I have a feeling there are going to be a LOT of broken chargers in the future. Unless YOU / WE want to pay 75 cents to a dollar a KW/hr to make it profitable for someone to put one in, (I think we all know the answer to that one) I just don't see it happening for long. The govt grants are mostly bullshit and so restrictive, and I don't think they cover continual maintenance and repairs.
Oh and just wait until the states figure out how to tax them more and the price to charge is 3 dollars per Kw/hr because of all the extra fees and taxes
Aaron
I agree, and it seems that we're headed for a real crunch sometime in the next few years as people keep buying EV's and the charging network continues to rot. Tesla will likely increase prices for other OEMs and use their network as a profit center for other EV's, and people will pay the higher prices after they get tired of the unreliable Chargepoint, EVGo, and EA networks.
I love electric motorcycles, but I'm kinda glad that I'm on gas right now. What I really want to see is a comfortable and powerful plug-in hybrid bike that can handle short trips on battery power and then switch to gas. I'm open to series or parallel hybrids, and I think there are a lot of interesting possibilities with either approach (like an ungeared gas motor that acts as a generator until high speeds and then helps drive the wheels). In terms of environmental and equitable sustainability, a small battery that saves a large amount of gas is the best combo given the manufacturing emissions and supply chain concerns of lithium-based batteries. Honda has shown that you can have a middleweight bike that gets 65+ MPG in the NC750X, so I don't think 80+ MPG with strong acceleration is out of the question if and when hybrids mature in the market. I'm watching the Ninja 7 and Z7 with interest, but I don't think sales of this first gen will be strong so it's an open question whether successors will be pursued.
Meanwhile, I'll sit pretty with my ~40 MPG FJR that is all-day comfortable and runs sub-11 second 1/4 miles because life is hard.