Any GTAM'ers own an electric vehicle?

It’s a 2021.

My only concern is after warranty repairs as I understand only Tesla has the parts / service.
We found Tesla was actually cheaper than some local mechanics who were Tesla certified for repairs. They also got the job done a lot faster and correct for a simple heating issue we had with one of our 3's. The certified shop did not hook the heater up correctly and charged 3x as much as Tesla. Still new to Tesla, we have only started our fleet about 8 months ago, so time will tell how good or bad Tesla is for service.
 
We found Tesla was actually cheaper than some local mechanics who were Tesla certified for repairs. They also got the job done a lot faster and correct for a simple heating issue we had with one of our 3's. The certified shop did not hook the heater up correctly and charged 3x as much as Tesla. Still new to Tesla, we have only started our fleet about 8 months ago, so time will tell how good or bad Tesla is for service.
Nice! Thanks for chiming in with real experience!

Looking forward to updates.

Buddy that bought the used 3 said he went to test the new 3 and is in love considering how much better it is overall than his 2021. He’s already jonesing to change after 2 months.
 
4 passenger + pilot and properly certified. Lots of uses for it - you might as well ditch helicopters to dismiss this.
and super cheap to fly.
$28 per hour ALIA VTOL energy cost vs. $311/hr Bell 407
84% less emissions ALIA VTOL vs. Bell 407
$18 per hour ALIA CTOL energy cost vs. $347/hr Cessna 208
75% less emissions ALIA CTOL vs. Cessna 208
336 nm range- 153 kts
What's not to like .... it resolves the short hop issue for aviation.
 
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4 passenger + pilot and properly certified. Lots of uses for it - you might as well ditch helicopters to dismiss this.
and super cheap to fly.
$28 per hour ALIA VTOL energy cost vs. $311/hr Bell 407
84% less emissions ALIA VTOL vs. Bell 407
$18 per hour ALIA CTOL energy cost vs. $347/hr Cessna 208
75% less emissions ALIA CTOL vs. Cessna 208
336 nm range- 153 kts
What's not to like .... it resolves the short hop issue for aviation.
Targeted range, projected range, rounds of funding secured. Wank. Once it actually carries passengers for hours, I'm willing to cha.ge my opinion. As it is now, it is 7000 lbs and I expect real range will be an order of magnitude less than the marketing.
 
Possibly ok for a flight school. For the vast majority of uses a giant wank using taxpayer funds.
I to would like to see government money minimized in speculative technologies. The island airport could have a vested interest in E-planes due to constant pressure from nearby residents to shut the place down over noise issues, the reason jets aren't allowed other than emergency flights.

Nice. Give people subsidized housing on some of the most valuable property in North America and they complain about noise they knew was going to be there when they signed up.

The true unsubsidized E-plane price wasn't mentioned but a Cessna 208 would start at about $3 million CDN and could go double fully loaded. I don't know if they are comparable aircraft. A 182 might be closer.

Longevity and repairs to composites has yet to be determined. DC-3s production ended in 1942 but ~150 are still flying 80+ years later. Composites tend to weaken over time. Aluminum is aluminum and can be patched panel by panel.

Maximum altitude would be interesting as engine output wouldn't be affected by thin air. Lift / drag would be a factor.
 
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Hard to imagine any commercial planes using electric just based on the weight. I have lived my dream of having a car that drives for me, I am now ready to look forward to my next dream of a simple and easy flying machine to go to and from work. I live and work rurally, about an hours drive everyday through the countryside which I love. The only thing I would love more would be to soar just over the tree tops and farms to work... I wonder if these will be something a little more common in the next 10 years.

This is what I would love, after range is increased significantly a little bit of storage area. I swear after I have this I will be happy!

Price is steep, but hoping in time this is going to come down quite a bit.

 
Hard to imagine any commercial planes using electric just based on the weight. I have lived my dream of having a car that drives for me, I am now ready to look forward to my next dream of a simple and easy flying machine to go to and from work. I live and work rurally, about an hours drive everyday through the countryside which I love. The only thing I would love more would be to soar just over the tree tops and farms to work... I wonder if these will be something a little more common in the next 10 years.

This is what I would love, after range is increased significantly a little bit of storage area. I swear after I have this I will be happy!

Price is steep, but hoping in time this is going to come down quite a bit.

PIvotal Helix is similar. Cool idea and has a real probability to deliver on it's promises. $190k USD for 64 km range. Classed as ultralight so you don't need a full PPL in the USA. If they ever became remotely popular, I expect regulation would change quickly to restrict them. It's one thing to fly your ultralight from an airport over some farms, it's a very different thing to take off from the roof of your condo to commute to work downtown.
 
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