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This Electric Vehicle Owner Loves His Car - The New York Times

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John Silbey bought a used Bolt without a test drive and said it saves him money and is fun to drive.

Good morning. Electric vehicles are no longer a niche choice for well-off environmentalists. We’ll meet a driver who says he’s a “cheap early adopter” — and bought a used E.V.

A man in a plaid shirt sits in the driver’s seat of a stationary car with the door open.
James Estrin/The New York Times

I was no more than 75 words into reading Robin Shulman Agüeros’s story about people who are buying electric vehicles in the New York area when a line from an E.V. owner named John Sibley intrigued me: “I’m the cheap early adopter.” That raised practical questions about owning an E.V. How much are you spending on electricity, compared with gasoline when you had a conventional car? Is the driving different in an E.V.? What about the fear of draining the battery without finding a charging station?

He was also the first person I had encountered who had bought a used E.V. I’ve talked to E.V. owners at charging stations in parking lots. I actually did that when I was on vacation last year, but all of them were charging pricey cars, like an Audi e-tron, which starts at $70,800. That would buy three used Chevrolet Bolts at the price Sibley had paid. Analysts say the average electric vehicle costs about $60,000, which is about $11,000 more than the average price of a new vehicle in December 2022.

Tesla, which tends to dominate the conversation about E.V.s, is working on more affordable vehicles and is planning to build a factory in Mexico to manufacture them. But Sibley, who said he had done a lot of research about E.V.s, told me he had never driven a Tesla. On the other hand, he bought the E.V. he is now driving happily without so much as an around-the-block test drive.

Here’s what Sibley, a sound engineer who works on Broadway shows and commutes from Goshen, N.Y., told me. I started the conversation by asking him to talk about what he used to drive and how he found his E.V.

I was driving a Toyota Prius, which was a great car, but it was approaching the end of its life. It had over 200,000 miles on it. It was my commuter. Even though it was great on gas — I regularly got 42 miles plus to the gallon, and my daily commute is 130 miles — I was still filling up three times a week and spending $100 a week on gas, at least.

I had been fascinated by electric cars and had identified the Bolt as a model I could probably find inexpensively because General Motors had a giant recall on them. They had to replace the battery in every Bolt made between 2017 and 2022. I’d been calling dealers on and off for a while. The line for a long time was “we have a Bolt, but we can’t sell it to you because the battery hasn’t been replaced.”

Eventually, in February of last year, what came up was a 2017 with 17,000 miles, just off a lease, for $21,000. I called the dealer expecting the same answer. They said, “We just replaced the battery — it’s brand-new.” I bought the car over the phone. I had never driven one, never sat in one, until I picked it up. I felt pretty sure that if I hated it, I could get my money back if I didn’t like it. But I loved it.

It was in Maryland. My first trip home in my first-ever electric car involved navigating public charging stations. It was intimidating at the time but easier than I thought it would be. There are apps — the biggest one is PlugShare — listing every publicly available charger. I made a map, planning my mileage very conservatively to make sure I didn’t run out.

I only had to stop once. It took about 45 minutes. I stopped and ate at a Chinese restaurant in the strip mall in Pennsylvania where the charger was. There was a row of chargers behind the drugstore. I made it home just fine.

I spent a little time trying to figure out my home charging setup and what I needed for that. What you want is called Level 2 charging. That meant calling an electrician to have a plug installed. The plug I have is commonly used for RV connections. It’s very similar to a dryer plug. I had done the research in advance so I knew my electrical panel could handle it, and I got lucky: I got away for $300 for the electrician and $350 for the Level 2 charger, the piece that connects to the car.

My electric bill has certainly gone up, but I discovered that in New York, where electric companies give a discount to incentivize charging at nonpeak times, I’m eligible for time-of-use billing, so my rate drops tremendously at night, which is when I charge my car.

Having a car to charge ended up adding about $100 to my electric bill every month, and that’s driving 130 miles a day, five to six days a week. I’m saving significant money, and it’s tremendous fun to drive.

The Bolt is not considered particularly quick for an electric car, but it is the quickest car I have ever owned. It does zero-to-60 somewhere in the neighborhood of 5.5 seconds, where it would take my Prius about 12 to do that. I wasn’t looking for driving excitement, I was looking for practicality, but it’s responsive, it’s quick and it handles very well. You can point it and accelerate into any little gap that opens up in traffic on the road.

I take friends for rides in it a lot. The people I let drive it, I don’t have to go into a spiel about what you have to do, you just put it in drive and go. It feels like any other car.


Weather

Expect a cloudy day, turning into a mostly sunny day, near the mid-40s. The evening is partly cloudy with temps dropping to the high 20s.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

Suspended today (Purim).


Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

METROPOLITAN diary

Dear Diary:

My boyfriend had planned a staycation weekend in Flushing for my birthday. We invited all of our friends to join us for an epic overnight of feasting.

We started at the New World Mall food court with mala dry pot and crispy pork dumplings. I filled up quickly but managed to free up space during a walk to the Ganesh temple for the famous dosas and uttapams.

Next up: drinks at a local watering hole with a sizable outdoor space. I nursed a single beer and switched to water, prepping myself for our Korean barbecue dinner.

It didn’t disappoint, and we were treated to endless banchan alongside Mapo’s signature galbi (and, of course, plenty of soju.)

Karaoke was next, naturally. We sang along to Nicki Minaj, Abba, Billy Joel for hours.

“This is crazy” my boyfriend began, “but I could eat … ”

Twenty minutes later we were at Hahm Ji Bach tucking into kimchi and pork belly. I couldn’t believe I was still eating.

The next morning, we pushed onward, sitting for dim sum at Asian Jewels. Other friends joined us, reviving our energy and appetites. Plates of shu mai and turnip cakes appeared and then disappeared in a blur.

We waddled outside. Next up was hot pot.

I turned to my boyfriend.

“This has been great,” I said, “but … ”

“Should we call it?” he said.

I nodded.

We took the subway home. Dinner was salad.

— Rachel Leventhal

Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here.


Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B.

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here.

Melissa Guerrero and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@nytimes.com.

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