. This is also without full national availability, and likely fully loaded models.
Monthly Plug-In Sales Scorecard |
What's the difference 'tween an EV and a plug-in?
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A plug in refers to any car that has plug in capability, such as some hybrids (Mitsubishi Outlander, Prius Prime etc) and pure electric cars which are always plug in.
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Plug in covers PHEV and BEV. Basically anything that can charge from the grid.
EV could include fuel cell cars that are fueled by hydrogen or any other fuel. It can also include a BEV that runs on primary batteries alone, but i don't see such coming to market. |
So, reading between the lines, are you saying that some hybrids do NOT have a plug-in option?
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Apparently the UK took the number one spot in EU registrations of plug ins in 2016.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C5CSE19WEAICKPA.jpg |
Nice. It will ONLY get better, too.
Paul, you would probably know the answer to something like this... Is marijuana legal in the UK? |
I just saw the movie APEX: The Story of the Hypercar. Well worth seeing for sports car lovers.
I mention this because many of these manufacturers create runs that are counted in the hundreds of vehicles per year, so if you sold 100 x $1.5M hypercars last year, and this year you sell 125, that's a stellar 25% growth! And I mention this, because:
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The same applies to reducing an entire car down to 0-60 mph times. Or horsepower. Or RPM. If that's where your mind is at, then by all means, save a ton of dough and get the best 0-60 mph times at the lowest price tag, and you're the winner! Personally, I'd choose a Porsche 911 Carrera 4 convertible, with a meagre 370 hp and 0-62 mph (0-100 kph) times of 4.5 sec. I guess I'm a sucker in your eyes. I'm okay with that. I'm also okay with you loving Teslas. To me, a car is much more than 0-60 mph times. But that's just me. |
EV's and ICE cars shouldn't really be compared, they look and feel like similar products, but the electric motor isn't an engine, so will have many benefits over an ICE. They're about 300% more energy efficient, have less moving parts so are far more reliable, are quick and easy to rebuild and install, cheap to manufacture and that's before you even talk about max torque at 0 RPM, zero emissions, quietness etc. Not bad for something the size of the bucket you use to wash your car.
Tesla as a car maker aren't that great as you know, early days, poor build quality, reliability issues, they've lots to learn. But I'm sure if the same drive train were available in an Audi, or Porsche, you would admire the EV more ;) |
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But every corner you turn in a good handling car is always a pleasure. A Miata hits the sweet spot for me. If you've never driven a Miata, for weekend kicks go to a dealer and test drive one. They have automatics, if manual transmissions aren't your thing. If you do, let us know whatcha think! |
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When's the big day, Matt? Perhaps you can marry into a fun car. What does she drive? |
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