There is no turning back for drivers
There is no turning back for e-car drivers, but in this case that’s a good thing. Because practically everyone who has switched from a combustion engine to an electric vehicle can no longer imagine going back to the old drive. But that does not blind us to the tasks that still lie ahead of e-mobility.
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E-car drivers: Hardly anyone wants to go back to the combustion engine
E-cars convince their drivers, and not too closely. This is shown by a survey commissioned by the online car market mobile.de. Accordingly, are proud 97.5 percent of the e-car drivers surveyed were so satisfied that no other drive is possible for them.
Anyone who drives a hybrid is also quite happy with it: at 88.3 percent, plug-in hybrids are even more popular than mild hybrid models (85.4 percent). In the eyes of most drivers, however, the latter should hardly count as an electric car anyway.
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While 82 percent of all-electric car owners would not switch again, they can Imagine hybrid drivers switching to a fully electric car as well – with an overwhelming majority of 80 percent. Among petrol and diesel drivers, the willingness to switch to a pure e-car is even higher at 65.8 percent than the general willingness to change drive (around 40 percent). This includes a switch to hybrids.
Reservations about electric cars: Drivers do not agree
Anyone who already drives an e-car obviously feels confirmed by the experience they have had: the switch was the right decision. However, it does not blind to the tasks that still have to be done. The respondents – around 3,000 e-car owners between the ages of 18 and 75 – were able to confirm some well-known reservations about e-mobility (source: mobile.de).
Why you too should switch to the electric car better today than tomorrow:
So 33 percent stated that the range was still too small. On average, the survey participants covered 253.8 kilometers a week in their e-car. 29 percent also complained about too few charging options, especially in the immediate vicinity. At least 23 percent stated that charging would take too long.
But that is by no means a reason to turn your back on the electric car. In addition more than a third of those surveyed (33.5 percent) did not confirm any of the common prejudices against electromobility Has. The reactions are balanced here.