First generation Volt here and charging has suddenly become a HUGE issue after an EF-4 tornado displaced us to a home with no driveway, thus no charging. Further compounding this, the pipeline hack made gas prices double while the 2013 Volt takes Premium too.
Actually, it is my brother’s car since my own was carried off by the tornado before getting crushed under a tree. We are relying on his car more than ever and yet it’s harder than ever to keep it charged. Luckily the temporary home is only 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) from a public charger at City Hall but we’ve already got nastygrams from people complaining that we hog it and it’s only available after business hours. Also, even that short trip often adds up to hours spent walking each day when we definitely don’t have that time to spare.
I had to spend my car insurance check on medical bills for a tornado injury so I couldn’t afford another and had to get an electric kick scooter to get my brother to and from the public chargers. He just puts the car on charge, pulls the folding scooter out of the hatch, then scoots home. When the car’s charged he scoots back at up to 18.6 miles per hour (30KPH). The range and relative speed compared to walking enables him to use more chargers, further away. For example, there is a free public charger at a nearby park about twice as far with the opposite schedule from the one at City Hall (better get your car before the gates close at night!). There is another at a nearby aluminum extrusion plant that seems to be totally free and always available. When I have the car I might park it across the road from work where you can charge at Target free for the first two hours, then I will scoot back over and get it on my break.
What I recently realized is that the range and affordability of eBikes and eScooters means that a lot of people will be buying these instead of an electric car or truck. For some, a gas vehicle becomes a secondary utility vehicle like you might treat a pickup truck or a minivan that isn’t always needed and often stays parked until you occasionally need it (rain, groceries, etc). Indeed, their respective markets have embraced electric faster than cars or motorcycles that try to be too much. All you really need is wheels, a motor, battery, controls, and a place to fit the rider. Adding enough to make it a full-fledged motorcycle, car, or truck, ends up making it expensive and compares badly in some ways to traditional motorcycles, cars, and trucks (refueling infrastructure, for one).
This “Fortnine” guy gets it:
https://youtu.be/O2zlYpy6QCMNow, that isn’t to say I haven’t struggled with it. It broke down on me the very second time I needed to commute all the way home from work and it was under a month old. Also, I had extreme tire wear with nearly no tread left on the front tire even though the back tire looks new... and the back is the one that you literally rub the tread to stop! I also developed a stem wobble that I had to fix.
The breakdown was caused by a bad connection with the external battery pack. I couldn’t find my tools after the tornado to it took several days but I cleaned the connection from the black carbon/oxidation, added dielectric grease, and it began working perfectly again.
My specific model is the Segway Ninebot ES3 Plus, which has identical specs to an ES4. It probably is an ES4 rebadged for Costco since no one else sells that model but they seemed to disappear from their app/website and my local store over a month ago. Well, ES4 is still around even if the ES3 Plus was just a flash in the pan.