Predatory trade practices. Any country with a domestic auto industry will lose those companies if they allow BYD cars to be imported absent steep tariffs.
Tesla, Rivian and Lucid need to build compelling products that stand on their own instead of relying on financial engineering. Federal subsidies and carbon credit schemes distort the free market.
A 30% battery price difference is huge, and obviously more important in total dollars when buying an 80 kWh vehicle instead of one like 40 kWh that Ford Authority keeps picturing in BYD Seagull. However, as a percent of vehicle MSRP there may not be much difference between BEV sizes.
Anyway, if LFP batteries have indeed fallen to $100/kWh or less price range already, a 40 kWh battery pack should cost no more than around $4,000 at cell level, so a 30% reduction in Chinese advantage would be in order of $1,000 or so. That hardly explains the vast difference between Chinese and other manufacturers’ vehicle costs. At 80 kWh their savings could be over $2k per vehicle, which is no doubt significant but not all that remarkable in context of entire vehicle and its price.
Just saying that if battery cells are actually costing less than $100/kWh, their influence on total vehicle costs may be overstated a bit. My 2 cents.
Rather than start new thread due to limited scope, I’ll reply to your post above because it seems appropriate even though dated.
Tesla just announced new cheaper Model 3 and Y to help offset loss of $7,500 tax credit at end of September. Prices for the significantly decontented 3 and Y are roughly in ball park of $5k lower. I personally don’t see this move making a huge difference in total sales but it will be hard to know unless Tesla shares individual model data. It seems they removed pretty much any feature that was easy to delete even if it only saves a few dollars each. Lower battery capacity is a given, as is reduced range, though still better than previous standard versions.
I happen to agree that this approach won’t be as effective as an all-new smaller Tesla that was to share manufacturing line capacity.
https://electrek.co/2025/10/08/tesla-doesnt-want-to-sell-its-new-cheaper-model-y-heres-why/
Terrifying how aggressively BEVs are being marketed in places outside the US, China is using Europe’s own CO2 legislation against domestic euro brands to basically kill them off in the next decade.
I have a 2024 F250, 6.8L & 3.73 axle with about 6K miles. I’ve noticed that I’m getting a whining noise or howling noise from what appears to be the rear diff. The issue is most noticeable between 40 – 60 MPH on a rolling coast or slight throttle. Under a hard throttle there is no noise. For me this is the first time having a larger Supper Duty Truck. My previous Trucks F150 did not make any noise like this. For this instance I did take it to the dealer, they indicated what I hear is normal and to drive for more miles and let know if it gets worse. I also check the Diff and Transfer case and oil levels were full at the fill plug. Is anyone else experiencing this same noise behavior and is this typically normal for a new F250 to make rear end noise like this?