Yes, the upcoming EV taxes for road maintenance are out of line with gas cars when you consider the sales tax and registration fees of the more expense 'green' car.
While I don't advocate buying 'green' to save money, here's how my numbers work in California:
I drive a 2017 Volt for work duties.
I pay <$0.12 a kWh to refuel it. (charging at work is free, but that is cheating, lets go with .12 which includes all taxes and fees)
I will normally get over 4 miles per kWh. Sometimes averaging 5 miles per kWh on roundtrips. Let's go with 4 since I can hit that number 12 months a year where I drive.
Assuming 85% charging efficiency:
Electric driving burns up $.035 per mile.
The cheapest gas here is Costco, $2.71 a gallon.
My driving style which is normally all electric, >75% freeway roundtrip, is true gas equivalent of 76.8 mpg highway.
Yes, I keep my highway speed down, but we have a lot of elevation changes. I have to cover 58 miles minimum to complete a parts run on pure EV mode. I have stretched that to 70.x miles on a charge, but that was awful. 58 is a breeze, I just drive in the slow lane and stay with the flow. We do have a lot of freeway congestion though. The 58 mile trip takes 2 hours, speeds of 0 to 67 mph.
However, that's not why I bought a Volt. Since it's the 3rd one we added to the family, I knew exactly how much you save buying an economy car that costs over $15,000. Nothing. It's cheaper to buy cheap.
So why did I make the same 'mistake' 3 times in a row? I love how an EV feels when driving in traffic. Instant, smooth, quiet, torque up the yazoo. And it accelerates in traffic better than most cars because of it. I bought so I enjoy driving more. My son and I even AutoX our Volts (a low speed version of road racing, tight course, speeds no higher than 60mph). Both of ours are shod with high performance tires, and corner very well for a FWD 3700lb raceweight sedan.
Why not a Prius, or Leaf, or Golf EV, etc? Because the Volt has more powertrain performance and better handling. I bought a premium 'green' car, not something that I'd hate to drive. I can drive green and enjoy it.
While I don't advocate buying 'green' to save money, here's how my numbers work in California:
I drive a 2017 Volt for work duties.
I pay <$0.12 a kWh to refuel it. (charging at work is free, but that is cheating, lets go with .12 which includes all taxes and fees)
I will normally get over 4 miles per kWh. Sometimes averaging 5 miles per kWh on roundtrips. Let's go with 4 since I can hit that number 12 months a year where I drive.
Assuming 85% charging efficiency:
Electric driving burns up $.035 per mile.
The cheapest gas here is Costco, $2.71 a gallon.
My driving style which is normally all electric, >75% freeway roundtrip, is true gas equivalent of 76.8 mpg highway.
Yes, I keep my highway speed down, but we have a lot of elevation changes. I have to cover 58 miles minimum to complete a parts run on pure EV mode. I have stretched that to 70.x miles on a charge, but that was awful. 58 is a breeze, I just drive in the slow lane and stay with the flow. We do have a lot of freeway congestion though. The 58 mile trip takes 2 hours, speeds of 0 to 67 mph.
However, that's not why I bought a Volt. Since it's the 3rd one we added to the family, I knew exactly how much you save buying an economy car that costs over $15,000. Nothing. It's cheaper to buy cheap.
So why did I make the same 'mistake' 3 times in a row? I love how an EV feels when driving in traffic. Instant, smooth, quiet, torque up the yazoo. And it accelerates in traffic better than most cars because of it. I bought so I enjoy driving more. My son and I even AutoX our Volts (a low speed version of road racing, tight course, speeds no higher than 60mph). Both of ours are shod with high performance tires, and corner very well for a FWD 3700lb raceweight sedan.
Why not a Prius, or Leaf, or Golf EV, etc? Because the Volt has more powertrain performance and better handling. I bought a premium 'green' car, not something that I'd hate to drive. I can drive green and enjoy it.