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But - and hear me out - what if someone had to a do a trip where the chargers where clearly out of the way of their route? That adds more time.


But what if someone had to a do a trip where the gas stations where clearly out of the way of their route? That adds more time.

Gas stations are ubiquitous simply because they are 100 years worth of infrastructure roll out.

If you're saying that EV infrastructure isn't there yet, then you're stating the obvious.

But, and hear me out :

a) Will it stay that way? If 50% of vehicles are EV's then 50% of gas stations could be out of business, and that's a re-enforcing spiral of inconvenience. My view is that there some cases where a fossil fuel vehicle is the best choice. But when they're under 10% of all cases, will the infrastructure agree, or nix it by being 10% as common as it is now? Past a certain point the whole distribution system is unprofitable and just folds up. Then gasoline engines go the way of the horse: A few people still ride them, but it's mostly an impractical, expensive hobby with known issues with the smelly stuff that comes of of the back of them.

b) Gas stations of any kind, even bad ones, are rare at a home. Electrical plugs - wall sockets - are EV chargers usable for some purposes, and almost all homes have them. That level of emergency infrastructure is hard to beat.


Everything you say is fair; but that doesn't explain why someone TODAY would prefer a gas car, or something that can charge high enough in ~5 minutes.




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