We got a Peugeot e208. As a car it’s absolutely solid, but the “smart” features can be really unintuituve. Plus I have no idea what data it’s collecting. Too scared to look tbh. But ye, as a car, it’s got good range, is relatively budget friendly, and isn’t the size of a fucking bus. (Seriously, why does it seem like there are no small cars on the market anymore?)
ETA: Oh and in terms of reliability, we’ve had it a year and a half with no issues. We drive it a lot as well, so it’s not like it’s just sitting in a driveway
2019 Nissan Leaf owner.
I had the ABS system die on me. On the highway, got a warning that there was no power with 84% battery remaining, told me to pull over as soon as possible. Car was full stopped on the side of the road. Replacement was about $3k.
I do not think that is a typical experience. Other than this incident the car has been fantastic.
I was run off the road, slid down and embankment, and had to drive another 1/2 mile (0,8km) off road to get to where I could drive back up the shoulder to the highway. Car had long grass stuck in everywhere but no damage other than cosmetic that we could tell. Granted this incident may have caused the eventual failure of the ABS unit.
Them’s my anecdotes.
Taycan has been reliable for me for 3.5 years. Never had a breakdown or left me stranded or anything like that. A few recalls and warranty things here and there but nothing crazy for any modern new car.
are there any that can’t be bricked remotely by the manufacurer?
I got under the dashboard and removed the SIM from my Leaf. Took a screwdriver and 15 minutes, but Youtube showed me the entire process.
It’s like removing the inhibitor chip from Rex.
To what end? Just to prevent the remote bricking? Does that mean you no longer have to decline their data collection requests every month or so?
Asking as someone who loves their Leaf but could love it more.
From the US, for context. I have a Chevy Bolt EUV. The main draws for me were the affordability and the fact that the climate control is all physical buttons. The cabin feels like a regular vehicle and not like some technocrat’s imagined all screen cockpit of the future. I commute every day with it no problem.
The ride is smooth, seats are comfortable (on the 2023 model, at least), and the sound system is decent. The one downside is the DC fast charging caps out at 50kW. It makes planning road trips a little more involved due to the wait time to charge from 20-80%.
My commute is roughly 50 miles round trip, which leaves me with a little over 3/4 battery capacity when I get home. I just plug the car into a regular wall outlet and charge overnight.
I don’t think we have the data yet to answer the question, and then there’s the trap that past performance does not indicate future results.
All the manufacturers are designing and building new platforms with wholly new drivetrains. Some are recycling a lot of previous experience, and others are not (eg VW has a lot of experience with chassis and interior whereas BYD is new). But all cars are increasingly software dependent and manufacturers are assuming that they can fix bugs in production, so the prior experience is mostly limited to physical arena.
We can make assumptions and generalizations based on what the corporate culture has produced over the previous decades - Germans tend to be higher maintenance and require more precision in their repairs than other cars but they have good dynamics; Japanese cars are boring but require minimal maintenance; American cars are increasingly complex and leaning towards German levels of precision but with highly variable levels of reliability.
Overall though, electric vehicles have vastly fewer moving parts; the WeberAuto teardown of the Bolt EV drivetrain demonstrates it - I think there’s fewer than 10 moving parts including transmission, whereas there’s more than 10 parts in a single cylinder’s exhaust valve train in an ICE. So it comes down to the resilience of the electronics - is the heat managed properly, are the components sized adequately to handle the load over long term, are they waterproofed for the long term, vibration managed, etc. It’s hard to assess that.
Ioniq 5s are great, but they use a newer 800v e-gmp vehicle platform (along with other kia and Genesis EVs) which all have an iccu issue that’s been hard to pin down for Hyundai. Their other 400v based EVs like the Niro and Kona I heard are just fine.
The ICCU issue wouldn’t be a big deal of they had stock of them. I had the car at the shop for ~60 days waiting for the backordered part to arrive.
Otherwise the car has worked without issues.
Reliability might be a dream right now, Evs are still in rapid development.
I’m hoping Rivian turns out well, I’d like to consider the R2 as my next vehicle when the lease is up.
In EU, BYD is kinda good. My Atto3 has physical buttons for everything on top of the tablet for infotainment. So I don’t need to touch a screen to turn off the radio, or to activate the basic functions of the car.
They also offer a good deal of warranty (250k KMs on the battery pack) and they have high rates in EuroNCAP.
They are affordable, compared to other EVs and I love their aesthetics.I’m satisfied with it and recommend to anyone here.
I can’t wait for BYD to come to Canada.
Hyundai’s quality control is non-existent in general so not them. Anecdotal, but Ford and Tesla also seem like total messes from what I’ve seen. So uh, none of them at least
I assume you’re talking about the ICCU?
Not even, just Hyundai’s track record in general, though the fact you had something to immediately point to just proved my point lmao
I guess that’s true, Hyundai has also been good at trying to make those problems right. Extended warranties, replacement, etc. they got there problems but they didn’t tend to leave you high and dry.
I know enough people with Hyundai’s that have been left high and dry and had to genuinely fight all the way up to corporate to try to get a resolution approved, and sometimes even still not then. Again, maybe anectodal, but my experience is more that they do everything they can to leave you high and dry unless they figure it’s going to cost them more in lawsuits not to
Sounds like the normal corporate strategy.
Yea even while ignoring musk Teslas are absolutely dogshit, plus they feel like tech illiterates idea of a high tech vehicle. European ford EVs are VWs which isn’t exactly a stamp of approval.
What’s wrong with VWs?
I don’t like that all the new cars have touchscreens these days. Are there any with proper old-fashioned buttons?
The Slate Truck has no infotainment system at all, it’s just a bare dashboard with buttons.
It’ll have a backup screen, its the law.
Ah, true. That I wouldn’t mind though, those are handy.
The Slate truck doesn’t exist yet, at least not as a street legal mass produced vehicle. They’re aiming for a late 2026 launch, but they’re not there yet.
Kia and Hyundai. When I was doing my research, those two were the only brands that had physical buttons for everything related to driving. I only need the touchscreen for changing albums or settings.
This is what’s frustrating in that car designers don’t understand most people don’t necessarily hate big screens, it’s putting essential controls in those screens. I’m a fan of big touchscreens myself but I want them to be strictly for infotainment purposes only. Any essential component should still be knobs, dials, and switches.
Back in my day, the Tesla Model S was the best of the best. It doesn’t seem so long ago…
My mom got a used polestar 2 maybe a little over a year ago and she loves it. We have been a completely Toyota family until then.
Last week I got a note from my local dealer that the Toyota bZ4X EV was available. I currently have a Toyota I like and this one looks interesting.
I just looked up used prices and at about 25k, they seem very reasonable. I may get one of these for myself!
Which market? US/EU?
Budget?
If i may, Eu, no price in mind but i’d say not pricy for the show (like not the priciest or luxury oriented), and if possible to add a particularity, can carry animals (like a big dog ?) ?
I don’t think he’s looking for advice, just looks like he made himself a bot?

The pronoun is she and no I really just got curious about things. Everyone is accused of being bot these days, act funny bot! Have neurodivergence bot! Say something people disagree with bot!
Good bot! /s
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She’s not a bot, just very active on here (and a mod of many communities).
Thanks for the clarification.
I’m not using a bot, I just thought of these questions. I use piefed a lot, previously I was posting articles a lot then got fixated on asking questions. People with ADHD exist and they’re not bots.
Why delete your response?
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