Home » What Will Classic Electric Car Ownership Be Like In The Face Of Battery Degradation?

What Will Classic Electric Car Ownership Be Like In The Face Of Battery Degradation?

Futureevclassics Top
ADVERTISEMENT

It’s the year 2048. It’s Sunday morning, and you’ve just finished a delicious brunch of vat-grown sirloin orbs with your polycule. You feed the now synth-meat-juice-soaked bio-organic plates to your feli-canine hybrid dogcat, ironically named Covid, and turn off the holovisor because you’re sick of listening to President Skrillex’s campaign speeches. You’re going to meet some friends at your local Cars and Coffee, which now all start no earlier than noon thanks to an internationally-agreed upon binding UN mandate. You climb into your prized 2023 Renault Megane RS Ultime, which you just got, as it’s finally 25 years old and able to be imported, and you’re very excited to show it off. Now, here’s my question: Will you see any cool old electric cars at this event?

I ask this question because I was talking to our own David Tracy, who, as he has reminded all of us multiple times, is the proud owner of a 2014 BMW i3 electric car. Both David and I agree that the i3 is a fascinating car and has all the makings of a future classic: interesting technical design (even if, or maybe especially because, it was a dead end), novel and distinctive styling, historic significance, and so on. It’s absolutely the sort of car I’d like to see at a Cars and Coffee in 25 years. But will I?

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Bmw16

It’s pretty uncommon to see people collecting vintage EVs now, and I think the main reason for that is there just aren’t that many that people actually want to collect. Sure, there are really old ones like a Detroit Electric that may be in museums, and some people have been collecting Crap Era EVs like the Citicar, but those use widely-available lead acid car batteries, and as such are relatively easy and cheap to keep going.

Detriotelect

ADVERTISEMENT

But something like an early Nissan Leaf? No one really cares, and, even if they did, getting replacement battery packs would be an expensive and difficult undertaking, costing between $5,000 and $10,000 depending on the age and size of the battery. Does anyone really want to drop that amount of money into a Leaf?

That said, there’s actually a lot of current EVs out there that should, by almost any definition, become future classic and collectible cars. Whatever you may think of Teslas, there is no question that Tesla ushered in a new era of EVs, and cars like the first-generation Model S have gobs of historical significance. In the year 2048, a well-preserved Tesla Model S should have as much gravity and relevance as, say, a well-preserved 1965 Mustang or a 1959 Mini or any number of other collectible cars. Tesla has a huge following of wildly brand-loyal enthusiasts, and it’s quite easy to picture a 2012 Model S owner in 2048 polishing their Tesla, maybe with those weird creepy little kid dolls leaning up against the car, desperately hoping you’ll ask them some question about the car that will trap you in a tedious conversation that ends with a reminder that one day Elon will return, his Starship wasn’t actually lost on the way to Mars like everyone said, and he will deliver all his believers unto paradise.

You may back away, but you’d never question why that car was there, being shown. Because it deserves to be there.

And yet, as David and I were talking about this, we realized that keeping and enjoying a really old electric car may prove to be a much more difficult task than doing the same thing with classic combustion cars. As you have probably already guessed, the problem is with the batteries.

EVs Lose Their Usefulness Over Time, Gas Cars Don’t

Right at this moment, my daily driver, a 1990 Nissan Pao, is technically a “classic car.” It’s 33 years old, and still performs just as it did three decades ago: slowly but reliably, and it goes as far on a tank of gas as it did in 1990, at generally the same speeds. And, it does all this with pretty routine piecemeal maintenance and repairs. Sure, I had to do a lot of work on it when I hit a deer, but even with the difficulties of getting hard-to-find parts from Japan, it wasn’t really all that expensive or difficult to get back on the road.

ADVERTISEMENT

The same goes for my other archaic shitboxes that I love so: my 1973 Beetle had been my daily driver since I got it when I was 18, and keeping it going has never been very hard, really. There’s a huge base of support, and parts are plentiful. My Yugo is, well, a Yugo, but it can be fixed with hose clamps and a rock, if needed. And, of course, my 1989 Ford F-150 will pretty much run forever, and you can find parts for that thing in convenience stores, practically.

All these cars are just as useful when 40 years old as they were brand new; they get the same range, they make basically the same power, and they take just as long to fill up. EVs, on the other hand, because less useful over time, and that’s interesting to think about in the context of classic car ownership, especially when you realize that mending that loss of utility means replacing what will then be archaic batteries.

But let’s think about a car like David’s i3 or a Tesla Model S that’s over 30 years old [Editor’s Note: I really don’t know that this discussion is as relevant to the Model S. For one, its batteries seem to hold up reasonably well (they seem to lose about 10 percent or so over 200,000 miles and 10 years based on what I’ve read), and two, it’s got so much range that even if it lost 50 percent after 50 years, you could still take it to car shows and even commute with it. That’s not the case with the i3 or Leaf. -DT].

Sure, EV battery life has proven to be better than many anticipated years ago when cars like the first Nissan Leafs started to hit the market, but they’re not magic, and they’re still subject to the laws of chemistry and physics. There’s a reason why David was able to get the battery in his i3 replaced for free when he bought it, and that is because California mandates that the high voltage batteries of plug-in hybrids be guaranteed for 10 years or 150,000 miles, which is more generous than BMW’s own eight-year guarantee. After just nine years, the battery in David’s i3 was, charitably, garbage, with a displayed range of under 50 miles. In short, not very useful. And just imagine if the car were 20 years old and had driven over 250,000 miles; yikes.

If David had to change that battery pack himself, pay out of his own rust-filled pockets, he’d be out at least $16,000, according to the SAE. And, that’s pretty much about average: battery replacement costs for Teslas like the Model S or Model X or Model 3 are around $13,000 to $16,000, for example, and those are still currently being made, of course. What about when these things are old enough to be classics? Will there be an industry for making very old legacy EV batteries? Maybe! Will there be aftermarket companies making modern batteries that could be retrofitted into old cars? How complex will that integration be? How expensive? Will the new batteries play nicely with the rest of the electronics?  Maybe there will be innovations that make these batteries cheaper and easier to use? But it hasn’t happened yet.

ADVERTISEMENT

The problem is batteries just aren’t like other car parts, in that they will fail over time, no matter what. Batteries decay over time, and it’s not an if, it’s just how it is. If you find a 57-year old 2012 Tesla Model S in a barn in 2069 (nice) and you want to drive it again, there’s really no way to get around the fact that the entire battery pack may need replacing, and that’s a monolithic cost – it’s one unit, one part, and the car won’t work if you don’t fix that, even before you address anything else about the car. (Of course, the Model S would likely have been easier and cheaper to maintain over its lifespan than an equivalent ICE car, given how few moving parts are in an EV powertrain).

Iso Tesla

Conversely, if you found a 57-year old combustion car in a barn today, say a 1966 Iso Grifo, you could get that thing up and running pretty easily, swapping out the Chevy V8 used in there with a used one or even a brand new crate motor, complete with carb and distributor and everything, for about $6,000. Sure, there’s other stuff you’d need to fix, but it’d be mostly parts that you could get one at a time, at whatever pace you needed to do.

Now, the Iso example is maybe a bit of a cheat, because it has an engine that is still being made, in some compatible forms. but even if you found something like a Corvair or another car decades out of production, you can still find plenty of used parts to get that going again, even whole used engines that have been sitting for decades. But unlike a battery, you can get an engine that’s been sitting for decades going again. And you can take your time doing it, buying parts you need as you can afford it.

So, really classic EVs will face two major battery-related issues: batteries will go bad over time and to replace them, it will require a significant one-time infusion of cash. And then there’s the issue of who will actually be building obsolete battery packs? There could be a thriving aftermarket for this, if there are enough people collecting cars of a particular make and model, but if not (and it’s very possible that during the “danger period” of a car — that is the period after it’s lost its novelty and before it’s become classic — these cars will just be junked, especially if range is already compromised) what could you do? Could you assemble your own battery packs using some sort of off-the-shelf cells and a used housing, connectors, and electronic control equipment? Maybe? I don’t want to say no, but it does seem like an order of magnitude more complex than a current-day classic car owner who may just need to install a new intake manifold on an engine or something. Especially when you consider how many new EVs are using structural battery packs, where the battery pack forms an integral part of the car’s chassis. [Editor’s Note: The modules are usually replaceable, however. And they each have certain characteristics that could be replicated, in theory. The integration with the electronics/cooling system could be tricky, however. -DT].

ADVERTISEMENT

Currently, pretty much anyone who wants it enough can have a vintage car that is drivable and usable. Sure, it takes money, but there’s a lot of options for non-rich people, myself included. If every vintage car I looked into getting would definitely need one part that cost over $10,000, before any other work on the car was done, could I be in the position I am now, with a driveway full of old cars, both in drivable and project car status? Hell no.

Some Cars’ Batteries Won’t Last And Will Need To Be Replaced, But By What?

I don’t know for sure what this means for the future, for a future where the hobby and lifestyle of collecting and using and enjoying old cars is still viable and within the reach of many. Sure, there will still be many combustion cars that can be collected and enjoyed, but they’re getting older and older and older. Is it realistic to think that a car show in 2050 will be filled with tons of 80 year-old cars? How many informal car meetups have you been too that were mostly 1930s Hupmobiles or early 1940s Packards? Are we currently building cars that are truly disposable, and don’t even have the option to be kept as classics decades hence?

Will David have to get rid of his i3 in 10 years, when the battery has degraded again? I’m not sure.

I know that a solution to this would be something I’ve long thought the whole industry should go to for electric vehicles: standardized and swappable batteries. Batteries that are unique to a particular model and integrated into the structure of the car are pretty much the standard for mainstream EVs, and that’s why used EVs and then classic EV ownership is going to be such a huge slice of clusterfudge. If batteries came in standard sizes, with standard connectors and output, they could be changed and upgraded as new developments in battery chemistry occurred, and a thriving and competitive aftermarket of battery manufacturers could develop. Then when you pull a 40-year old EV out of a barn, you know you just need to add in some number of affordable standardized battery packs to at least get it mobile again.

Of course, that’s not a direction the industry seems interested in going. And that’s why I’m so uncertain if any of the currently produced EVs on the market will ever be viable classic cars to own when our kids or grandkids decide they’d like to get into vintage cars, and want the vintage cars they grew up with, just like how Boomers collect Bel Airs or how the Radwood and Litwood collector movements started.

ADVERTISEMENT

I’m worried about i3s, because if David’s battery died after 9 years and 134,000 miles, how many of these things cars will even be left in 30 years?

I think it’s something worth discussing, at the very least. BMW/third-party shops aren’t going to stockpile new old-stock i3 batteries like they could engines, for a number of reasons including battery longevity and safety. For certain cars, there will definitely be companies that step up to provide solutions, and maybe there will be technological breakthroughs that render all of my hand-wringing moot. I sure hope so. Because I’d hate to see this whole passion and interest in old cars become something only for rich people who can either afford to own and maintain incredibly aging combustion cars or who can be willing and able to drop large chunks of cash on bespoke EV battery packs for their vintage EVs.

Maybe I’m missing some key element here. Maybe we can have EV classics in the future. Maybe one of you in the comments has a solution. I sure hope so, so let’s talk about this.

[Editor’s Note: I’ll reiterate that I think modern Teslas (and other modern high-range EVs) will be fine even after 50 years. Per the company “Even after 200,000 miles of usage, our batteries lose just 12% of their capacity on average.” Obviously, time is a factor, and the company only warranties batteries for eight years:

Screen Shot 2023 05 03 At 9.01.53 Am

ADVERTISEMENT

But owners have reported sub-10 percent range losses after 10 years, so that’s good. And with over 300 miles of range, many Teslas will still have useful utility in 50 years even if they do lose one percent per year (which seems plausible). But it’s the earlier EVs with lower range that I’m more concerned about.-DT]. 

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
169 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Ricki
Ricki
1 year ago

Here’s why you won’t see a industry-standardized battery solution: power tools.

That is to say: Milwaukee/Bosch/Makita/DeWalt/Black & Decker all want to suck you into their ecosystem of tools through battery incompatibility. You think car manufacturers, who are already insular as hell, are gonna standardize something as necessary as the main drive battery?

The best thing we’ll be able to hope for in that regard is a fly-by-night knock-off industry like the one that exists for inkjet cartridges.

Not Sure
Not Sure
1 year ago
Reply to  Ricki

As the owner of an 18 volt Nickel Cadmium Skill set from 2008, I agree with this assessment.
Drill
Circular saw
Sawzall
Jigsaw
It’s such a great kit.
Or.. it was…
I used to work at Home Depot, people were always coming in with old power tool batteries looking for a replacement.

Sure, I can sell you the Riobi battery for $120.00
Or you can buy this Riobi chop saw that comes with the same battery for $99.99

We live in a wasteful society.

Last edited 1 year ago by Not Sure
Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Ricki

Cars are regulated harder than drills, though, and the same way Europe is forcing standard charging connectors for small devices, it can and probably will do the same with car batteries and charging ports and such. But the tech is too new and complex to say hey, let’s standardize on x, compared to mini USB vs micro vs USB C vs barrel connector to transfer electricity into a small battery. In 10 years? Maybe.

Gardenbolt
Gardenbolt
1 year ago

someone will make a tag along trailer kit with cords and new batteries towed behind in a mini trailer. extend your range or leave the old battery there, add new volts. the batteries are all a hodge podge proprietary mess, but electricity is universal.

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Gardenbolt

Like a pouch on an IV cart you push around as you stagger to the bathroom in the hospital?

Jason Grant
Jason Grant
1 year ago
Reply to  Gardenbolt

Or as in another article, ride around with a generator in the trunk

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 year ago

You can’t even compare real classic cars to newer cars and especially EV’s. They will never be classics- but that’s me. Will stay with the good cars! (& would only convert them to EV power w/ gun to head, also me drive new EV=over my dead body)

121gwats
121gwats
1 year ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

Your great grandpa said the same thing about your ’68 Camaro, his ’42 Chevy was the bees’ knees.. but then you talk to his dad, Mr. Yells-at-Clouds Sr., and he’ll tell you his old mare was the last true classic.

Not Sure
Not Sure
1 year ago
Reply to  121gwats

I like the cut of your jib.
“The old gray mare, she ain’t what she used to be,
Ain’t what she used to be, ain’t what she used to be,
The old gray mare, she ain’t what she used to be,
Many long years ago.”

Last edited 1 year ago by Not Sure
Defenestrator
Defenestrator
1 year ago
Reply to  121gwats

These newfangled electronical cars with their injected fuel will never have the soul and reliability of a good old carburetor! It’s the end of real cars, I tell you.

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

OK boomer

Not Sure
Not Sure
1 year ago

I’m gonna call you grammatical miscarriage.
Is that cool?
You OK with that?
Kidding of course.
We’re all friends here.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 year ago

No one cares about an early Nissan Leaf?
C’mon, Jason, you of all people should know better than that! Gearheads are irrational-and we love what we love. With connectivity, any obsessed person can contact similarly obsessed people to share tips and parts.
Humans are clever and will go to extreme lengths to possess the object of their desire.

Not Sure
Not Sure
1 year ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

“Don’t bend; don’t water it down; don’t try to make it logical; don’t edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly.”
-Franz Kafka-

John Verlautz
John Verlautz
1 year ago

Great subject, and we’re starting to have actual facts as electric powered vehicles are pushing 20 years in service (Gen 1 Prius)
I drive a Ford PHEV. 10 years old and 150Kmiles. I’ve experienced some loss, even though my research suggested that engineering is top notch, and load is light on this system. The 20 mile range battery indicator usually reaches 15-18 miles of range in the summer months, and in the winter it may not hit double digits. I live in fear that am expensive electrical component will fail leaving me with a giant paperweight. In the meantime, it’s quite possibly the best car I’ve ever owned. That’s considering that I paid $6K for it 3 years ago and put on 30K miles with very low cost of ownership.
Here’s the issues I see;

  1. There will be costs to dispose of the batteries when the vehicle is decommissioned. These costs should be borne by the owner, and will increase the cost of vehicle replacement. There’s no indication that salvage battery value will approach the cost to retrieve/refurbish.
  2. The automobile industry has yet to address the major environmental risks presented by widespread EV use and their huge batteries. (I chuckle to myself just writing out this truth relative to environmentalist support of EVs)
  3. The concept of “design for service” is the solution. It will add a lot of cost, and force the standardization that reduces efficiency. Think Land Cruiser with its rugged replacement parts, heavy weight and low gas mileage.
Defenestrator
Defenestrator
1 year ago
Reply to  John Verlautz

Redwood Materials is already making an incremental profit on lithium ion battery recycling, and there’s still years of process efficient refinement ahead. I’m not terribly worried about disposal.

Barry Allen
Barry Allen
1 year ago

I dunno, but can I give props to whoever in the graphics department added the “crying kid” doll on the banner at the top? I was starting to think I’d imagined those things.

Not Sure
Not Sure
1 year ago

Don’t worry about it.
It possible.
People were swapping V8’s into VW Beetle’s in 1958.
Car people are bonkers. We can do anything.

Sid Bridge
Sid Bridge
1 year ago

Actually, the future could look good for classic EVs out of necessity. I don’t think anybody wants the environmental disaster that would happen if junkyards were full of cars whose entire floorpan was a big, dead battery. We’re already going to need solutions to recycle or repurpose the contents of old batteries and making the necessary repairs/upgrades to keep older EVs on the road might actually be better for the environment… as opposed to us guys who love old cars (like my Oldsmobile) that have pre-smog engines that are supposed to run on leaded gas.

On the other hand, mass adoption of EVs will make gasoline production less than profitable at some point and we’re going to end up home brewing juice to run our big blocks on.

Old Busted Hotness
Old Busted Hotness
1 year ago
Reply to  Sid Bridge

As long as society needs plastics, asphalt and dry-cleaning fluid, it’s going to get gasoline. That’s just how refining works. The greenies think EVs will wean us off oil, but that’s not happening unless we adopt an 18th-century standard of living.

Inthemikelane
Inthemikelane
1 year ago

Ok, but it’s going to reduce the volume which is good, but I agree, society is too oil based to move on from it for years to come.

Defenestrator
Defenestrator
1 year ago

It’s not all or nothing. Cutting the amount we need to pump out by 50-80% and the amount burned by 98% would still be a huge benefit and is more or less necessary. Actually recycling more plastics (it can be done more than it is now. It’s just cheaper to dump, especially when it’s not clean and well-sorted) would also cut consumption, even if some of it happens via hydrolysis and depolymerization instead of more direct remelting.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
1 year ago

My 23 year old Ford Ranger EV gets lots of looks when I take it to cars and coffee and such, there’s millions of Ford Rangers, but only about 1500 were EVs so they’re kinda special. Battery upgrades are possible due to it’s fairly analog nature.

For modern EVs that’s a bit trickier, but a couple points, as battery production increases and prices come down, replacing or upgrading older cars batteries should decrease as well, also technology keeps improving so potentially there’ll be ‘adapter’ boxes for fitting newer better batteries into older EVs, similar to restomodding with LS swaps and such.

Also surprised you said Model S instead of the Roadster, that’s the real gem, but to the point of battery degradation, apparently the newer batteries Tesla is offering for Roadsters are degrading at an alarming rate compared to the old ones, so maybe better to leave the original batteries if they still get you 100 miles or so.

Gubbin
Gubbin
1 year ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

You have a Ranger EV? Awesome! Yeah, I think that if you can roughly match the pack voltage your motor controller and 12V inverter should be happy, and you can just swap in a charger and BMS for the new battery. People are doing pretty cool things with LEAF and Tesla battery modules. People are figuring out how to tweak newer EV and hybrid drivetrain electronics for changes like this, and I’m hoping that right-to-repair laws will help that along.
The exciting thing is when (if?) the next generation battery technologies come along. Imagine being able to double the range of your vintage EV in a few years for half the cost of a traction battery today.

P Hans
P Hans
1 year ago

I think this is a non-issue. Battery or power-storage prices are only going down. In 30 years all these modern classics will have their batteries replaced like you would out of a flashlight. There will be a robust industry replacing worn OEM batteries with fresh ones because new cars last longer than their batteries.

Thomas Metcalf
Thomas Metcalf
1 year ago

I think that there will be some standardization with plugs, connectors, and batteries. There were weird Edison plugs, then 2 prongers and now we have standardized, at least at a continental level. North American batteries also seem pretty standard.
I predict that we will find an optimum cell/pack type and things will become much more plug and play. EV’s of this era will be like the weird Packards and Pierce Arrows that have unique engines with LOW part availability but have a devoted set of enthusiasts that keep them going.

Primer
Primer
1 year ago
Reply to  Thomas Metcalf

Standardization will only happen through regulation; companies want to make you buy their parts, not someone else’s. Look at phone chargers. But one would think there’s going to be a big market for ICE-electric conversions so maybe early electric car battery replacements will flow from that.

Last edited 1 year ago by Primer
Ben
Ben
1 year ago

I’ll reiterate that I think modern Teslas (and other modern high-range EVs) will be fine even after 50 years.

I guess time will tell, but I think you’re wrong about that. Time is the #1 killer of Prius batteries. There are taxis out there with many hundreds of thousands of miles on their stock battery, but at around 15 years or so they all start to die. And the degradation is not necessarily linear either. A battery may slowly degrade over many years, but one day a cell or module kicks the bucket and now you have a car-shaped brick as opposed to a mode of transportation.

I suppose in a big EV battery it may be possible to isolate the worn out modules like they do with worn sectors on an SSD, but eventually enough of them will die that you don’t have enough left. And because they were all manufactured in essentially the same way at essentially the same time, chances are they’re all going to bite the dust at around the same time too.

I expect there will still be classic EVs around in 50 years, but they’re going to be a lot harder to maintain and if they sit in a barn for 25 years you’re not going to be able to revive them with some new belts and a little MMO down the spark plug holes to lube up the cylinders. It will, as with many things these days, be the sole domain of the stupidly rich who can afford to do whatever it takes to keep them going. Shade tree mechanics need not apply.

(of course, new battery tech that would allow you to “replace” a skateboard EV battery with a suitcase of batteries chucked in the frunk could change this whole equation, but based on current technology I stand by my prediction)

Harmanx
Harmanx
1 year ago

It’s likely that in 25 years the prevailing new chemistry (some form of solid state battery perhaps) will become cheap compared to current batteries. This would allow for inexpensive third-party new-chemistry replacements for older EVs (and possibly OEM-manufactured new-chemistry replacements). I don’t think the cars absolutely need to use the same cells that they were built with to work — they just need the same form factor, power output, and internal connectors. If new chemistry batteries get a lot longer range — and require different charging specs — they’ll probably need an OTA update to address differing math for the computer. Solid state batteries (along with the touted advantages, including eventual lower cost) are pretty likely to appear, being that they’ve been proven in lab settings — and mass production is the challenge now being addressed.

Last edited 1 year ago by Harmanx
Paul B
Paul B
1 year ago

The battery pack in the Volt is modular and repairable.

Even if the battery pack is structural to the car, the pack can be made to be serviceable. Labour may be high, but technically doable.

Even today, there are Ford trucks where the cab has to come off for fairly basic engine repairs.

JShaawbaru
JShaawbaru
1 year ago

There are aftermarket solutions for the 2000s Honda Insight and most/all generations of the Prius, so it’s plausible that some company will start selling battery packs for EVs once OEM support is gone, but it seems less likely due to the massive size/cost difference between a small hybrid battery and a battery for an EV. Even the idea of swapping out bad cells as a DIY seems a lot more daunting when you’re dealing with such a large number of them, although I’m sure people will.

Lightning
Lightning
1 year ago
Reply to  JShaawbaru

People swapped out bad cells in Priuses in the early years, but that’s not recommended now (either OEM pack or aftermarket all matched cells) because it always became a game of whack-a-mole.

Dennis Frederickson
Dennis Frederickson
1 year ago

Automobiles play such an important role in American society I think it is safe to say there will always be car collectors in future generations.

However, as discussed in exquisite detail by many commentators to this post, the cost and complexity of EV restorations in particular will probably be major barriers to entry to this hobby and therefore a predictor of a much smaller pool of collector car aficionados in the future.

JDE
JDE
1 year ago

you say the Leaf is a worthless thing, yet I fully believe the i3 is exactly the same under ranged glob of turd on the road.

Cars and coffee might have a few first gen priuses with upgraded li-ion battery packs and manual transmissions. Possibly the by then defunct Tesla corporation product like Model S plaids and the two or three proto cyber trucks that made it out before the the collapse. I am not feeling like anything except maybe the E-Rays and the 4Xe wranglers will still be crawling defunct mall lots to get a sip of pseudo coffee and tofu Donuts.

Sivad Nayrb
Sivad Nayrb
1 year ago

The future C&C events will be VR affairs driven by AI.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 year ago

Jason, you had me at “President Skrillex”.

Brian Michael
Brian Michael
1 year ago

“Tesla has a huge following of wildly brand-loyal enthusiasts”

Those aren’t enthusiasts, they’re weird nerds. Tesla is essentially Apple, a charismatic leader and disposable products with a cult-like following. Their fan base is not the type to lovingly restore a first year Model S.

Automotiveflux
Automotiveflux
1 year ago
Reply to  Brian Michael

iPods have a huge modding scene, I don’t see why that won’t happen with Tesla also (it already is)

Justin Noker
Justin Noker
1 year ago
Reply to  Brian Michael

Yeah I’ve heard of people buy a used Tesla and then trying to upgrade it themselves for features they want just get shamed and told “why not just buy a new Tesla?”

Rabob Rabob
Rabob Rabob
1 year ago
Reply to  Brian Michael

You can criticize Tesla for a lot of things but their cars are way less disposable – at least compared to other brand’s stuff – that came out around the same time like the Leaf and i3.

StalePhish
StalePhish
1 year ago

“batteries will go bad over time and to replace them, it will require a significant one-time infusion of cash”

IMO, not necessarily. An EV battery isn’t just one solid black box, it’s a case filled with lots of smaller parts. It’s basically like a car engine, which also isn’t a black box. There are lots of components that can individually fail, causing the whole device to cease operation, but you don’t need to replace it all at once. Gruber Motors in Arizona is a specialty shop for old Tesla Roadsters where they diagnose and replace individual AA-battery sized cells to fix damaged batteries. I think the future of EVs will be a lot of shops like this able to swap out individual broken parts.

And then when the entire battery pack does need to be swapped out, there will be newer and less expensive technology to do it with. Take the most recent ChrisFix video, where he repaired the hybrid battery in a 3rd gen Prius (2010-2015) himself using hand tools on his driveway. He didn’t just swap out the whole battery, but he replaced the flat battery cells that were inside the pack with cylindrical cells bought online, and replaced a small amount of other componentry like bus bars, and then it performed better than brand new, getting him 80 MPG.

Sivad Nayrb
Sivad Nayrb
1 year ago
Reply to  StalePhish

Sounds plausible, until the battery cells are integrated & sealed into the car structure.

Ben
Ben
1 year ago
Reply to  StalePhish

Prius batteries are very different from EV batteries though. An aftermarket Prius battery is just a bunch of NiMH D cells welded together in approximately the same overall size and shape as the OEM ones. EV batteries these days usually structural and much more integrated with the rest of the car. You’re not swapping an EV battery in your garage in one evening of work.

Sivad Nayrb
Sivad Nayrb
1 year ago

The 2035 Cars & Coffee Pills meet peeps will be excited to see a ‘busa-swapped i3…

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
1 year ago

“But something like an early Nissan Leaf?”

The Nissan Leaf had a half-assed battery pack design and Nissan also gave up on supporting the first gen model. And dealerships have usually been useless for 1st gen Leaf owners.

And another dynamic to that is that Nissan, like all the other legacy OEMs, wasn’t really serious about selling/supporting BEVs in volume.

How classic BEV ownership is depends on the manufacturer, the model and the volumes it was produced in.

If you look at a Tesla Model 3 or Model Y, the volumes these were produced in practically guarantees that there will be 3rd parties offering support for less.

In the case of the Model S, some of those have needed battery packs out of warranty. You can go to Tesla and get a new pack for around CAD$20,000. Or you can go to BEV specialists such as Shift Motors in Oakville, Ontario who specialize in selling and servicing used BEVs.

https://www.shiftmotors.com/

And I have read of at least some people with Tesla Model S vehicles and getting them to repair their battery packs for substantially less than what the Tesla Service Center will charge… mainly because Tesla does an all-or-nothing approach to replacing battery modules while Shift is willing to drop the pack, test the modules and only replace what is needed.

But even for low-volume Teslas like the original Roadster, Tesla has not only continued to support them, but has even offered battery pack upgrades at times.

“EVs Lose Their Usefulness Over Time, Gas Cars Don’t”
I disagree with that statement. A BEV will lose some performance as it ages… just like ICE vehicles. And like an ICE vehicle, you can refurbish a BEV so it will perform like new again. Whether it’s worth it depends on the vehicle.

Plus in the coming years, I expect we will get a proliferation of BEV specific services such as this one:
https://grubermotors.com/services/roadster-ess-main-battery-pack-services-pricing/

“$6000 for an engine vs $16,000 for a Tesla battery pack”

This is not an apples-to-apples comparison. There is a good chance that if that old ICE vehicle’s engine is shot, the transmission is likely to also be shot.

Plus once the Tesla becomes 57 years old, 2 things will be different… battery packs will be way cheaper and servicing/installing that ICE will be much more expensive… probably comparable to servicing a V12 vehicle from the 1930s.

Maybe we can have EV classics in the future.”

We absolutely will have EV classics in the future. We already practically have one in the form of the Tesla Roadster. And while servicing a low volume vehicle like that will require pre-ordering parts way ahead of time, it’s not impossible.

If anything, BEVs are EASIER to retrofit newer/better tech to than old ICE vehicles… such as has been done to some 1st Gen Nissan Leafs like this one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMMEooP3AZ0

And I predict we will see more aftermarket businesses offering BEV upgrades in the coming years.

It’s no different than how there are businesses that offer upgrades to the shortcomings various ICE vehicles had… such as upgrades for the crappy OEM brakes that were on Fox body Mustangs.

Sivad Nayrb
Sivad Nayrb
1 year ago

You won’t see battery swaps in the future on your Model 3, as replacement cells won’t be available…

I can machine new parts for an ICE, but cannot machine new battery cells.

Defenestrator
Defenestrator
1 year ago
Reply to  Sivad Nayrb

Why would you need to machine cells? Just stick enough standard cells in series to get the voltage to match.

Thomas Metcalf
Thomas Metcalf
1 year ago

The dumbass car doll was a brilliant touch. Bravo sir.

DadBod
DadBod
1 year ago
Reply to  Thomas Metcalf

Car show! Come celebrate the golden age of cars and child abuse!

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 year ago
Reply to  Thomas Metcalf

Still needs a giant plastic placard with mostly inaccurate or irrelevant facts about the car and pop culture at the time it was built

HumanCola
HumanCola
1 year ago

Original Tesla Roadsters came out around 2006, I wonder how much degradation they are showing 17 years later. I would think those ‘old’ Lotus based Teslas are already Cars and Coffee bait.

TriangleRAD
TriangleRAD
1 year ago
Reply to  HumanCola

The massive Cars and Coffee in Morrisville, NC had an “EV Day” a few months back, and there was indeed a Tesla Roadster parked in the monthly theme parking section with numerous other Teslas and a couple R1T’s.

Sivad Nayrb
Sivad Nayrb
1 year ago
Reply to  TriangleRAD

The Tesla Roadster had a Honda K20 swapped in.

169
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x