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Comment by prottog

3 years ago

> It sold social status to wealthy customers rather than basic transportation to an abandoned market.

I thought their plan explicitly was to start with low-volume, high-margin exotic cars (the Roaster), followed by the slightly higher-volume luxury car (Model S), then progressively going towards higher-volume, lower-priced cars, with each step funding the development of the next.

Are you looking for the Toyota Corolla of the EV market?

I don’t own an EV but wouldn’t the closest one to that be the Nissan Leaf?

I see them all around me and the marked for used ones, all the way back to 2012 models seems to be strong.

  • Leaf is a "city car" which is an euphemism for very short range and slow charging using a dying standard.

    MG4 is the cheapest EV (£30K) sold outside of China that could reasonably compete with a Corolla. There isn't much else in the cheap bracket. e-Niro and ID.3 start at £35K.

    • I know it’s not a Corolla, but it might be the Corolla of the EVs.

      It is inexpensive for an EV and seems to be a reliable and durable car.

      I’m almost sad to hear it’s going to be discontinued but for myself, when the time comes, I’ll be taking a good look at whatever Nissan will be offering.

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    • In Australia we now have the BYD Atto 3 (AUD$45k plus on-road costs) from China, and the MG ZS EV (AUD$45k plus ORC).

It does feel like they're pretty comfortable selling expensive cars for now while others are expanding info the cheaper segments.