Hi, auto-gaf. I'm looking for some input. I'm going to purchase a car entirely on my own for the first time (parents helped last time around) in about 2 months. Efficiency is a big selling point to me because I live in traffic-laden Los Angeles where you're lucky to ever exceed 70 mph anytime other than 3 A.M, so performance just wouldn't matter a whole lot. I wouldn't mind something with a little pep and decent acceleration, but at the same time I have no interest in plunking down crazy money on a car that could do 160 mph when it's realistically never gonna go past 85.
With that in mind, I've been considering the Hyundai Ioniq Electric. I'm going to list the pros here, and I'd appreciate it if the aficionados could point out any cons I might not be considering.
-Decent range. It's not a model S or even a Chevy Bolt, but It's a step up from most EV's. It's rated at 124 miles on a full charge. I don't see myself using more than that in one day very often.
-effiency. Even among EV's, this is a very efficient car. It gets 136 MPGe. It has a 28kw battery but gets better range than the leaf or i3 with their 30-33kw batteries. As far as I'm aware, it's actually the most efficient production car available. And thanks to this efficiency I could charge the battery 80% in 23 minutes, making long distance travel feasible, albeit not ideal.
-charging. Comes standard with DC fast charging up to 100kw or whatever the measurement unit is. In a lot of EV's this seems to be an upgrade that costs $750 or so.
-price. Hyundai offers a program that makes this similar to a phone contract. It is a flat fee of $275/month for 36 months for the base model, which includes the cost of tax, title, license, etc. and it comes with no annual mileage limits on the lease. They also offer charging reimbursement with this program, so my first 50,000 miles of charging are totally free. Additionally, California offers a program to people who buy EV's which would fully reimburse the initial $2,500 down payment. I just have to own the car for 30 months or else I'd have to pay back that rebate.
-design. It's not exactly going to turn heads, but it isn't a weirdmobile like almost all other EV's and it has at least some style to it unlike, say, the volkswagen e-golf.
So, those are the advantages I see behind owning the car. I personally am really excited about the Ioniq and EVs in general, but I'm also not exactly a "car guy". It may have some disadvantages I'm not considering. So, gaf, do you all know anything about this car, Hyundai in general, etc that I should be aware of? Or do you have a case to make for an alternative hybrid/EV? Would love everyone's input before I make such a big decision.