silvrsvt Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 (edited) https://arstechnica.com/cars/2024/03/ev-buyers-want-suvs-and-sedans-not-minivans-or-trucks-survey-says/ The article is rather eye opening-with the biggest takeaway is that customers are woefully uninformed or just have no clue Quote The survey shows that car buyers looking for EVs are, on the whole, not well-informed. Twelve percent said they trust Toyota best when it comes to EVs, despite the fact that the Japanese automaker is years behind its rivals and has but a single, somewhat mediocre EV on sale today in 2024. Another 8 percent named Honda, which similarly is lagging the industry in terms of electrification. Edited April 28 by silvrsvt 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ice-capades Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 22 minutes ago, silvrsvt said: https://arstechnica.com/cars/2024/03/ev-buyers-want-suvs-and-sedans-not-minivans-or-trucks-survey-says/ The article is rather eye opening-with the biggest takeaway is that customers are woefully uninformed or just have no clue The survey shows that car buyers looking for EVs are, on the whole, not well-informed. Twelve percent said they trust Toyota best when it comes to EVs, despite the fact that the Japanese automaker is years behind its rivals and has but a single, somewhat mediocre EV on sale today in 2024. Another 8 percent named Honda, which similarly is lagging the industry in terms of electrification. While the Edmunds survey may, repeat, may reflect potential EV buyers' opinions, the survey sample is extremely small statistically with only 300 potential EV buyers counted. As such, the degree of accuracy should be highly suspect, and my gut reaction is to consider this survey more as clickbait than an accurate assessment of potential EV buyers' opinions. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
silvrsvt Posted April 28 Author Share Posted April 28 1 hour ago, ice-capades said: While the Edmunds survey may, repeat, may reflect potential EV buyers' opinions, the survey sample is extremely small statistically with only 300 potential EV buyers counted. As such, the degree of accuracy should be highly suspect, and my gut reaction is to consider this survey more as clickbait than an accurate assessment of potential EV buyers' opinions. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/howcan-a-poll-of-only-100/ Some info on polling sizes and how data is extrapolated by using polling size 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akirby Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 2 hours ago, ice-capades said: While the Edmunds survey may, repeat, may reflect potential EV buyers' opinions, the survey sample is extremely small statistically with only 300 potential EV buyers counted. As such, the degree of accuracy should be highly suspect, and my gut reaction is to consider this survey more as clickbait than an accurate assessment of potential EV buyers' opinions. Not surprised at all. Edmunds has been clueless for 25 years. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Harley Lover Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 2 hours ago, ice-capades said: While the Edmunds survey may, repeat, may reflect potential EV buyers' opinions, the survey sample is extremely small statistically with only 300 potential EV buyers counted. As such, the degree of accuracy should be highly suspect, and my gut reaction is to consider this survey more as clickbait than an accurate assessment of potential EV buyers' opinions. Yes, but so long as the conclusions of the survey confirm someone's EV bias, they will become the basis of articles on EV sites and posts on this site. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
silvrsvt Posted April 28 Author Share Posted April 28 6 minutes ago, Harley Lover said: Yes, but so long as the conclusions of the survey confirm someone's EV bias, they will become the basis of articles on EV sites and posts on this site. Here is the thing-everyone has their biases and misinformation-I posted how/why a small sample size can be used to extrapolate data for this. I posted this as informational....take all information with a grain of salt. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akirby Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 3 hours ago, silvrsvt said: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/howcan-a-poll-of-only-100/ Some info on polling sizes and how data is extrapolated by using polling size That assumes 100% random participants and you don’t get that if you only survey people shopping at your website. You also have to consider the market at that point in time. EV trucks are far more expensive than sedans and SUVs. I bet if EV trucks were $35K a LOT of buyers would be interested. Not saying the conclusions are wrong necessarily just that there is too much bias in that survey to draw conclusions like EV buyers don’t want trucks. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DeluxeStang Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 (edited) I understand sedans and coupes generally aren't as profitable as crossovers and trucks. But with how successful the model 3 has been, I'm stunned Ford has no plans to use this new affordable EV platform to develop a model 3 rival. Especially considering ford claims this platform will be profitable even on 25k EVs. Edited April 28 by DeluxeStang Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akirby Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 3 hours ago, DeluxeStang said: I understand sedans and coupes generally aren't as profitable as crossovers and trucks. But with how successful the model 3 has been, I'm stunned Ford has no plans to use this new affordable EV platform to develop a model 3 rival. Especially considering ford claims this platform will be profitable even on 25k EVs. You can’t always translate Tesla sales to other brands. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sullynd Posted April 28 Share Posted April 28 (edited) I think the Rivian R2 is the sweet spot for BEV SUVs. I wish there was a Ford option - A BEV Everest (with a more modern body) would be pretty cool. Edited April 29 by sullynd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tico Posted April 29 Share Posted April 29 I think the Mach E is the right size, but its more a Mustang replacement for me than and Crossover cause it can't tow. Something more like my Escape hybrid (not plug in) that can tow something (small trailer) and has AWD would also be on my list. Prices have to be under 50K preferably under 40K. Price is what is stopping me now. Also waiting for better batteries. But huge expensive SUVs and Trucks are not what I want. I don't know about the EV market in general but I do think the market for $60K plus vehicles is limited in size no matter what the motivates the wheels. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AM222 Posted April 29 Share Posted April 29 (edited) 14 hours ago, DeluxeStang said: I understand sedans and coupes generally aren't as profitable as crossovers and trucks. But with how successful the model 3 has been, I'm stunned Ford has no plans to use this new affordable EV platform to develop a model 3 rival. Especially considering ford claims this platform will be profitable even on 25k EVs. A small sedan or crossover can be sold everywhere (high volume models), a full-size truck is mainly a North American thing. This is why many of Ford's competitors retain a full range of affordable small models that include cars and crossovers (ICE/hybrids/EVs). Ford still has one B-segment crossover, the Puma which will gain an EV version but sadly this is not a global model despite Ford having multiple plants in different continents. Another case of Ford's rivals selling global models while Ford is stuck with regional models. PS: Just like their ICE counterparts, EV sedans and car-like crossovers are more aerodynamic, lighter and more efficient than tall SUVs, you can squeeze extra miles out of a smaller cheaper battery pack. Edited April 29 by AM222 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gurgeh Posted April 29 Share Posted April 29 14 hours ago, sullynd said: I think the Rivian R2 is the sweet spot for BEV SUVs. I wish there was a Ford option - A BEV Everest (with a more modern body) would be pretty cool. There almost was a Ford version -- but it would have been a Lincoln. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sullynd Posted April 29 Share Posted April 29 25 minutes ago, Gurgeh said: There almost was a Ford version -- but it would have been a Lincoln. No there wasn’t. There was supposed to be a Lincoln based on the R1 platform. R2 is new. Back when Ford had a large investment in Rivian, and the Lincoln was planned I had hoped Rivian would use Ford as a “ghost kitchen” for service. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gurgeh Posted April 29 Share Posted April 29 5 hours ago, sullynd said: No there wasn’t. There was supposed to be a Lincoln based on the R1 platform. R2 is new. Back when Ford had a large investment in Rivian, and the Lincoln was planned I had hoped Rivian would use Ford as a “ghost kitchen” for service. Ah my mistake. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
.I. Posted April 30 Share Posted April 30 Si esto es cierto, Ford está jodida! 🤣 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deanh Posted May 3 Share Posted May 3 On 4/28/2024 at 2:26 PM, sullynd said: I think the Rivian R2 is the sweet spot for BEV SUVs. I wish there was a Ford option - A BEV Everest (with a more modern body) would be pretty cool. bring on a sub 30k electric Maverick.....BINGO! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DeluxeStang Posted May 3 Share Posted May 3 1 hour ago, Deanh said: bring on a sub 30k electric Maverick.....BINGO! Can Ford pull off a 30k EV maverick without compromising on long term quality? That's the big question. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deanh Posted May 3 Share Posted May 3 48 minutes ago, DeluxeStang said: Can Ford pull off a 30k EV maverick without compromising on long term quality? That's the big question. dont see why not, and based on Fords #1 selling vehicle being a Pickup, and the dfact Mavericks are selling like hot cakes..I think that contradicts somewhat the "buyers want electric sedans and SUVs..." fact is theres only 3 electric pickups on the market and they are all up scale which somewhat limits the take rate... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sullynd Posted May 3 Share Posted May 3 2 hours ago, Deanh said: bring on a sub 30k electric Maverick.....BINGO! Even 40k would be fine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deanh Posted May 3 Share Posted May 3 1 hour ago, sullynd said: Even 40k would be fine. Maybe ..But that puts it within 10k or so of a Lightning PRO....but a smaller EV pickup I think would sell relatively well...the PROS are our biggest Lightning movers.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jpd80 Posted May 6 Share Posted May 6 (edited) On 5/4/2024 at 5:42 AM, Deanh said: dont see why not, and based on Fords #1 selling vehicle being a Pickup, and the dfact Mavericks are selling like hot cakes..I think that contradicts somewhat the "buyers want electric sedans and SUVs..." fact is theres only 3 electric pickups on the market and they are all up scale which somewhat limits the take rate... Something tells me that was one of the goals with original E-Max BEV project but then it was turned into something completely different with higher expectations. Im curious to see the technical details on the BEV Puma to see exactly what Ford did to go from ICE to BEV, maybe similar could be done with C2 architecture provided that it could be altered correctly for efficiency and low costs..perhaps the clean sheet CE1 does all of that with far less complication…. Edited May 6 by jpd80 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ice-capades Posted Sunday at 04:01 PM Share Posted Sunday at 04:01 PM Passed a white Rivian R1S EV on the road this morning but only got a quick look at it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrCurvedLimos Posted yesterday at 05:45 AM Share Posted yesterday at 05:45 AM (edited) Rivian R1Ses are pretty common out here in Seattle area. Starting to see Cybertrucks with some regularity, and even saw a Fisker Ocean today. Tesla model 3s are so common you can see about 3 of them anywhere you look in town. I saw 5 out of 6 cars turning left at a traffic light on Tuesday were model 3s! I was watching the light and my internal monologue was droning, "Red one, red one, white one, white one, Mazda, black one... Criminy!" But I haven't seen a Rivian R2 yet. Edited yesterday at 05:51 AM by MrCurvedLimos Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akirby Posted yesterday at 01:07 PM Share Posted yesterday at 01:07 PM I’ve seen a few cyber trucks including a black one (not sure if it was paint or a wrap). Teslas are a dime a dozen. I’ve only seen one Rivian utility but I see a truck 3-4 times per week. At work we even have a Lucid sedan and we had a Fisker Karma a few years ago (might be the same owner). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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