Nice timing on that purchase. The 100mpg equivalent is pretty sweet, and yeah, getting ahead of potential tariff increases was probably a smart move. I've been curious about the Equinox EV myself, so it's cool to hear real-world thoughts on it. The charging speed isn't crazy fast but honestly 150kw is plenty for most situations, and you're right that you won't get throttled on those shared 350kw stations. Good call on planning that road trip carefully, nothing worse than range anxiety on your first long haul with a new EV. The Meijer charger rollout is actually pretty clutch for Midwest drivers, should help fill in some of those charging desert areas.It's a necrothread but since I didn't do it, I'll chime in b/c we just bought an 2024 Equinox EV. Good deal between 0% financing, the ev credit, pre-black Friday event and, oddly, a Costco discount. The minivan was turning into a money pit and we wanted to dodge the inevitable price hikes when tariffs on steel and what-not show up.
I did the math and dollar-to-dollar, at $3/gal gas, we'll get equivalent to 100mpg. From an emissions standpoint, at US grid standard, the CO2 from generation also equates to around 100mpg. The other car is a Kia hybrid that gets 42mpg, which I used to be pretty happy about. The 48A/11kw charger is good for 30+ mi/hr of charge. I do need a NACS adapter so we can use older Tesla stations that aren't equipped with the CCS plugs, though gen4 stations are slowly rolling out. It only supports 150kw speeds, which less than amazing for charge rates but means the 350kw chargers that share power on two ports won't slow us down.
We'll be using it for a trip this weekend where we can make one leg on a full charge with a solid buffer but will need a major recharge for the trip home.
The Meijers chain has started installing chargers, apparently funded by the federal govt (got it via Carplus). We have quite a few around here and several chargers have been announced on our longest route which will make the jitters go away.
Not a huge fan of the lack of android auto/carplay but it's got 8yrs of voice/map service and we'll likely sell it in year 7.
Also, we looked at the Bolt before buying the Kona. IMO, there's no comparison. The Kona feels like a real car (and has a fully functional infotainment system), while the Bolt felt like a toy, and requires you use Android Auto or Apple Car Play for everything. (At least it did in 2020...)We have a Hyundai Kona EV (and an Ioniq 6 EV, but the Kona sounds like what you're looking for. It's a small hatchback with very respectable range. We love it.
Our local power company paid for our home charger (but not the installation - we had a 50 amp circuit run to the garage), and gives us a discounted rate from midnight to 6am. We set the charger to start at midnight.
We've gone on road trips without issue. Every now and then, while traveling, we'll find a bank of chargers that are all in use and/or some not working, but there's always another close by. And now that Hyundai can use Tesla chargers, that opens up a whole lot more. (Newer Hyundai models are shipping with the Tesla charging port, but I'm not sure the Kona is one of them...but they sent us a free adapter.)
10/10 would buy again. We've had the Kona since 2020, and my wife used to commute an hour each way 5 days a week. It still gets the same range as it did when new. We got the Ioniq last year, and are now an all-EV household.
Lol, got sucked in by a necrothread. Oh, well, hopefully it'll help someone else.Also, we looked at the Bolt before buying the Kona. IMO, there's no comparison. The Kona feels like a real car (and has a fully functional infotainment system), while the Bolt felt like a toy, and requires you use Android Auto or Apple Car Play for everything. (At least it did in 2020...)
As for home charger, we've been very happy with the ChargePoint Home Flex.
Nice timing on that purchase. The 100mpg equivalent is pretty sweet, and yeah, getting ahead of potential tariff increases was probably a smart move. I've been curious about the Equinox EV myself,
so it's cool to hear real-world thoughts on it. The charging speed isn't crazy fast but honestly 150kw is plenty for most situations, and you're right that you won't get throttled on those shared 350kw stations.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.