this post was submitted on 04 Nov 2024
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[–] pinkystew@reddthat.com 31 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I asked a dealer for a dumb-car. No fucking auto 911 dialing, bluetooth enabled, GPS service horseshit, just a normal car and he shot me

[–] dan@upvote.au 5 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

I think you want a 2007 Toyota Corolla lol

I've currently got a 2012 Mazda 3 but swapped the radio for one that supports Android Auto and Apple CarPlay. No other fancy features.

[–] Justas@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 weeks ago

I hope that Mazda isn't a diesel one.

[–] sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

We're looking for a new car, but unfortunately there's nothing between "sedan" and "minivan" that we want. We have three kids and a minivan, and we hardly use the extra seats or storage. It's still working fine (it's a mid-2000s Sienna), but my wife and I hate driving it, it has terrible gas mileage (20-ish MPG), we don't need the space 99% of the time, and we never need the storage space and people space simultaneously.

What I want is:

  • AWD
  • >30mpg, ideally 35+
  • flip-up third row (will be used like 1-2x/year, if that)
  • >30 cubic feet storage w/ third row unused (Prius is super close)
  • as small as possible
  • if I have to get an SUV, at least 1500lbs towing capacity (prefer >3000lbs)

If they still made them, a station wagon would absolutely fit the bill. But now, I can't have that, so I'm stuck in SUV-land.

So my plan is to completely abandon the third row and get a compact hybrid SUV. If we buy new, it'll be a Rav4 hybrid (the CR-V hybrid has a dinky 1000 lbs towing capacity, and if I have to get an SUV, I want the option). If we buy used, it'll probably be a Ford Escape hybrid, not because it's good, but because it's cheap and good enough (Escape and Rav4 can both do 1500lbs towing). I don't want either, but since there's pretty much nothing in the sedan w/ storage space market (and I want more than suitcase storage, we camp quite a bit), I'm essentially being forced to get an SUV.

I hate SUVs, but I guess that's what we're getting. I'll probably get an EV for the second car (currently a Prius), if only for the convenience of never having to fill up gas again.

[–] AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Toyota RAV4 is nice. Especially the hybrid

Edit: never mind you mentioned that

Yup, they're just a bit hard to get ATM because they're super popular, so I'm not going to be able to haggle much to get a better deal. Used Rav4s go for the same if not more than new Rav4s.

The Ford Escape, however, is pretty decent and a lot more available than the Rav4, so I can probably get a decent discount. There are several 3-4yo Ford Escapes at $10-15k less than new that look interesting in my area.

That said, neither the Rav4 or the Ford Escape has an option for a third row/jump seats, which sucks.

I really just want a station wagon...

[–] dan@upvote.au 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

It might be too large for your use case, but have you looked at the Kia EV9? The EV6 might be worth looking at too.

[–] sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

EV won't work because we do road trips quite a bit, charging infrastructure in the US sucks, and range would suck in the winter. If I'm going to get an EV, I'd need about double that range for a family car since we regularly go about 300-400 miles between charges, and often 800 miles in a day (takes about 13-14 hours driving). An EV would add a day to those trips, as well as require longer stops.

I'm planning on getting an EV for my commuter (only need about 150-200 miles of range), but not for our family car until range improves significantly.

[–] dan@upvote.au 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Makes sense.

My wife and I don't commute very far so an EV is fine for us even if we can only charge it with 120V initially (until we install a proper charger in our garage). We've got a BMW iX on order.

Tesla is opening superchargers to all brands eventually. That'll help a lot, as will the inevitable changes that'll happen to gas stations where they replace some pumps with EV chargers.

Range is definitely an issue, but it's improving over time. 10 years ago, the average EV range was around 100 miles. I know BMW have tested a prototype car with ~600 mile range, and that tech should hopefully come with their Neue Klasse vehicles some time in 2026/2027. The Lucid Air gets around 500 miles range. Our current gas car (2012 Mazda 3) only gets around 360 miles until the gas light comes on, so it's not actually that different for us.

Yeah, we're right in that awkward window where EVs are almost good enough to replace the family car, but not quite.

We can usually get 400 miles out of our minivan, and filling up gas only takes a couple minutes. We usually pack lunches and whatnot for these road trips, so there's really no reason to stop any longer than that. I guess it's nice to stretch our legs or whatever, but we'd really rather just get to our destination and relax there.

With an EV, we'd probably get about 250 miles range since highway speeds are about 70-80mph in my area (probably a little less since fast charges aren't everywhere), and then 20-30 min waiting to charge. For a typical 700-800 mile trip, that's 3-4 stops, so if it's 30 min each time, it would add 2 hours to the trip.

If we could get 400-500 miles range, we could recharge once, which is totally reasonable. But we're not there yet, so we're looking at hybrids for the family car and an EV for around town driving.

[–] Thadrax@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

and often 800 miles in a day (takes about 13-14 hours driving)

Oh wow. After my last trip that was supposed to take like 9 hours and ended up more like 12, I decided to never do that to myself ever again. But I guess if you have multiple drivers that can share the burden, such along day on the road is still an option.

[–] sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Eh, I usually drive the whole way because I often get carsick if someone else drives, though my SO is there if I need a break. I grew up doing that, and started driving most (if not all) of the way as young as 16, so I'm used to it. We're pretty efficient at it (get gas and go to the bathroom, then get back driving), and my kids basically just read, watch videos, or play video games in the backseat.

It's a lot cheaper than flying and honestly less stressful than flying (no TSA, listening for boarding call, etc) and we don't need to rent a car at the destination, though it takes a lot longer.

We'll also do "shorter" trips at like 200-400 miles (i.e. visit nearby state and national parks), and an EV with 200-300 miles range would make that annoying (we'd have to recharge just before getting there). And the charging infrastructure to those places is spotty at best. An EV would be totally fine for around town driving, but not for road trips, so I either need <200 miles range, or >400.

[–] Thadrax@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Interesting. I don't have a car any more and no kids, but my friends that do always tell me their kids need more breaks than the electric car. And I always found that I need breaks every 2-3 hours anyway to keep the alertness high. I can't imagine going 400 miles in one go.

We make sure the kids use the restroom at each stop, we don't give them many liquids, and distract them w/ tablets and audiobooks. But honestly, half the time we need to stop in the middle of nowhere because it's an "emergency" and they can't make it to the next stop (to be fair, where we go, stops are about every 20-50 miles), so they'll pee on the side of the road (we keep baby wipes and hand sanitizer handy).

If I could time it perfectly, an EV could potentially work. But with so much space between reasonable stops and a high chance for "emergencies," it would probably add another hour or two to the total trip time if we had to wait to recharge, and that's assuming we can reliably find available fast chargers (I hear they're often broken/occupied).