More like double the rate of inflation. On a long enough timeline it ends up being the same. See 2008 or sept 27 2024 stock market crash. People need a roof, reliable transportation and food. If the cost of any of those goes up faster than wage or salary, then your customer pool will shrink over time.
All my friends that were driving premium legacy cars in China have moved to Chinese EVs, not because they are downsizing but because is a more compelling offering. One went from a Maserati to a Li and when he showed me the new car he was so exited shoeing me all the tech it comes with. I really think legacy already lost China
The Chinese Delete America (and all foreign companies) program has something to do with it. Even so I agree the trend for EV value to be as good as the premium ICE vehicles is undeniable both in and outside of China when comparing performance/luxury/tech features. I wish Chinese vehicles could be imported into the US with a reasonable import tax so our lazy legacy vendors would have to compete.
@@pentoo988no. That only exist in your head. Most affluent Chinese don't like the government, but they detest arrogant uncompetitive products even more.
@@pentoo988 There is no "Chinese Delete America (and all foreign companies)" -- you are getting confused with the US trying to ban everything Chinese. There are US companies like Walmart, Starbucks, McDonalds, everywhere.
@@pentoo988 - You say ‘lazy legacy vendors’, I think it’s more like incompetent legacy auto vendors, these yesteryear ‘Tesla Killers’ are getting killed by Tesla in the EV space and ICE is dying.
implying that Porsche is any better? Hmm...what about those Boxsters and Caymans that had oval cylinders, and a litany of other problems that made them just about worthless? The 911s with the IMS bearings that all fail. The list goes on an on. Porsche builds nice-driving cars, but they have had plenty of serious issues. By comparison, the Taycan is actually not that bad.
In no way true that it is shared with VW. May be only with the audi 800volts archtecture car....the only one with comparable battery. All other VW ,skoda and audi still have 400volts archtecture. Also Porsche is more than twice the price of a comparable hyundai or Kia. (including genesis)
Yes, this is a special strategy by Chinese Automakers to get into European/North American markets, via the "back door". Buying up "old" legacy Car Companies and initially continuing with ICE engines before moving directly to BEV's (Battery Electric) or sometimes their NEV (New Energy Vehicles) ie Hybrids. Those Chinese Companies now own (and have for between 10-15 years) Volvo, Polestar, (Owned by Geely), MG, (owned by SAIC) Lotus and others. They tend to retain the "old HQ's" in the Country of origin eg England, Sweden but often the cars are designed and built in China with enough local input to make it seem like England and Sweden etc. YEs, sometimes they also have to assemble the cars in the original Country. All this results in people thinking they are buying English or Sweden cars! However, what most people don't know, is that Chinese Car Companies and individual large Chinese investors, also now own 19% of Daimler (Mercedes). I'm both an EV Analysist and Fund Manager and we've been watching the Chinese NEV/BEV market for 20 years now. It's very, very, interesting. When the Chinese Government decided to heavily assist the NEV/BEV market, they took a long-term view. At its peak there were more than 400 NEV Car Companies. When the Chinese Government stopped their direct subsidy support at end of 2022, allowing market forces to do the survive or die dance, it was down to approx 91 Companies and further rationialisation will force it down to around 25-30. But all these are battle hardened Companies just frothing at the bit to get into markets outside China. They must do so, or die! So they will be VERY aggressive.
Same problem with every legacy auto maker. They put off making EVs, thinking "we'll just start making them when the sales take off." "We known how to make cars. EVs are just more of the same." So they tried to skip the learning curve. All of these companies *could* have been making a few thousand EVs per year for the last decade, and *learning* how to make good EVs. But no. "We already know how to make cars. It's all about Brand Name and Advertising sizzle."
Exactly, what is so strange is, that this was clear shortly after Tesla presented the Model S, so over 12 years. I think the problem is aways the same with disruption and there also was a huge echo chamber of anti Tesla FUD which obfuscated the minds. I would not wonder if the anti FUD of these incumbent companies is a crucial part of the picture why they fail. China was much more intelligent they saw the potential and how exceptional Tesla and Elon Musk were and are.
That is the best combo. On a weekday, you want to relax going to work and doing about things, so Tesla is perfect for it. Besides, it is cheap to run. However, during the weekend, you WANT to drive a car and a gas Porsche is the perfect machine. Just sitting in it with the engine on gives a different emotion and satisfaction. {Then the wife prefers the Tesla but the kids loved the Porsche...} And Oh, track days!. Forget EVs. you want to do 10 full hot laps at the edge.....yeah!.
"the absolute limit" is actually 140, over that a driver in a real problem. But more important there are plenty of tricky driving on the roads and also all the speed cameras are marked on the online map by the law etc. So driving like on autobahn is not an option, but aggressive driving on packed and/or mountain roads it is.
Most countries have speed limits. That doesn’t mean everyone follows them exactly every second they are driving. I’ve never heard of anyone from any country claim that everyone strictly follows the speed limits at all times. Plus the kind of people that can afford luxury performance cars can afford to pay off the law or bribe themselves out of legal infractions.
Top speed isn’t what EVs are about - if they go really fast range suffers badly. But really quick acceleration- getting to the speed limit in only a few seconds - perfectly legal and actually has bigger impact on journey times than you might think
The main reason is of course Porsche's ridiculous high price. They only need to ask themselves one question: "Do we want to sell vehicle/sports cars to 35% of the upper/middle class buyers or just 7% of the lower elite buyers.? Porsche had chosen the wrong crowd over the last 20 years.....hence paying the price for the mistake. That is another reason why the most successful car makers are the ones that sell more mid-priced to high end cars rather than those just sell Out of reach high end cars...just ask Ferrari or Lambo makers.
Taycan resale value is in the dumpster. They are forcing people to buy Taycans to qualify to buy premium models. They are sitting in inventory all over the place.
NOT TRUE. I am in my 2nd 718 Boxter, and purchased a MACAN TURBO (EV) fully loaded last October. Drove already over 3,000 miles and it is a fantastic vehicle.
It’s no longer enough to put some stitching on the headrest and call it a day… I just got back from a 460 mile road trip in my 2022 Tesla Model Y. Another flawless experience. Total charging cost: $35 CAD.
It’s no longer enough to just build a normal electric car. Tesla is plummeting in sales like no other. At least Porsche has something to offer. At the current used prices of a Porsche you gotta be an idiot to rather pick a Tesla. Except you want poor charging speed, a shitty suspension and overall shitty quality.
A friend at work has a Taycan … he’s swapping it for a Tesla. *Why?* He actually got stuck at a non-working third party charger the morning of Christmas day. The Tesla supercharger network is so much better !
If that's the only reason, that seems rather extreme. And I'm a patient TSLA long starting in 2016. Yes, they're better, but Tesla chargers are getting more common, getting built for other car brands, and it's not like competing brands of chargers are doing nothing, so I think that lead will narrow meaningfully over time, re having a reasonable number of reliable chargers around to charge BEV's over time.
@@rogergeyer9851 In Europe very few Tesla superchargers can be used by non-Tesla. In Portugal as an example not one Supercharger is open to non-Tesla ! Also non -Tesla (if they can use the supercharger) pay 30% more ! 😂
As some of you pointed out … yep, that perhaps was badly worded. It was the final straw, not the only reason ! He complained about (i) The car has to go back to the dealer for a software update , which takes 26 hours ! (ii) pitiful efficiency
@@davidbeppler3032 They are as true as horrible resale value and not selling of all EV vehicles (not just Porsche) same story happens with Mercedes EVs and Tesla.
I do not know what you have been taking but at least in the last 5 years Porche stock has not dropped 59%. The worst high to low is same as Tesla's, about 40%.
Porche stock is at its highest already or the ceiling. It doesn't have room to grow. If that basic you don't even know or acknowledge, then what you said is rubbish.
The stock price in October 2007 was £155.37, today it's £42.76. If you factor inflation into those figures, you can add another 20% to that drop in value. Look it up.
In any country with speed limits around 130km/h, will top end cars be defined by battery range, charging speed, comfort and software experience for the driver?
A premium Porsche is not a vehicle purchase as much as it’s a statement that one can afford to pay over the odds. Perhaps wealthy Chinese now prefer value over vanity. This is cyclical, ostentatious spending comes back.
German brand need to do what Jim Farley is going to try do Jim Farley's BRUTALLY Honest Interview About EVs And The State Of The Industry Dave Takes It On 9.28K
Yeah Jim gets it. Brutally honest about not only EVs, but the challenge that Ford is faced with, understands the volatility of that market, and has taken steps with what seems a rational plan to build competitive EVs that can make a profit. The current market in the US is regional and Jim understands this. It will shift gradually to a wider market there as people learn more about the benefits of EV. Wish other legacy auto makers would approach this problem with Jim’s honesty and humility.
@@YippydogThe new Fraud Crappie is not exactly Blue Oval's finest recent hour in satisfying automotive badge emotion. But perhaps this rebadged German machine addresses the need to rationalise the humiliating plethora of coolant hoses Sandy Monroe's Ford disection revealed a while back. Fords are surely vehicles you expect to be simple and easily repairable by blue collar guys and the thought of trying to run a ten year old Ford EV on a shoestring is scary, without even getting to the main battery. Hopefully Ford's 12V battery will be generic, compared to the apparently 3,000 quid Porsche 12 Volt replacement battery scam.
Just drop the government incentives and tax EVs as much as ICE cars, and let's just see how they really do!! All this BS about running costs is ridiculous.
In Germany, almost no car dealers accept a Taycan as trade-in and there were rumors that Porsche had to recycle 3'000 Taycans from leasing returns, because they couldn't be sold at a reasonable price. The market for luxury EV's is too small.
I traded in my cayenne for a model s, not touching a porsche ever again. 4year warranty expired and car started breaking down. I should've listened to everyone that told me not to buy a german car.
Buy a German car, just not one from this century. My last Mercedes, an '04 W203 was my last German car. Our family drove nothing but German cars until about 20 years ago.
I blame the nosedive in quality of Porsche interiors, it is all LCD screens and creaky, cheap-feeling haptic panels made from piano-black. Those Porsche interiors are no better than much cheaper Chinese alternatives.
The first 3 years Porsche quietly recalled half the Taycans they built to put new batteries in them when GM had all those Bolts catching fire. Porsche paid millions to stay out of the news.
Was in China a few weeks ago. Honestly the Chinese cars look a lot better than the German cars imo and definitely have better tech. You can’t just rely on your brand image forever, ask Maserati.
There's a lot more regulation of cars in the west than China. It's unlikely that their tech would be street legal in the EU or US. Or their safety, or quality of construction. People forget that you get what you pay for. And China's business culture is extremely cutthroat box checking. They also forget that China is substantially subsidizing their domestic EV market.
The “legacy” part is only valididated by car making countries who based their culture around them. The danger for Porsche is, there’s nothing special about them except a flat six engine. As an EV, it’s just a badge.
The administration's incompetence and corruption are becoming increasingly absurd. I feel horrible for people with disabilities who aren't getting the support they require. Thank you Leah Foster Alderman. Imagine investing $1.5k and receiving $6.5k in four days.
Loved Porsches in the 80’s -90’s, they were counter culture, now according to the 30 somethings, you would think they are the norm. The truth is , they are very expensive to operate and no longer that fast.
1) sounds like you never were directly affected by a recall defect much less a life threatening issue 2) when companies want to deny there is a flaw and it rakes a year and more to get a fix and you have to pay out of pocket to fix it 3) it sucks to be without your vehicle while they fix it as many dealers no longer provide courtesy vehicles, plus what a hassle and waste of personal time 4) when multiple major recalls happen to the same vehicle your resale value will go down even after it is remedied, especially on high end cars
@@pentoo988 1. i work in a fleet shop and we deal with thousands of recalls and i've had some personally as well 2. most recalls are booked and fixed at the dealer within weeks, never have i heard of anyone paying out of pocket 3. yes it can be a hassle. most offer courtesy valet service and if more than your daily work shift they will offer a vehicle for overnight if they need it longer. 4. never heard of recalls effecting resale. only time it effects resale is if you don't get the recals done. When i buy a car i ask the owner if they registered their car with the brand and had the recalls done... most don't. I tell them its free fixes why not register?
The reason why I drive a porsche taycan is due it‘s driving dynamics and its build material. It also looks beautiful. We can’t debate about taste. If you can’t afford it, just don’t buy one. Though, I agree that they’re expensive and not twice as good as other. I like your channel, but you are starting to confuse things. Have you ever driven one?
Sales of vehicles of any class are going to ebb and flow - you will have increases and decreases period to period. Claiming a crash after a one period drop is not necessarily a trend. We could be entering a period where auto sales might be lower than last year. Sales can trend up next year. The key is if the central companies are profitable at whatever level.
You don't understand this channel. If sales crash at Tesla over a quarter, it's not a trend. If they fall over two quarters, it's not a trend. If Toyota sells one less car today than they did yesterday, it's a trend and they're going out of business.
@@davidbrayshaw3529 - I get that - I think it depends on which market you are looking at. If Porsche sales fall in the EV market - that does not mean they are doing poorly in the ICE market. Same for all legacy OEM. To be brutally frank - the EV and ICE market is going to coexist. I have a Tesla but also have two other ICE cars. The Tesla is perfect for the use case of commuter, mid range travel and errand running car. It’s actually a great and well built car. But so is my wife’s Acura MDX and our Ford Explorer. The EV market metrics are important mostly for pure EV companies. To determine health of a company and the market you still have to evaluate them in isolation.
@@RagnarinVa EV's and ICE vehicles will co-exist for the foreseeable future for many reasons. And I agree, you do have to look at EV specific manufacturers and Legacy manufacturers in isolation.
I'm all for EV's and hope my next car is one,but I also value the truth so can you tell me where these Porsche figures come from as when I checked their share price I could not see any sign of a collapse ,they are down 10% on year on year but that is not a collapse
You don't come to this channel for "facts". It's here for entertainment purposes and to pump up the value of Tesla stock, only. Sam doesn't cross reference or fact check anything.
@@stopthefomo Ioniq 5N range 240 miles at best. Macan EV, well over 300 miles, and build quality superior too. Sheer breakneck speed in a straight line is nothing special, most EVs are fast enough. Who is going to race with others in our speed limited roads? Driving dynamics, ride and handling, the feel and precision of the steering wheel, nimbleness in corners, NVH control (noise and vibration levels), interior and exterior quality are all pieces that make up a good car.
Totally agree, you should go visit China if you can. Glad you had the chance, with everything going on, I was there back in the late 2010's, and watched in envy as silent electric buses zoomed by, absent were the heaps of smoke and pollution which accompanies the dirty Diesel buses of the Toronto transmit commission.
I suppose that all the drive trains are the same, so why pay an atmosphere and a leg for a Porsche when you are getting nothing different than any other vehicle.
Let me say the truth. They deluded their own brand with models like the Macan. They need to go down on the sales and make it premium again. Which means, very expensive and very high quality.
The depreciation of the Taycan is astronomic compared to EVs, and Porsche owners are not used to accepting this sort of loss. Porsche and all other premium sports brands have a serious problem, because a large part of the appeal is performance, and you can get that much more cheaply and in a more practical package with something like the Tesla Plaid. Sure, there's the luxury element and brand perception, but that's relying on the ICE legacy which is coming to a close. If they're not careful, they're going to go the same way as companies that made Steam powered vehicles. Either they get it right and survive or they don't. It's a stark reality check for Porsche.
Well one thing you said isn't true. Tere are still subsidies for EVs in Germany. 1) no vehicle tax (few hundred bucks per year) 2) 0.25 % taxable benefit of list price for EVs instead of 1 % for ICEs (only relevant for company car drivers, but most new cars sold are such company cars)
Germany need to think about putting high tariffs on Chinese EVs... If Germany put high tariffs on Chinese EVs their German cars in China will get hurt. Germany needs China to buy their cars. China buy more cars from EU than US so EU should not listen to US regarding putting high tariffs on Chinese EVs
My issue with this video is that the narrator is conveniently leaving out that souces cited state that it’s LUXURY EV sales that are falling. The top end. It’s different at that end of the market.
He’s right about people who don’t want facts regarding various beliefs in religions. It is dangerous, but regarding one’s fate after death, people like a dreamy view to keep upbeat as they can’t avoid it. ❤
Sounds like the Porsche-Piëch family needs to hire back Herbert Diess and put him in charge of Porsche ... and then maybe give him his old job at VW too.
Nostrodamus here. I foresee several factors that will hit internal-combustion engine (ICE) automobiles simultaneously, triggering a black swan event: Tightening of government restrictions on polluting ICEs in urban areas. Collapse of Hydrogen-powered vehicles humiliates the car companies and their champions, undermining their efforts to manage the transition. Electric vehicle (EV) cost-of-ownership continues downward, EV range up. EV charging subsidised by companies, etc.. becomes commonplace. Home solar panels charging EVs further reduce running costs. A lot of chatter about extraordinary low cost-of-ownership. Media highlights the measurable and notable reduction in noise and other pollution, and corresponding quality-of-life improvements as EVs propagate. Public enthusiasm for EVs that was rising, accelerates. More political talk about ending of petrol/gas ICEs as credibility of industry is close to zero. Bottom falls out of the new ICE market. New ICEs heavily discounted and sold at a loss. Bottom falls out of the secondhand market. Used ICEs changing hands for dozens of dollars. Petrol/gas stations going out of business. With the collapse of the ICE market, talk turns to: “How to reclaim and recycle all those obsolete ICEs?” and “What to do with all those old gas stations? … old oil tankers? … old refineries? etc…” Auto companies scrambling to retool for solely-EV production as demand rockets. Company executives change their tune about EVs, and beg for government handouts to manage the transition. Car industry shake-up with many failing to make the adjustment. Major oil/petroleum companies shake-up as demand plummets. Huge promotion and propaganda blitz to rescue the situation for ICEs fails spectacularly. Massive culture wars around EVs, especially in US. Lots of flag waving and posturing by paid-for politicians (think of the anti-Japan sentiment in the 80s). The public, unmoved, embrace EVs wholeheartedly. Politicians and industry team up to pick through the wreckage of their major flag-bearing industrial companies (GM, Ford, Fiat, Renault, Toyota, Honda etc.). Turmoil in Middle East and other oil producing regions (Russia, Nigeria, Venezuela, Angola, Canada etc.) as the cash dries up spectacularly and breaks their economies, uproots their oligarchies, and upends the rampant cronyism. Shock waves crash through a major global religion as central influence wanes. Residual demand for ICEs amongst a few hold-outs in the Middle East, Russia, Africa, and India, for example. Victorious Chinese EV manufacturers help accelerate the transition in developing economies. I foresee that these events will accelerate in the next two years and will take about five years to play out. (By now, you’ve realised that I’m no Notradamus - It’s true, anyone can read the writing on the wall.)
I've driven the first Gen Taycan GTS for a month and the BYD seal while I was in China last year. Porsche does feels better on the wheel but it's not worth 6 or 7 times difference, and I think a lot of people like me with less than 2 mills in their bank would feel the same. The BYD seal also has way more tech that comes with the car. I think it's on par with 2nd gen model 3 on handling. To be honest people who still buy BMW or Porsche in China are buying the prestigious status to let people know they got money, which I think is stupid. I think people should look at EV as a tech product than a traditional car, because they got phrase out in 2-3 years like an Iphone.
Every time my wife sees your face on my screen she laughs. She thinks your hair is crazy. I keep telling her when we're in Australia we are taking you and your family out for lunch! We visit my son in Melbs in December/January. He lives in Docklands. He has a second home in Rushworth. As a Porsche owner, I get a kick out of how you pronounce the name. Take care of yourself and your family.
UChicago Prof. Shirley Meng’s Laboratory for Energy Storage and Conversion creates world’s first anode-free sodium solid-state battery - a breakthrough in inexpensive, clean, fast-charging batteries. LESC believes the research brings forward the reality of inexpensive, fast-charging, high-capacity batteries for electric vehicles and grid storage. To create a sodium battery with the energy density of a lithium battery, the team needed to invent a new sodium battery architecture. Anode-free batteries store ions on an electrochemical deposition of alkali metal directly on the current collector. This approach enables higher cell voltage, lower cell cost, and increased energy density, but comes with challenges.
Good to hear! Has the laboratory produced a sample battery that can pass the nail-puncture test, not only when charged, but also discharged - at which point the active pure lithium or sodium metal would be deposited on the negative collector and therefore most vulnerable to a fire? A reference would be great!
@@AllDogsAreGoodDogs "Challenges" means that everything else on the battery got worse; volume, charge/discharge speed, lifespan etc. Batteries are always going to have these challenges, the problem for a battery being implemented in a mobile environment, it needs everything overcome. They have completely screwed up the introduction of electric cars. Elon Musk maybe a complete idiot. Tesla has set the standard of charging batteries to refuel; Battery swapping takes the need for charge rate being factored into batteries, eliminates charge times and solves a great many problems not just in the car but also at the charging station which is never going to be able to do fast charging of 15 minutes on mass. You would have thought that he had atleast worked out with the rest of the industry to use only one plug, instead he built his own network just for Tesla to give him a competitive advantage. The entire automotive industry is built around the legacy car manufacturers, Tesla produces and ships the cars. How much support is there out there for your Tesla? I don't know. It is actually beneficial for Tesla for the other companies to be succeeding at electric. This can still be a flop or a successful nightmare. NEO went with the battery swapping, it's no big deal to add the plug. I think devising a good standard and system for battery swapping is going to be far better for EV's, especially their resale value.
@@alexandermelbaus2351The battery cassette exchange system could be a robotic drive through experience taking 2 minutes and a buffer stock of batteries could allow smoothing of grid demands from off peak charging and allow automatic preparation for high demand holiday weekends. But it needs international cooperation on standardising the technology and it doesn't exactly sound cost effective. Even though battery swapping was apparently a feature in US EV taxi fleets in the early 1900s.
People seem to think Porsche is just about the brand. It's not. They have the best suspension in the business for electric cars, bar none. Now whether that is worth the extra price to potential buyers? Seemingly not. That said, although the Taycan has some problems, it's overall a fantastic car, especially if you buy it used. And it's utterly beautiful, IMHO. Tesla for sure is much cheaper and has better driver assistants, no question about that. I prefer the Taycan, though. It looks better, drivers better around corners, has a proper instrument panel, indicator and wiper stalkers, and a HUD. None of which I can get in the Tesla, even for extra cost.
It is a mindset among ICE exotic car makers that their cars have to be special and expensive. The EVs are bursting that bubble. But Porsche still wants too much money from each car.
I love Porsche but the Macan EV is just not quite right. There are too many small things which are wrong and Porsche cannot see it. So frustrating as no cars handles like a Porsche. They have the 2nd Gen Tycan finally right but still very expensive.
The Chinese customer is the canary in the coal mine for legacy car companies, the German car industry needs to be paying attention to what is happening, German vehicles aren't seen as a luxury anymore and their price point isn't helping
Let's increase prices at a rate of 10-20% per year and see what happens to demand.
More like double the rate of inflation. On a long enough timeline it ends up being the same. See 2008 or sept 27 2024 stock market crash. People need a roof, reliable transportation and food. If the cost of any of those goes up faster than wage or salary, then your customer pool will shrink over time.
All my friends that were driving premium legacy cars in China have moved to Chinese EVs, not because they are downsizing but because is a more compelling offering. One went from a Maserati to a Li and when he showed me the new car he was so exited shoeing me all the tech it comes with. I really think legacy already lost China
The Chinese Delete America (and all foreign companies) program has something to do with it.
Even so I agree the trend for EV value to be as good as the premium ICE vehicles is undeniable both in and outside of China when comparing performance/luxury/tech features.
I wish Chinese vehicles could be imported into the US with a reasonable import tax so our lazy legacy vendors would have to compete.
@@pentoo988no. That only exist in your head. Most affluent Chinese don't like the government, but they detest arrogant uncompetitive products even more.
@@pentoo988 There is no "Chinese Delete America (and all foreign companies)" -- you are getting confused with the US trying to ban everything Chinese. There are US companies like Walmart, Starbucks, McDonalds, everywhere.
@@pentoo988 - You say ‘lazy legacy vendors’, I think it’s more like incompetent legacy auto vendors, these yesteryear ‘Tesla Killers’ are getting killed by Tesla in the EV space and ICE is dying.
@@pentoo988they cannot compete - they would die without the taxes.
The only Porsche is a 911.........the rest are just VW / Audi mutants designed to keep the company from going bust.
This is the truth.
The 718 has no VW/Audi counterpart.
the 718 is a better car
How about panamera
Wrong even the 911 is just a beetle.
And a Taycan is a VW product shared with Audi … hardly a bespoke Porsche
implying that Porsche is any better? Hmm...what about those Boxsters and Caymans that had oval cylinders, and a litany of other problems that made them just about worthless? The 911s with the IMS bearings that all fail. The list goes on an on. Porsche builds nice-driving cars, but they have had plenty of serious issues. By comparison, the Taycan is actually not that bad.
Same goes for Cayenne (Q7/Q8 and Touareg)😂
In no way true that it is shared with VW.
May be only with the audi 800volts archtecture car....the only one with comparable battery.
All other VW ,skoda and audi still have 400volts archtecture.
Also Porsche is more than twice the price of a comparable hyundai or Kia. (including genesis)
@@reiniernn9071 Audi - that was what he wrote... Same (bullshit) platform like the Audi etron GT.
It’s actually developed wholly by Porsche and Audi purchased the underpinnings/technology. It’s also not on the VW group PPE platform.
I test drove an MG4, designed in London, built in China, absolutely brilliant, placed an order
You are a fool to buy a Chinese EV and provide all of your driving data to the Chinese. What a sucker you are.
Good luck when you are in a crash
Yes, this is a special strategy by Chinese Automakers to get into European/North American markets, via the "back door". Buying up "old" legacy Car Companies and initially continuing with ICE engines before moving directly to BEV's (Battery Electric) or sometimes their NEV (New Energy Vehicles) ie Hybrids. Those Chinese Companies now own (and have for between 10-15 years) Volvo, Polestar, (Owned by Geely), MG, (owned by SAIC) Lotus and others. They tend to retain the "old HQ's" in the Country of origin eg England, Sweden but often the cars are designed and built in China with enough local input to make it seem like England and Sweden etc. YEs, sometimes they also have to assemble the cars in the original Country. All this results in people thinking they are buying English or Sweden cars!
However, what most people don't know, is that Chinese Car Companies and individual large Chinese investors, also now own 19% of Daimler (Mercedes).
I'm both an EV Analysist and Fund Manager and we've been watching the Chinese NEV/BEV market for 20 years now. It's very, very, interesting. When the Chinese Government decided to heavily assist the NEV/BEV market, they took a long-term view. At its peak there were more than 400 NEV Car Companies. When the Chinese Government stopped their direct subsidy support at end of 2022, allowing market forces to do the survive or die dance, it was down to approx 91 Companies and further rationialisation will force it down to around 25-30.
But all these are battle hardened Companies just frothing at the bit to get into markets outside China. They must do so, or die! So they will be VERY aggressive.
Great analysis. Thanks for the great explanation 👍
@@johnwilson5743Thank you for your input.
Same problem with every legacy auto maker. They put off making EVs, thinking "we'll just start making them when the sales take off." "We known how to make cars. EVs are just more of the same." So they tried to skip the learning curve. All of these companies *could* have been making a few thousand EVs per year for the last decade, and *learning* how to make good EVs. But no. "We already know how to make cars. It's all about Brand Name and Advertising sizzle."
If only you were there to manage these billion dollar companies.
They'll find out the hard way like all legacy industries and businesses 😂
Kodak!
Exactly, what is so strange is, that this was clear shortly after Tesla presented the Model S, so over 12 years. I think the problem is aways the same with disruption and there also was a huge echo chamber of anti Tesla FUD which obfuscated the minds. I would not wonder if the anti FUD of these incumbent companies is a crucial part of the picture why they fail. China was much more intelligent they saw the potential and how exceptional Tesla and Elon Musk were and are.
Porsche stock crashed 59%?
How did you make that up?
Year-to-date, it has fallen 8.5%, and in 5 years it fell 29% 🤔
He is mixing up the 2 Porschestocks, look at minute 13.34 - PAH3.
he's a tesla fan, loves spreading lies
@@Supraboyes so he got it wrong. Down 29% over the last five years is still terrible.
@@marcsimmonds5483 Porsche just IPO'd last year.
Porsche just went public. The ticker is P911.
I have both … porsche petrol for the weekend and Tesla for the weekdays …. No plans to buy Porsche EV at any point
That is the best combo. On a weekday, you want to relax going to work and doing about things, so Tesla is perfect for it. Besides, it is cheap to run. However, during the weekend, you WANT to drive a car and a gas Porsche is the perfect machine. Just sitting in it with the engine on gives a different emotion and satisfaction. {Then the wife prefers the Tesla but the kids loved the Porsche...} And Oh, track days!. Forget EVs. you want to do 10 full hot laps at the edge.....yeah!.
Me too!
Tesla has such a low build quality and design that its impossible to accept if you ever had a modern Porsche.
The speed limit in China is 120 km/h. Why do they even buy Porsches?
"the absolute limit" is actually 140, over that a driver in a real problem. But more important there are plenty of tricky driving on the roads and also all the speed cameras are marked on the online map by the law etc. So driving like on autobahn is not an option, but aggressive driving on packed and/or mountain roads it is.
Most countries have speed limits. That doesn’t mean everyone follows them exactly every second they are driving. I’ve never heard of anyone from any country claim that everyone strictly follows the speed limits at all times. Plus the kind of people that can afford luxury performance cars can afford to pay off the law or bribe themselves out of legal infractions.
Why buy any car? 🙄
Australia is only 100km/h, so what.
Top speed isn’t what EVs are about - if they go really fast range suffers badly.
But really quick acceleration- getting to the speed limit in only a few seconds - perfectly legal and actually has bigger impact on journey times than you might think
The main reason is of course Porsche's ridiculous high price. They only need to ask themselves one question: "Do we want to sell vehicle/sports cars to 35% of the upper/middle class buyers or just 7% of the lower elite buyers.? Porsche had chosen the wrong crowd over the last 20 years.....hence paying the price for the mistake. That is another reason why the most successful car makers are the ones that sell more mid-priced to high end cars rather than those just sell Out of reach high end cars...just ask Ferrari or Lambo makers.
Taycan resale value is in the dumpster. They are forcing people to buy Taycans to qualify to buy premium models. They are sitting in inventory all over the place.
Taycan is a great car when compared to a Ford Taurus. Just no so great when compared to any other $200k car.
You are confused by the two Porschecompanys, this PAH3 is the familyholding, owning a 53.3 % stake in VW. The car builder is PAG911.
So, is the hole thing going down?
The base?
The mantra is ‘don’t confuse me with the facts, I’ve made my mind up’.
Porsche drivers are not going to drive ev's. The very idea is farcical, can you imagine Ferrari drivers driving ev's, not in a million.
NOT TRUE. I am in my 2nd 718 Boxter, and purchased a MACAN TURBO (EV) fully loaded last October. Drove already over 3,000 miles and it is a fantastic vehicle.
You are absolutely spot on about people and their emotions, keep up the good work.
It’s no longer enough to put some stitching on the headrest and call it a day…
I just got back from a 460 mile road trip in my 2022 Tesla Model Y. Another flawless experience. Total charging cost: $35 CAD.
It’s no longer enough to just build a normal electric car. Tesla is plummeting in sales like no other. At least Porsche has something to offer. At the current used prices of a Porsche you gotta be an idiot to rather pick a Tesla. Except you want poor charging speed, a shitty suspension and overall shitty quality.
A friend at work has a Taycan … he’s swapping it for a Tesla.
*Why?*
He actually got stuck at a non-working third party charger the morning of Christmas day.
The Tesla supercharger network is so much better !
If that's the only reason, that seems rather extreme. And I'm a patient TSLA long starting in 2016.
Yes, they're better, but Tesla chargers are getting more common, getting built for other car brands, and it's not like competing brands of chargers are doing nothing, so I think that lead will narrow meaningfully over time, re having a reasonable number of reliable chargers around to charge BEV's over time.
@@rogergeyer9851 how much money you lost.
Wish him luck selling or trading in the Taycan. Ouch.
@@rogergeyer9851 In Europe very few Tesla superchargers can be used by non-Tesla.
In Portugal as an example not one Supercharger is open to non-Tesla !
Also non -Tesla (if they can use the supercharger) pay 30% more ! 😂
As some of you pointed out … yep, that perhaps was badly worded. It was the final straw, not the only reason !
He complained about (i) The car has to go back to the dealer for a software update , which takes 26 hours !
(ii) pitiful efficiency
The ticker for Porsche that IPO’d last year is P911. Its down about 10% from IPO today
He is a Viking, not a stock analyst. His points about Taycan not selling and having horrible resale value are true.
@@davidbeppler3032 I’m not disputing that. Only that he was wrong on the ticker symbol.
@@davidbeppler3032 They are as true as horrible resale value and not selling of all EV vehicles (not just Porsche) same story happens with Mercedes EVs and Tesla.
@@HenryTomasino1911 Tesla resale value is very high. A new 2024 TM3LR costs $43k a used 2021 TM3LR with 80k miles is $36k.
I do not know what you have been taking but at least in the last 5 years Porche stock has not dropped 59%. The worst high to low is same as Tesla's, about 40%.
Porche stock is at its highest already or the ceiling. It doesn't have room to grow. If that basic you don't even know or acknowledge, then what you said is rubbish.
The stock price in October 2007 was £155.37, today it's £42.76. If you factor inflation into those figures, you can add another 20% to that drop in value. Look it up.
Hi I bought a new Porsche 911 in 2021 I had numerous quality issues which Porsche refused to sort out. I have now sold it and have a new BMW on order.
Lol trade in one junk for another. Just buy a pre 2020 car. Problem solved. New cars are built like shit.
In any country with speed limits around 130km/h, will top end cars be defined by battery range, charging speed, comfort and software experience for the driver?
A premium Porsche is not a vehicle purchase as much as it’s a statement that one can afford to pay over the odds. Perhaps wealthy Chinese now prefer value over vanity. This is cyclical, ostentatious spending comes back.
A 20% global increase wouldn't surprise me if that includes Chinese EVs at $9000 dollars a car!
German brand need to do what Jim Farley is going to try do
Jim Farley's BRUTALLY Honest Interview About EVs And The State Of The Industry
Dave Takes It On
9.28K
Yeah Jim gets it. Brutally honest about not only EVs, but the challenge that Ford is faced with, understands the volatility of that market, and has taken steps with what seems a rational plan to build competitive EVs that can make a profit. The current market in the US is regional and Jim understands this. It will shift gradually to a wider market there as people learn more about the benefits of EV. Wish other legacy auto makers would approach this problem with Jim’s honesty and humility.
Porsche =🫣
@@YippydogThe new Fraud Crappie is not exactly Blue Oval's finest recent hour in satisfying automotive badge emotion. But perhaps this rebadged German machine addresses the need to rationalise the humiliating plethora of coolant hoses Sandy Monroe's Ford disection revealed a while back. Fords are surely vehicles you expect to be simple and easily repairable by blue collar guys and the thought of trying to run a ten year old Ford EV on a shoestring is scary, without even getting to the main battery. Hopefully Ford's 12V battery will be generic, compared to the apparently 3,000 quid Porsche 12 Volt replacement battery scam.
I sold my 2016 Cayenne diesel this year and replaced it with a BYD FangChengBao5…very happy.
Just drop the government incentives and tax EVs as much as ICE cars, and let's just see how they really do!! All this BS about running costs is ridiculous.
People realising that electric cars are over priced and the depreciation is insane.
I have a porsche cayeene v8 and i love it … problem is ev 😂
Agree
In Germany, almost no car dealers accept a Taycan as trade-in and there were rumors that Porsche had to recycle 3'000 Taycans from leasing returns, because they couldn't be sold at a reasonable price. The market for luxury EV's is too small.
I traded in my cayenne for a model s, not touching a porsche ever again. 4year warranty expired and car started breaking down. I should've listened to everyone that told me not to buy a german car.
Buy a German car, just not one from this century. My last Mercedes, an '04 W203 was my last German car. Our family drove nothing but German cars until about 20 years ago.
A very uninteresting brand selling overpriced cars that are are now very outdated
Outside the 911 yes your right
@@mistermood4164 Includes 911
I blame the nosedive in quality of Porsche interiors, it is all LCD screens and creaky, cheap-feeling haptic panels made from piano-black. Those Porsche interiors are no better than much cheaper Chinese alternatives.
By far the most premium (less than spectre) ev out there.
You did not sit into a Macan Turbo (EV). Mine is fully loaded and interioir is first class, a lot better then the regular MACAN.
The first 3 years Porsche quietly recalled half the Taycans they built to put new batteries in them when GM had all those Bolts catching fire. Porsche paid millions to stay out of the news.
I'm not sure that they swapped batteries. I thought they locked out the bad cells and gave the battery pack a new part number.
Hey Sam, stop insulting your viewers. Not everyone with another opinion is an idiot or moron. Come on you are better than that!
When was he better? 🤔
You are listening to Australians this is our skill. Only outclassed by the Brits.
Was in China a few weeks ago. Honestly the Chinese cars look a lot better than the German cars imo and definitely have better tech. You can’t just rely on your brand image forever, ask Maserati.
There's a lot more regulation of cars in the west than China. It's unlikely that their tech would be street legal in the EU or US. Or their safety, or quality of construction.
People forget that you get what you pay for. And China's business culture is extremely cutthroat box checking.
They also forget that China is substantially subsidizing their domestic EV market.
The “legacy” part is only valididated by car making countries who based their culture around them. The danger for Porsche is, there’s nothing special about them except a flat six engine. As an EV, it’s just a badge.
The administration's incompetence and corruption are becoming increasingly absurd. I feel horrible for people with disabilities who aren't getting the support they require. Thank you Leah Foster Alderman. Imagine investing $1.5k and receiving $6.5k in four days.
That woman completely transformed my life for the better. I've met many people, but none are as honest as Leah. I'm surprised you know her too.
I've seen several people talk about Leah Foster, she must be excellent for others to talk so positively about her.
Leah Foster Alderman. If you search her up online, you'll definitely learn more.
Exactly that's her name, look her up with the name above!
Loved Porsches in the 80’s -90’s, they were counter culture, now according to the 30 somethings, you would think they are the norm. The truth is , they are very expensive to operate and no longer that fast.
Thank you for pronouncing Porsche correctly!
The security features of Vematum set it apart from others.
Does the Porsche recall relate to manufacturing defects in the CATL battery pack?
i usually get excited when my cars have a recall cause i know im getting a free upgrade... not sure why the doom and gloom about recalls
1) sounds like you never were directly affected by a recall defect much less a life threatening issue
2) when companies want to deny there is a flaw and it rakes a year and more to get a fix and you have to pay out of pocket to fix it
3) it sucks to be without your vehicle while they fix it as many dealers no longer provide courtesy vehicles, plus what a hassle and waste of personal time
4) when multiple major recalls happen to the same vehicle your resale value will go down even after it is remedied, especially on high end cars
@@pentoo988
1. i work in a fleet shop and we deal with thousands of recalls and i've had some personally
as well
2. most recalls are booked and fixed at the dealer within weeks, never have i heard of anyone paying out of pocket
3. yes it can be a hassle. most offer courtesy valet service and if more than your daily work shift they will offer a vehicle for overnight if they need it longer.
4. never heard of recalls effecting resale. only time it effects resale is if you don't get the recals done. When i buy a car i ask the owner if they registered their car with the brand and had the recalls done... most don't. I tell them its free fixes why not register?
The reason why I drive a porsche taycan is due it‘s driving dynamics and its build material. It also looks beautiful. We can’t debate about taste.
If you can’t afford it, just don’t buy one. Though, I agree that they’re expensive and not twice as good as other.
I like your channel, but you are starting to confuse things. Have you ever driven one?
Agree. Getting rid of my Tesla and moving to Porsche.
When have you ever seen him do hands on review driving cars, like others do?
He makes judgements sitting on his desk all day, reading articles 😁
I see Vematum as a long-term hold. Great fundamentals!
Sales of vehicles of any class are going to ebb and flow - you will have increases and decreases period to period. Claiming a crash after a one period drop is not necessarily a trend. We could be entering a period where auto sales might be lower than last year. Sales can trend up next year. The key is if the central companies are profitable at whatever level.
You don't understand this channel. If sales crash at Tesla over a quarter, it's not a trend. If they fall over two quarters, it's not a trend. If Toyota sells one less car today than they did yesterday, it's a trend and they're going out of business.
@@davidbrayshaw3529 - I get that - I think it depends on which market you are looking at. If Porsche sales fall in the EV market - that does not mean they are doing poorly in the ICE market. Same for all legacy OEM. To be brutally frank - the EV and ICE market is going to coexist. I have a Tesla but also have two other ICE cars. The Tesla is perfect for the use case of commuter, mid range travel and errand running car. It’s actually a great and well built car. But so is my wife’s Acura MDX and our Ford Explorer. The EV market metrics are important mostly for pure EV companies. To determine health of a company and the market you still have to evaluate them in isolation.
@@RagnarinVa EV's and ICE vehicles will co-exist for the foreseeable future for many reasons. And I agree, you do have to look at EV specific manufacturers and Legacy manufacturers in isolation.
Vematum's low presale price is a steal. Time to load up!
Emotion rules - 'but I like my car'. That's how we got into this mess.
I'm all for EV's and hope my next car is one,but I also value the truth so can you tell me where these Porsche figures come from as when I checked their share price I could not see any sign of a collapse ,they are down 10% on year on year but that is not a collapse
You don't come to this channel for "facts". It's here for entertainment purposes and to pump up the value of Tesla stock, only. Sam doesn't cross reference or fact check anything.
Down 29% in the last 5 years is terrible. Their downfall is accelerating fast!
Please explain...... I just looked at stock price and it dropped 2.79% in the past 6 months. 1.22 euros less
Love the videos ❤ and comments good and bad ❤
Vematum's technology is ahead of its time. This will be huge!
Been tracking Vematum's development. Impressed with the progress!
Porsche make the best EV
Its a far better car than any Tesla 😁
But is it better than the Ioniq 5N? Macan EV Turbo comes close but not necessarily better
😂😂😂😂😂 What about the price?😂😂😂
@@stopthefomo
Ioniq 5N range 240 miles at best.
Macan EV, well over 300 miles, and build quality superior too.
Sheer breakneck speed in a straight line is nothing special, most EVs are fast enough.
Who is going to race with others in our speed limited roads?
Driving dynamics, ride and handling, the feel and precision of the steering wheel, nimbleness in corners, NVH control (noise and vibration levels), interior and exterior quality are all pieces that make up a good car.
The sale of Porsche dropped 33% this year in China.
You'd think Porche could afford braided break hoses.
The taycan is such a beautiful car with impressive performance. I really want one but reliability is a must, I hope they can turn this around.
The more I learn about Vematum, the more I believe in its vision.
Vematum's recent update shows they're serious about success.
Taycan is a meme right now, something dealership skits use as a punchline when pushing a bad car onto unsuspecting buyers
Time to buy Porsche
Totally agree, you should go visit China if you can. Glad you had the chance, with everything going on, I was there back in the late 2010's, and watched in envy as silent electric buses zoomed by, absent were the heaps of smoke and pollution which accompanies the dirty Diesel buses of the Toronto transmit commission.
taycan anyone?
160k usd car that will loose 80k the minute you drive it off the dealers forecourt 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
If you're looking for a solid x100, Vematum should be on your radar.
I suppose that all the drive trains are the same, so why pay an atmosphere and a leg for a Porsche when you are getting nothing different than any other vehicle.
Let me say the truth. They deluded their own brand with models like the Macan. They need to go down on the sales and make it premium again. Which means, very expensive and very high quality.
The depreciation of the Taycan is astronomic compared to EVs, and Porsche owners are not used to accepting this sort of loss. Porsche and all other premium sports brands have a serious problem, because a large part of the appeal is performance, and you can get that much more cheaply and in a more practical package with something like the Tesla Plaid. Sure, there's the luxury element and brand perception, but that's relying on the ICE legacy which is coming to a close. If they're not careful, they're going to go the same way as companies that made Steam powered vehicles. Either they get it right and survive or they don't. It's a stark reality check for Porsche.
Well one thing you said isn't true. Tere are still subsidies for EVs in Germany.
1) no vehicle tax (few hundred bucks per year)
2) 0.25 % taxable benefit of list price for EVs instead of 1 % for ICEs (only relevant for company car drivers, but most new cars sold are such company cars)
Germany need to think about putting high tariffs on Chinese EVs... If Germany put high tariffs on Chinese EVs their German cars in China will get hurt. Germany needs China to buy their cars. China buy more cars from EU than US so EU should not listen to US regarding putting high tariffs on Chinese EVs
My issue with this video is that the narrator is conveniently leaving out that souces cited state that it’s LUXURY EV sales that are falling. The top end. It’s different at that end of the market.
Yeah I’m out on EV. Kept my 911 Cab - not going to pay the ridiculous 2024 prices. Budget brands are the only ones with value propositions
Porsche has 'overcapacity' problem in China
😂
Bad customer service, increase of price YOY and long wait times had lost me as a customer of 25 years.
He’s right about people who don’t want facts regarding various beliefs in religions. It is dangerous, but regarding one’s fate after death, people like a dreamy view to keep upbeat as they can’t avoid it. ❤
Loss More like 19% in a year
I’m Singaporean clearly another end of an era.
So there's a 20% increase in sales in the last year in Europe and America? Really, in your target market in the West, a 20% increase??
I liked your honesty on religion at the 7:29 min mark
There are a lot of Porsche EVs in Brisbane.
Sounds like the Porsche-Piëch family needs to hire back Herbert Diess and put him in charge of Porsche ... and then maybe give him his old job at VW too.
Nostrodamus here. I foresee several factors that will hit internal-combustion engine (ICE) automobiles simultaneously, triggering a black swan event: Tightening of government restrictions on polluting ICEs in urban areas. Collapse of Hydrogen-powered vehicles humiliates the car companies and their champions, undermining their efforts to manage the transition. Electric vehicle (EV) cost-of-ownership continues downward, EV range up. EV charging subsidised by companies, etc.. becomes commonplace. Home solar panels charging EVs further reduce running costs. A lot of chatter about extraordinary low cost-of-ownership. Media highlights the measurable and notable reduction in noise and other pollution, and corresponding quality-of-life improvements as EVs propagate. Public enthusiasm for EVs that was rising, accelerates. More political talk about ending of petrol/gas ICEs as credibility of industry is close to zero. Bottom falls out of the new ICE market. New ICEs heavily discounted and sold at a loss. Bottom falls out of the secondhand market. Used ICEs changing hands for dozens of dollars. Petrol/gas stations going out of business. With the collapse of the ICE market, talk turns to: “How to reclaim and recycle all those obsolete ICEs?” and “What to do with all those old gas stations? … old oil tankers? … old refineries? etc…” Auto companies scrambling to retool for solely-EV production as demand rockets. Company executives change their tune about EVs, and beg for government handouts to manage the transition. Car industry shake-up with many failing to make the adjustment. Major oil/petroleum companies shake-up as demand plummets. Huge promotion and propaganda blitz to rescue the situation for ICEs fails spectacularly. Massive culture wars around EVs, especially in US. Lots of flag waving and posturing by paid-for politicians (think of the anti-Japan sentiment in the 80s). The public, unmoved, embrace EVs wholeheartedly. Politicians and industry team up to pick through the wreckage of their major flag-bearing industrial companies (GM, Ford, Fiat, Renault, Toyota, Honda etc.). Turmoil in Middle East and other oil producing regions (Russia, Nigeria, Venezuela, Angola, Canada etc.) as the cash dries up spectacularly and breaks their economies, uproots their oligarchies, and upends the rampant cronyism. Shock waves crash through a major global religion as central influence wanes. Residual demand for ICEs amongst a few hold-outs in the Middle East, Russia, Africa, and India, for example. Victorious Chinese EV manufacturers help accelerate the transition in developing economies. I foresee that these events will accelerate in the next two years and will take about five years to play out. (By now, you’ve realised that I’m no Notradamus - It’s true, anyone can read the writing on the wall.)
good thing they added a transmission to their EVs totally needed, right?
I've driven the first Gen Taycan GTS for a month and the BYD seal while I was in China last year. Porsche does feels better on the wheel but it's not worth 6 or 7 times difference, and I think a lot of people like me with less than 2 mills in their bank would feel the same. The BYD seal also has way more tech that comes with the car. I think it's on par with 2nd gen model 3 on handling. To be honest people who still buy BMW or Porsche in China are buying the prestigious status to let people know they got money, which I think is stupid. I think people should look at EV as a tech product than a traditional car, because they got phrase out in 2-3 years like an Iphone.
Much too expensive. The Taycan was special enough to command the premium but the Macan EV is not. The Macan EV is way to expensive for what it is.
For one thing, how much racing is done in China? Why buy a lot of performance for nothing?
Status
Every time my wife sees your face on my screen she laughs. She thinks your hair is crazy. I keep telling her when we're in Australia we are taking you and your family out for lunch! We visit my son in Melbs in December/January. He lives in Docklands. He has a second home in Rushworth. As a Porsche owner, I get a kick out of how you pronounce the name. Take care of yourself and your family.
Good report Sam. Thanks
One of their biggest problems is their styling sucks on most of their models.
UChicago Prof. Shirley Meng’s Laboratory for Energy Storage and Conversion creates world’s first anode-free sodium solid-state battery - a breakthrough in inexpensive, clean, fast-charging batteries. LESC believes the research brings forward the reality of inexpensive, fast-charging, high-capacity batteries for electric vehicles and grid storage. To create a sodium battery with the energy density of a lithium battery, the team needed to invent a new sodium battery architecture. Anode-free batteries store ions on an electrochemical deposition of alkali metal directly on the current collector. This approach enables higher cell voltage, lower cell cost, and increased energy density, but comes with challenges.
Good to hear! Has the laboratory produced a sample battery that can pass the nail-puncture test, not only when charged, but also discharged - at which point the active pure lithium or sodium metal would be deposited on the negative collector and therefore most vulnerable to a fire? A reference would be great!
At least 10 years away from production. 😂
LMK when the "challenges" have been overcome.
@@AllDogsAreGoodDogs "Challenges" means that everything else on the battery got worse; volume, charge/discharge speed, lifespan etc. Batteries are always going to have these challenges, the problem for a battery being implemented in a mobile environment, it needs everything overcome. They have completely screwed up the introduction of electric cars. Elon Musk maybe a complete idiot. Tesla has set the standard of charging batteries to refuel; Battery swapping takes the need for charge rate being factored into batteries, eliminates charge times and solves a great many problems not just in the car but also at the charging station which is never going to be able to do fast charging of 15 minutes on mass. You would have thought that he had atleast worked out with the rest of the industry to use only one plug, instead he built his own network just for Tesla to give him a competitive advantage. The entire automotive industry is built around the legacy car manufacturers, Tesla produces and ships the cars. How much support is there out there for your Tesla? I don't know. It is actually beneficial for Tesla for the other companies to be succeeding at electric. This can still be a flop or a successful nightmare.
NEO went with the battery swapping, it's no big deal to add the plug. I think devising a good standard and system for battery swapping is going to be far better for EV's, especially their resale value.
@@alexandermelbaus2351The battery cassette exchange system could be a robotic drive through experience taking 2 minutes and a buffer stock of batteries could allow smoothing of grid demands from off peak charging and allow automatic preparation for high demand holiday weekends. But it needs international cooperation on standardising the technology and it doesn't exactly sound cost effective. Even though battery swapping was apparently a feature in US EV taxi fleets in the early 1900s.
EV demand is collapsing…end of story
People seem to think Porsche is just about the brand. It's not. They have the best suspension in the business for electric cars, bar none. Now whether that is worth the extra price to potential buyers? Seemingly not. That said, although the Taycan has some problems, it's overall a fantastic car, especially if you buy it used. And it's utterly beautiful, IMHO. Tesla for sure is much cheaper and has better driver assistants, no question about that. I prefer the Taycan, though. It looks better, drivers better around corners, has a proper instrument panel, indicator and wiper stalkers, and a HUD. None of which I can get in the Tesla, even for extra cost.
It is a mindset among ICE exotic car makers that their cars have to be special and expensive. The EVs are bursting that bubble. But Porsche still wants too much money from each car.
What if Porsche merged with Xpeng, Nio or someone like that? They do have a _beaffie_ balance sheet.
I did hear that VW has bought into Xpeng, and they will be making VW EV’s, which is what a Taycan is anyway.
Am I the only one who is mightily distracted by his right pec bouncing all the time lol.
Audio is a bit too low
Truth is Legacy auto is an exclusive club that is about to go bust.
Should’ve put a v8 hybrid in the tycan it’s literally the sexiest car
I love Porsche but the Macan EV is just not quite right. There are too many small things which are wrong and Porsche cannot see it. So frustrating as no cars handles like a Porsche.
They have the 2nd Gen Tycan finally right but still very expensive.
The Chinese customer is the canary in the coal mine for legacy car companies, the German car industry needs to be paying attention to what is happening, German vehicles aren't seen as a luxury anymore and their price point isn't helping
My friend, pleeese call it PorschEEE. 😂😂
And while he's at it maybe he should pronounce BMW as Bee-em-vee and VW as Fow-vee because that is how the Germans pronounce them.
Most european expensive EVs will face their own demise with the rise of cheaper alternatives