Wassup with Sales?

Discussion in 'Clarity' started by MrFixit, Jun 29, 2019.

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  1. 4sallypat

    4sallypat Active Member

    Can't believe Honda is not continuing the Clarity line.....
     
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  3. Ryan C

    Ryan C Member

    Couldn’t agree with you more. Never had a charged vehicle available, no clue about options or anything. Also didn’t seem interested in selling it. They also avoided mentioning the tax credit like it was the plague which blew my mind. Luckily I had already determined the Clarity was the perfect Southern California commuter car. I felt like I had to work really hard to get a dealership to sell me this car.
     
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  4. Ryan C

    Ryan C Member

    I ran numbers on the clarity vs my 2013 Mazda 6 at 30 mpg and $3.69 gas (California). Adding in tax credit, rebate, haggling price and about $2k a year in fuel savings the Clarity isn’t damn near free for me after 5 years. Assuming insurance and mtx are constant and don’t factor in the cost of the clarity for me will end up being about $9k which is insane.
    But I have damn near the perfect scenario for this car. 35 mile one way commute in heavy traffic with warm temperatures and my destination is always to government buildings that offer free charging.
    I also view this car as a band aid solution/transition to evaluate going BEV. It’s such a good transition car to get someone off ICE and see how normal and beneficial the next evolution of battery tech will be. Also isn’t like to buy some time to see what the next quantum leap in battery tech will be.
     
  5. Ryan C

    Ryan C Member

    As a Californian I totally agree. Purchasing this car was purely a utility and defensive decision to maximize tax benefit, reduce gas tax, get hov Access and use the “free” charging infrastructure. The benefits to the planet are a nice positive but I purchased this car purely because it is the perfect So Cal car. Having the dealerships drop the price from $35k to $26k in one email pushed me over the edge.
     
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  6. coutinpe

    coutinpe Active Member

    Sorry to respectfully disagree with your last statement. I understand the PHEV is a transitional technology (like legacy masts and sails on the first steam ships) and will eventually go away, but I think many people driving PHEVs like me won't go full BEV only unless there's a real breakthrough, not only in EV range but on charging infrastructure that allows to recharge as accessible and fast as filling a tank of gas. Unless, of course, the PHEV option is dictatorially suppressed by the automakers, like GM and Ford did by killing the Volt and C-Max in spite of their popularity, which wouldn't be a surprise either. Sometimes it looks like the 'market decisions' are set by the CEO's will and assumptions, not the market itself. If that happens I would have to go, with pain in my heart, back to ICE if I need to change my car. But again, it's just a matter of opinion. Some people are OK with sitting for one or two hours at a charging station while driving interstate. Not my case. On the other hand, everywhere else on this forum you see people complaining they can't find Clarities at Honda dealers. There would have been more sales, the demand is there, not the offer.
     
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  8. MPower

    MPower Well-Known Member

    For people with 2 car households, a BEV for one of their cars can make sense, but for a single car household, a PHEV makes better sense at this point in the infrastructure buildout.
     
  9. DucRider

    DucRider Well-Known Member

    This is not how it works today, and it is improving constantly.
    Cars with the newest DCFC allow you to drive for 3-4 hours and charge for ~30 minutes, and it continues to get better. Most people stop at least that often when traveling. Those that don't stop that often are outliers that the market is not likely to cater to. At some point, filling your ICE will become more difficult on a long road trip than charging your EV (but not likely in my lifetime).
     
  10. RickSE

    RickSE Active Member

    This is a “happy day” scenario that we won’t see for 20 years. Once the technology hits mainstream anyplace available for charging would get overwhelmed if every car took 30 minutes. Was on a road trip today (260 miles, 54 MPG, 3 people, trunk full of luggage, 0 other clarity’s seen) and the lines for gas at the rest stops were 20 cars deep. I didn’t need to wait because my 7 gallon tank covered the entire trip!! This is an amazing car. I can only think that Honda doesn’t want to sell a lot of them because they sell a ton of accords and civic sedans at a way higher profit margin then they can do on the Clarity with the current cost of battery technology.
     
  11. DucRider

    DucRider Well-Known Member

    The charging network to do that exists today, and I know many people that do just that. One friend has >80K miles on his EV in under 3 years and has even towed his travel trailer across the US and back (but range was in the toilet doing that - like 50%).
    A 300+ mile EV would very likely have worked just fine for your trip, and no need to stop at all to charge. I've done Portland to Seattle and back (380 miles) in a day with no waiting to charge. Topped off a bit halfway there while using the restroom and grabbing a cup of coffee. Topped off again on the way home (at the same location) while eating dinner. Neither of those would have been any different if driving an ICE, and it did not add any time to the trip.
    I could have used a valet with free charging in Seattle while at the meeting (others attending did) and not charged in either direction, but I still would have stopped at about the same time/place anyway.
     
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  13. RickSE

    RickSE Active Member

    You are right. I wouldn’t have needed to stop to charge. But you are missing my point. I was talking about a rest stop on a turnpike where there were 20 cars waiting on gas due to volume. Fill-ups take 5 minutes. What happens when dozens of cars are queuing up for 30 minutes of charging. It won’t be dozens pretty soon. It will be hundreds. The charging network might work today when so few cars are stressing it. Not a chance it will work with volume. I’m not waiting for 10 cars in front of me to finish charging - I’ll keep my PHEV.
     
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  14. David Towle

    David Towle Well-Known Member

    I think PHEVs will be around for a lot longer than many posters here think. Lining up for charging is one problem that will be around for a long time, the other is that for those of us who don't have free or solar charging and live where electricity is not cheap, its significantly more expensive to drive in electric mode than gas for anything over a couple miles, especially if highway speeds are involved. My Clarity lets me address this by picking and choosing gas versus electricity as I see fit. Can't beat that! I'll be driving a PHEV for a long time, probably till death do us part (or maybe if I move where electricity is cheap).

    If Honda is indeed canceling the Clarity, its likely because they just cannot at this time get customers to pay the actual cost of the car plus profit. Hopefully that changes in the future. My guess is their costs are near $50k per car.
     
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  15. DucRider

    DucRider Well-Known Member

    There seems to be an assumption that charging speeds will not increase, and that the only way people will charge is "on the turnpike". Home charging will shift a significant amount of fill-ups away from the traditional "service station" model. The Taycan is the first of the next generation of higher voltage EV's, that will be able to charge significantly faster (the will take advantage of the 350kW chargers now being installed). A 350 kW charge rate would allow a 4m/kWh EV to gain 3 hours of driving in 9 minutes.

    I see no reason to believe that the number of charging stations will continue to increase along with the number of EV's.

    Honda cannot afford to drop the Clarity, as they will be forced to purchase ZEV credits on the open market. They've spent millions doing this already, and it has to rub them the wrong way to write big checks to Tesla. If the Clarity PHEV is supply constrained, they will indeed focus shipments to Section 177 States. They also may be balancing the production of the Clarity to target a specific amount of ZEV credits. It may be that the non Section 177 States got a surge as it made sense in getting the production up and running an needing to make a minimum volume to get the desired pricing from suppliers.
    Over the next couple of years, they will need to put out additional BEV/FCEV offerings that garner ZEV credits as opposed to the TZEV provided by PHEV's as they can only use TZEVs for a portion of the required credits.

    The life cycle of the PHEV variant will definitely be influenced by it's greater cost (as compared to the BEV), lower number of credits earned per unit, and limited value of the credits it does earn.
     
  16. RickSE

    RickSE Active Member

    We are a long way from that type of charge rate going mainstream. And while not everyone will charge “on the turnpike” that doesn’t mean that no one will. TODAY charge rates are not going to give 3 hours of driving in 9 minutes and for $120k the Taycan isn’t exactly a mass market vehicle. With gas at $2.75 and Massachusetts rates around $0.24 per kWh the accord hybrid or insight given the Clarity a run for its money all things being equal. With the $7500 credit the Clarity is a way better deal, and the phev lets me decide how economically I can power the car. Can’t do that in a bev.
     
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  17. David Towle

    David Towle Well-Known Member

  18. MrFixit

    MrFixit Well-Known Member

    Wow !! This is counter-intuitive.
    The fact that you can run a diesel generator, charge an EV, and get roughly the same end-to-end performance as you can could have gotten from a diesel vehicle is interesting, but... The fallacy here is that nobody should want to 'settle' for matching the performance of a diesel car with their EV !!! We want to do MUCH better than that !!!

    Perhaps this has some utility in the deep outback of Australia where it would be virtually impossible to get electricity through other means, and you must charge your EV there, but otherwise, this seems like a BIG LOOSER !
     
  19. Ryan C

    Ryan C Member

    I think I said elsewhere that the PHEV is a brilliant way to allow an average consumer to dip their toes into a new tech without completely transitioning. It’s a good way to avoid extremes. Kinda like becoming a weekday vegetarian. Try to responsibly reduce consumption without eliminating what you’re used to altogether and ultimately giving up on extreme change. I think as battery tech evolves you could end up building an EV like a Dell computer or a solar system. You identify your need and then the dealership builds a Just In Time type of customizable EV that has small battery clusters with room for expansion of additional battery packs etc and u pick the base skateboard power train then build up from there. I envision my Clarity purchase as an efficient way to test the tech and buy time to see what the next quantum leap will be for EV. I really want to watch the Rivian launch. Even if the Rivian itself fails it will completely revolutionize fleet trucks.
     
  20. craze1cars

    craze1cars Well-Known Member

    Kinda like owning a car that carries around its own gasoline powered generator to charge itself, which in the end gets about the same performance and mpg as a regular gasoline powered car otherwise would...

    Oh. Wait a minute....

    Sorry I feel the need to point out the glaring similarities in concept here with what most of us are driving. So “big looser” seems a bit strong to me....

    Indeed as you point out the point of the whole diesel generator thing is to bring electricity for EVs to locations that have zero electricity infrastructure. It has no practical purpose anywhere you can tie into the grid to use a charger, and that’s not why the product was invented...

    The diesel powered charger fills a gap and a need for those who drive outside the range of grid chargers. As does the PHEV. It could be easily argued a single shared Diesel engine for charging many vehicles is a far smarter and cleaner way to handle this issue than for every individual to carry his/her own gasoline generator and fuel like PHEV owners do.
     
    Last edited: Aug 4, 2019
  21. MrFixit

    MrFixit Well-Known Member

    OK, you got me... Although a more accurate analogy with the Clarity would be to sit on the side of the road running the angry bees while you charge your battery for a couple of hours. Then drive your 47 miles in EV mode. Then sit on the side of the road running the angry bees again, etc. etc !!!

    It is interesting it can do as well as touted because this is a humongous diesel generator. This generator is tremendously oversized for the sole reason of convenience (so the user doesn't waste so much of his time charging). Usually better efficiencies can be obtained without such a large mismatch. Our Clarities have an ICE that can just barely drive the car on it's own, allowing it all to work nicely in a 'reasonable sized' 4,000 lb. package.
     
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  22. coutinpe

    coutinpe Active Member

    Atl east for me, it takes almost 2 hours to get from 40% to 95% charge on a Level 2 Volta charger. Can't speak for the Teslas, maybe they're way faster.
     
  23. coutinpe

    coutinpe Active Member

    I like to have choices too.
     

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