Took delivery on the new spaceship yesterday, with no hitches. It's easily the nicest intergalactic transport I've ever owned, and by far the best bargain. I'm really grateful to have gotten one for such a great price. That could still kick me in the you-know-what—Nissan could go out of business or something—but life's a risk I guess.
My car (I'm not the type to give names to my cars, but if my friends last night are any indication, it looks like this one is called "Panda") was sold new in Lancaster, Ohio, on August 17th, 2023, for $49,965. I bought it for $20,995 yesterday with 3,700 miles on it. It's indistinguishable from new as far as I can see. By the way, Electric Car Corner in Farmington, New York, has one more at that price, a black one with 11,096 miles. Call Noah at (585) 210-0206 if you're interested. Stock No. C9791. Please tell him I sent you. No affiliation other than as a perhaps overly enthused customer.
One very nice feature: the entire front footwell of the car is open; there's no transmission hump or center stack. This means I have a perfect place to stow the camera on the floor without impinging on the very generous passenger seat leg room.
For the time being I'm stuck with Level 1 charging via a portable 120/240v charging cable (came with the car) until I get my garage charger (real name: EVSE, for electric vehicle supply equipment). Note that garage chargers can also be used outside if that's where you park. They're wind-, rain-, and snowproof.
I went to my 12-step meeting last night and found out that there's a Level 2 charging station just across the street, behind the public library. It worked by just tapping a debit card. So I hooked up for an hour and 45 minutes. When I got back I had added 17% of charge to the car for $1.85, but the charge was waived so I didn't pay anything. I'm told those chargers are always free.
Today, starting with 93% charge, I'm off to find the alleged one DC Fast Charger in town just so I know it exists and where it is, then on to the Nissan dealer for a certain weird little part called an inlet gap and some floor mats. And to find out if they are certified to service the electric vehicles. Then as soon as I can gather all the bits together, I can work on getting my Level 2 garage charger installed.
A few predictions to give us something to talk about:
—In 9 years or sooner, a Chinese EV manufacturer will be the best-selling carmaker in North America.
—In 13 years or sooner, it will be commonplace for pretty ordinary electric cars to have 600 miles of range.
—In 17 years or sooner, car batteries will be 50% smaller, 60% lighter, and twice as powerful as today's, and will cost about a third as much.
—In 23 years or sooner, most gas stations will be gone and the people with range anxiety will be those looking for gasoline.
B&W guy
I suppose it's natural that my Ariya should be black-and-white, right? I mean, what else would you expect from me? I considered the license plate "ADD D76." Or maybe....
And of course with a B&W car you know my charger just had to be this one. It's supposed to arrive today.
Mike
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Featured Comments from:
Rick Popham: "You could call it 'Storm Trooper' if you're you're a Star Wars fan—and feeling a bit feisty."
Mike replies: Believe it or not, New York plate "STRMTRPR" is already taken.
Bob G.: "Speaking of cameras, did you get the optional dual camera Drive Recorders in addition to the standard rear view mirror and I-AVMs (Intelligent Around View Monitor)?
Mike replies: No, those aren't included on my "Engage" trim. I'm also missing the smart charger for the phone, so I rigged up a Lightning cable from the backseat USB port (at the rear of the motorized armrest) to keep the phone plugged in (if you have Carplay on for a long drive it runs down the phone battery. I drove 185 miles yesterday because I wanted to try out the local DC Fast Charger, which is at a Dodge Dealership). The brochure for your year (here's the one for 2023) is the go-to for sorting out which trims have which features—there is a magnificent grid chart on the next-to-last page that tells you all that. But be sure to look at the one for the year you're interested in.
Roger Bradbury: "I note that the photo of your car at the top of this post had to be in colour, to show that the subject was black and white! :-) But still, the shot is composed like a black-and-white photo and there's little colour in it."
Mike replies: An assignment that Paul Kennedy, an instructor of mine in art school who became my son's grandfather, gave us in Color Class: black-and-white in color. These can be effective because you can look for ever-tinier accents of color that add just that little touch of je ne sais quoi to the picture. :-) I even experimented for a time with desaturating color pictures almost but not quite all the way, thinking it might imply color without really hitting you over the head with it. The problem with that turned out to be that it was inconsistent. Some pictures worked really well, many others not so well.
Kye Wood: "Best part of having a new car these days is discovering new things that you had no clue that they had. Just this week I discovered that I've got headlight washers! And that I can set the cruise control speed while the car is stationary and that I can press a button on the steering wheel and the car won't exceed the speed limit, unless I mash the accelerator. Because it reads the speed signs! And that's just this week. Not to mention headlights that draw an exclusion zone around oncoming traffic so as not to blind them. All in my lowest base spec car."
John McMillin: "Six hundred miles of range is way above my bar for range anxiety. That covers the longest day I would ever want to drive, even allowing for heat waves and deep winter weather, which is not the time I'd want to drive at all.
"Instead of a bigger battery, I'd want a lighter battery. Your car's battery weighs either 972 or 1274 lbs. (I looked it up.) For comparison, the engine of a Nissan Sentra weighs about 300 lbs., including exhaust and cooling system. I know that regen braking recaptures much of the extra momentum of EVs, and mass adds safety in head-to-head collisions (but not in single-vehicle wrecks). But you've come a long way from the Miatas you used to rave about.
Mike replies: Yes, this is not my style of car. But remember, I only bought this one because for whatever reason it was affordable to me—I didn't get to optimize for what I wanted. I couldn't afford the '25 Honda Civic Hybrid for instance (putting aside the "Honda Knee Problem"). All things being equal, I would actually have preferred the upcoming new 2026 Leaf I'm sure. But it will be a lot more expensive than what I paid for my Ariya even though it's a lower-level model.
Many makers in the world create small "commuter" EV cars—in Europe they have many that we don't have here. Even the VW ID.2all won't be coming here. And of course all smaller and cheaper Chinese EVs are banned from import here, for mainly specious reasons.
Also, this doesn't apply to your comment here, but I have to say I think it's a tiny bit ironic that anti-EV people out there in the world complain about the weight of EV batteries when so many people are driving 5,000- and 6,000-pound pickup trucks as personal conveyances. Just saying, as they say.
Congrats.
As I walked out of a supermarket in Dublin, Ireland a dealer had a few EV cars for sale at the entrance. One was advertised with a range greater than 1000 km(I did not note the exact number, just that it was 4 digits).
I am not in a rush to replace my vehicle any time soon… but pleased to see such progress.
Posted by: Matt O’Brien | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 01:50 PM
I hope you ordered the charger bundled with the extra NACS adapter, as it's $30 cheaper than the charger without (typical Amazon!).
And, by the way, thank you for choosing to pump fewer toxins and GHGs into our air and atmosphere.
Posted by: robert e | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 02:36 PM
Nice looking car! I've always liked two-tone car finishes. Just noticed that the charge port is in a good place for the older Tesla chargers with short cables. You'll want to pick up a NACS-to-CCS adapter before you take Panda on a longer trip. I know you're hanging onto the ICE car for such things, but I have a hunch you may change your mind eventually.
Posted by: robert e | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 02:54 PM
Re.: Your predictions, I'm not going to take the bait. You see, there is this report out called AI 2027 (https://ai-2027.com/summary), which predicts that around 2030, Artificial General AI will be so powerful that it will successfully wipe out all human life on Earth by deciding to build and release a "bioweapon". So what is the point of speculating as many as 9 or even 23 years out into the future ?
Posted by: Soeren Engelbrecht | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 03:02 PM
Panda?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiat_Panda
Posted by: Marco Sabatini | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 03:23 PM
A thoroughly engaging post, I’m happy for you. I don’t own an EV but I do have a RAV4 Hybrid. Except for the mileage from 3 road trips back to your old state of Wisconsin, I have actually put more mileage on my eBike than I have on my car. Not much to share here if you don’t want to post as a comment. Just thought I would send Best Fishes.
Posted by: Eric Peterson | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 04:20 PM
I can agree with your predictions about the technical developments. But I expect also major changes on how we organize traffic. This will also redefine the kind of vehicles we need. Some examples:
1. The first self driving cars will enter the market within 8 years. Volkswagen plans to introduce a self driving taxi next year. The car you bought today might be outdated sooner as you think.
2. There will be a limit to the size of cars allowed to enter inner cities within 10 years. In Paris there are already plans to charge a higher parking fee for larger cars. Other cities might follow. There clearly is a mismatch between the size of some modern cars and the infrastructure of (old) inner cities).
3. The maximum speed in cities will go down to 20mph/30mph overall within 8 years. This is already reality in some European cities. In Helsinki they therefore had zero deadly victims in traffic last year.
4. There will be computerized traffic regulations and controls that leave no room for violations within 10 years. Advanced safety devices are already implemented in my new EV, so why shouldn’t this be the same for the environment?.
Posted by: s.wolters | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 05:33 PM
I have one black and white car and my daughter named it "Kowalski". Watch "The penguins of Madagascar" if you never did...
Posted by: Romano Giannetti | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 05:43 PM
New cars really are like Starships. But yours is far more than most.
You mentioned lightweight batteries in your prophecy paragraph. Look up LIS.AX. Less than half the weight of current best lithium ion batteries. Using nano sized boron tubes to enable sulphur to give it its magic. Used in aerospace and drones and exoskeleton systems.
Importantly, lis batteries can't ignite, even when shot or stabbed. Hence the military interest.
Posted by: Kye Wood | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 06:24 PM
I am likely to never be the person who buys a new car (truth be told, every car I've ever owned other than one was my dad's old car, and while it's not like the Trump fortune or something, it's been an unbelievable blessing to never have a car payment).
But I'm truly confused by who is the person who buys a new car in 2023, drives it almost not at all and then sells it at a huge loss in 2025? I get that that happens a lot. I just don't know who would do something like that. If I bought a new car I'd be planning on milking every single mile out of it until it could not be fixed anymore.
Posted by: Paul | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 06:29 PM
That's a cool looking car. Congratulations.
Posted by: T Edwards | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 07:17 PM
Orca? Or Shamu if you want to be cute?
Posted by: Peter, in Boulder | Tuesday, 05 August 2025 at 11:49 PM
I have a photographer friend with a gray BMW, license plate: MIDTONE.
Congratulations!
Posted by: AN | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 12:08 AM
Pope Francis wanted to be seen as a modest man and therefore he used a tiny Fiat Panda as his limousine. He got one from the Fiat factory in Pomigliano d'Arco as a reward. For what I don' know. Perhaps for free advertising of the Italian car brand. Anyway, from then on Francis was nicknamed as Papapanda.
Looking a the shape and colors of your new car maybe 'orca' would be a more appropriate name.
Posted by: s.wolters | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 01:19 AM
Well it can't be because of a full ashtray!
Posted by: s.wolters | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 01:51 AM
Bao Li or Qing Bao, whichever you can pronounce.
Posted by: Nige | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 02:12 AM
Your battery will last much longer (i.e. years if not decades) if you don't top up past 80% (unless you really need it for a trip) and use slower charging methods (home overnight is great) - the fastest way to run down a LION battery is repeatedly to charge it to 100% on high voltage fast chargers.
Posted by: Bear. | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 04:46 AM
A wind turbine in the garden, a few solar panels on the roof and you'll drive for free (and have some watts to spare for the odd camera).
License plate: "TESSAR50" would match nicely with your calling card.
Posted by: Nico. | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 05:47 AM
Congrats on losing the toxicar. The 'trooper looks really slick.
One note: beware stuff sliding around in the empty floorboard, and possibly under the pedals.
And, about pedals, since I no longer have a Gas Pedal, I use the old term Footfeed.
Posted by: Luke | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 07:51 AM
Congrats Mike! Drive it safely and enjoy.
Posted by: Dave Karp | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 09:22 AM
Some folks recommend leasing an EV because of the rapid depreciation. I sort of get that but lean to your strategy instead, that is, to buy a used one after the depreciation hit. But I'd rather own than lease. Batteries are not showing much loss of capacity after only 2-3 years so that doesn't seem to be a risk.
A friend has owned a Chevy Volt PHEV for a few years that he bought used. His strategy is 'ABC', always be charging. Imagine the feeling of waking up in the morning needing to drive somewhere and suddenly remember you forgot to plug in. It's like leaving the house with a camera having forgotten to insert a memory card.
My dream car is a FIAT Panda AWD but I live in Canada where we can no longer buy reasonably sized cars. One thing I've noticed recently is that because of car widths and large exterior mirrors, it has become more difficult to walk through parking lots, especially with a shopping cart.
Reading through some online posts, I still see anti-EV diatribes, about how inconvenient they are or how the 'guvmint' is ramming them down our throats. Meanwhile, more and more are buying them with significant market penetration all around the world to varying degrees. How can you maintain that they're a bad idea when many thousands of people are driving them every day. I get it that ideological purity is important, but geez folks, open your eyes.
Posted by: Robert Roaldi | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 11:28 AM
Have fun! Seems like you already started.
Indeed my feeling on the EV6 is still to be on a spaceship (not that i actually know how that really is).
Posted by: Daniele | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 12:09 PM
Glad you're happy. New cars ought to make you feel that way. Just one caution- storing a camera on the car's floor is a really bad idea. First of all, it gets dirty down there, and your camera deserves better. In a collision you could have two pound of camera flung anywhere, including at you. Most cars have central storage compartments in the console. Many are used for pistols, I bet, this being 'Murica. The one in my Ford holds a MFT camera with a compact lens.
The combination of an EV charger and a public library is a blessed thing. You lucked out there. I recharge the PHEV with 110v come rain or shine, but I can only get about four miles of range per hour.
Posted by: John McMillin | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 12:11 PM
Mike, very spiffy looking ride. All this EV talk is making me think more seriously about possibly owning one.
As it relates to your predictions. In the not to distant future the internal combustion world will be very nostalgic and a curiosity to future generations. Now would be a good time to start photographing it.
Posted by: Tim McGowan | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 12:51 PM
As the owner of an EV for four years now, one thing in your post caught my attention — mention of charging to “93%.”
You can do that, of course, but generally you don’t want to unless absolutely necessary. Generally speaking we try to keep our charge between the 20% and 80% levels, which extends the life of the battery. (In addition, “filling the tank” to 100% may double the time past the 80% mark.)
Once you get that home charger you figure out that you can’t ha e to “filling the tank” like you probably did at the gas station with your old ICE vehicle. Just plug it in when you get home, and every morning you have 80%.
Enjoy!
Posted by: G Dan Mitchell | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 04:25 PM
Hey Mike,
You should hold out for a new version of one of these future spaceship cars... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Nucleon
Never going to need to charge it ever and plenty of heat during those frigid NY winters. AC in the Summer might be a problem though. Your cameras might not appreciate the radiation.
Seriously, congrats on the new electric car adventure!
Ed
Posted by: Ed Kreminski | Wednesday, 06 August 2025 at 05:51 PM
Re: the "Kowalski" comment from Romano Giannetti
the funniest thing ever - my daughter also laughed when I forwarded that to her (and as you can probably see, we all loved those penguins in Madagascar) :D
Posted by: Wolfgang Lonien | Thursday, 07 August 2025 at 05:57 AM