The shape of things to come.
The specs below are where we can be today. Yes it's over £100k, but you won't find another 200mph+ vehicle with 1,100hp which can travel so far or have a 184mpg best rated power equivalent.
This vehicle is on sale today, delivery for orders today within 3-4 months. this is not hype or maybe, this is now. What is now will be more commonplace in 10 years from now. Vehicles in OZ average about 25mpg, especially the big monsters. With an 18 gallon tank you can get another 103 miles and, yes, you can fill up in 10 minutes (our big cars have 18 gallon tanks, it takes an AGE to fill them).
However, with the Tesla, so long as you have a modern supercharger, you can go to the toilet, have a coffee, or a meal, then go back out to your vehicle, which has charged itself in your absence and drive another 500 miles. No standing at a petrol pump, running to the toilet, grabbing a coffee and still only being 10 minutes faster than the person sitting having a coffee, having been to the toilet, watching you sweating in the sun filling your vehicle, with an amused look on the face.
Just as a question to ask yourself, just how many people are going to drive 625 miles, then fill up and drive another 625 miles? With the EV, you can stop after 400 miles, have a meal and a break and be ready to go again. 400 miles at OZ highway speeds is 5 hours. 625 miles is 7 and a half hours.
This is the question you have to ask yourself. Would you, or many others, drive for 15 hours straight with a 10 minute break? With the EV, you can do almost the same journey in three 400 mile hops with a 30 minute stop each time. Yes, granted you get a supercharger at each stop. But this is coming.
Mere humans, on the other hand, might want a full 1.5 hour stop after 5 hours, which is enough for even a 50kw charger, then drive another 400 miles and sack out for the night, if they even drive that far.
As was proven with even a VW ID.3, recently, on a test from Edinburgh to Bournemouth, a 1 hour stop around Leeds with a very quick 15 minute top up just south of London gave enough to do the 500 mile drive comfortably.
At which point do we stop and realise that 625 miles is actually far further than most people will ever need to drive in one go? Then we can stop saying "but it doesn't go 625 miles in one hop". No it doesn't, neither doe 95% of the people. And you don't have to stand next to it as it fills up either.
A point to remember. I have direct experience of this. My Ford Galaxy 2.3l automatic, on the three times I drove it 1,500 miles to Sweden and 1,500 miles back, would need to be filled up around every 400 miles. That's 22 miles per gallon. Granted it had half a ton of stuff in it. But on the Autobahn it needed to be filled up every 250 miles. That's less than 19 mpg and a true PITA when driving that far. I could live with a vehicle that did 300 miles with my foot down then refilled itself whilst I sat and had a cup of coffee.
This is the future.
Oh and Tesla set up a Supercharger manufacturing factory in China over the last 6 months. Expected output? 20,000 per year. Superchargers are something which are coming. Faster than most believe.
https://ev-database.org/imp/car/1406/Te ... -PlaidplusEVDB Real RangeRange * 415 mi
Vehicle Consumption * 275 Wh/mi
CO2 Emissions 0 g/km
Vehicle Fuel Equivalent * 146 mpg
WLTP RatingsRange * 522 mi
Rated Consumption * No Data
Vehicle Consumption * 220 Wh/mi
CO2 Emissions 0 g/km
Rated Fuel Equivalent * No Data
Vehicle Fuel Equivalent * 184 mpg
Fastcharge Power (max) * 250 kW DC
Fastcharge Time (42->332 mi) * 30 min
Fastcharge Speed * 580 mph
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