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So, it is the same thing… but people have vibes and perception that it’s not? Data says otherwise, but people have feelings? I don’t really know what to do with that argument.

Even if it’s true that people have a “perception”, it won’t matter in the medium term, these folk are going to learn pretty quick that EVs are more reliable than ice cars. Much simpler, much less to go wrong. And soon cheaper, at least everywhere but the US. We’ll be into majority EV soon enough (not in the US, for reasons)



> So, it is the same thing… but people have vibes and perception that it’s not? Data says otherwise, but people have feelings? I don’t really know what to do with that argument.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45631855

The original poster does a much better job than I explaining the issue.

> Even if it’s true that people have a “perception”, it won’t matter in the medium term, these folk are going to learn pretty quick that EVs are more reliable than ice cars. Much simpler, much less to go wrong.

When people make this claim I know they have never had to work on a vehicle. What you think is simpler (which I suspect is less moving parts) actually isn't. Mechanical systems can be diagnosed by simply prodding / wiggling them much of the time or a visual inspection.

EVs for the most part have a huge amount of electronics and computer software. Computer software is incredibly complex in its own right and I shouldn't need to spell that here.

Electronics can fail with moisture and dirt. Electronics are the most difficult thing to solve when repairing a vehicle and this includes working on older vehicles. Issues are difficult to diagnose and intermittent.

So while is mechanically it is simpler, that is dwarfed complex electronics and computer software which is many of orders of magnitude more complex.


Almost all ICE cars sold in the last 5+ years have as much or more electronics and software, including massively complex software engine control. For better or worse, that’s all cars now. The days of simple engines you can fix with a wrench are in the past.


> Almost all ICE cars sold in the last 5+ years have as much or more electronics and software, including massively complex software engine control.

It massively depends on the manufacturer, model and country. So it not entirely true.

Even if it was true it doesn't make EV simple or simpler which was your claim as they are completely reliant on a huge amount of electronics.

There is no such requirement really for Petrol/Diesel vehicles as I drive a vehicle with no ECU and no digital electronics.

> For better or worse, that’s all cars now.

It is obviously worse. Things are less reliable, less repairable and more proprietary.

> The days of simple engines you can fix with a wrench are in the past.

No quite true either.

You can still do a huge number of jobs with basic tools. You may need some sort of code reader to help diagnose. You can still physically inspect things, and prod things etc. The fundamentals of how the vehicle works hasn't changed.


I don’t think there is a single new car for sale in the US that doesn’t have an ECU, and a huge amount of digital electronics. Hell, my friends petrol jeep was bricked a few years ago by an overnight software update and had to be towed to a dealership. If they are available without this, new, where you live, feels like that’s on borrowed time. This is the world we live in now

And in that world, where every car is software. EVs are fundamentally simpler, they have less moving parts and no complicated things like engines or transmissions. Less parts, less complexity, less to go wrong.




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