I like not having to change oil, tweak stuff brake pads, etc. approaching 70, it hurts to do this stuff. My Honda Element is nice, but painful to service. I do it for the quality of work, not cost. in the last decades a just ex-girlfriend, after me keeping her car in excellent shape for users after her friends cars conked out. bought a new toyota.
At her 1000 mile (paid) service, going home the oil light came on. Not being a car girl, she drove it back. I think they gave her a stupid warranty.
Before that, an audiophile (not audiophool) friend bought a VW rabbit in for first service. The car fell off the lift upside down onto another car. some kind of left/right liting mechanism. crushed roof.
He agreed to let them repair it.... geeeze.
I'm bringing in my Tesla s 2017 into its first checkup next week. $500.00 As far as I know, they check brakes, change the reduction gear fluid, check antifreeze and brake fluid, suspension looseness (probably the same as a Maine inspection), 12 volt battery.
But, we get new cr3020 batteries for our keyfobs and new wipers.
I'm all for hybrids for econoboxes, but for a luxury car company, you get the same extreme service costs on top of electronics add-ons.
My car is was $69,000 and hope it will last twice as long as an ice car. Aluminium body and stuff, performance brakes, shocks available anywhere.
Any steel underneath like on my Element, I'll spray Fluidfim on it (it's an excrement from sheep).
The performance will stay as new, no wearing gaskets and rings, not dragging around transmission, emission controls, exhaust (I dread the day doing exhaust on my Element. At least only one muffler.
Wait and buy a full electric.
Electric cost is not determinable on our bill lost in dithering if we use clothes dryer, clean electric oven, how long our hot plasma tv is on, dehumidifier in basement, a/c.