this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2025
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Exactly.
We do a road trip about once/year, and our trips are long enough that renting a car for that specific trip is impractical.
We have two cars, a hybrid commuter (hopefully an EV soon) and an ICE family car (hopefully an EV soon). That family car isn't going to be an EV until it can do >500 miles/charge, especially if refuels take >20 min. We rarely go that far, but when we do, we need the range because our trips are often >800 miles in a single day (usually only one actual stop for food, we pack lunches). Yeah, that trip isn't very frequent, but it does happen and there's no way I'm spending 2 hours of the trip waiting for my battery to recharge.
Our commuter, however, can absolutely be an EV, because the furthest it will ever need to go is about 100 miles in a single day (25 miles to work, 20 miles to the airport, 35 miles back home, and maybe a stop at a store). But it needs to be able to do that in winter as well as summer, and after a few years of ownership, so 150-200 miles is a better range.
You're an excellent case for my point. Most car-owning households in the US have slightly more than 2 cars. An EV covers your needs 335 days of the year and a gas car covers the other 30 days, yet people act like that's why they need a 7 seat suv every day. I plugin hybrid will be my next move when I stop picking up lumber every weekend and put my little trailer back in use for the once a month "haul"
Yes, one EV can work, but only as a second vehicle.
We're actually trying to downsize from a minivan (we have three kids), to a 5-seater SUV for the family car. The minivan is super convenient, but fuel is expensive (and pollutes) and we both hate driving it. Unfortunately, most smaller SUVs have very little towing capacity, so we need to find something just big enough to tow what we need, but not so big that we lose all fuel efficiency.