Yeah a lot of stuff that makes you bang your head against the wall, like if we're supposed to be getting accelerated toward EV, why EV aren't getting any cheaper? I do revisit the practicality for us of EV, but it's still as bad as trying to take a train anywhere, chargers are far enough away that it's like need a car to get to your car, or waste hours a week just sitting in it. Level 1 charging seems like it will only put about 50km worth of range back a night, whereas 100km is gonna get used daily, so older EV with 200km ranges when they were new, and probably 150km now, and maybe don't have the capability to use modern charger networks, are gonna be a problem. Particularly if like that 500e in vid, essential repair parts are unobtainable.
For repair and part costs and price of new cars, I keep hearing the "complexity of modern cars" thing... but how come then I am having problems with the systems that were reaching a state of near perfection by the noughts, the engine and transmissions. "Oh they made them lighter and cheaper with less material" so they're cheaper to replace than the $1500 unit from the early noughts? No, three times that. Aaargh. Even crap like alternators, it looks almost the same as the $150 one for my old escort/minivan, but for a tens up car it's $500.... and I'm not sure they last as long either. Just standard alternators, not stop start BAS stuff. Yah so no doubt there are complex systems that cause trouble, but it's the "basics" failing and costing so much to repair that are biting me in the ass in the last decade. Unless in the end it's failure mitigation sensors and ECU software that's completely failing to mitigate failures, not reacting fast enough to limit combustion chamber pressure by changing fueling or valve timing, or allowing too much torque for the transmission or something. Yet when such things were introduced in the more expensive models in the noughts.... they worked.
But wizard dude didn't need to tell me about 80s french cars being hard to find parts for now, the dealers were out of them in the late 90s. But yeah Stellantis parts availability is a good warning. I was wondering how come some dodge parts were turning up in random surplus outlets a while back, guess they must have dumped a load of stuff at a penny on the dollar for inventory liquidation to bump up one quarters numbers. The plastics heavy stuff I was seeing resold, the metals heavy stuff maybe got recycled straight off. I will need to keep myself from the temptation of cheap ecodiesels and what if I just get this $2000 Compass and drive it, etc. And there's a Dart or two around cheap, but if they are "being like that" with parts on the more prestige stuff, I ain't risking it.
I wish I was "in" some old reliable I could keep fixing, rust is a bit merciless for finding a good one to adopt.
edit: actually that was why I went into newer cars from beaters in 2015, because of parts drying up at 10 year mark across a bunch of stuff. So that's been going on a while, and 10 years is now looking optimistic.
editII: Ah, trade war already started in EV and electrical components. US 100% tariff, Canadian 25% component tariff... and since most part networks route thru US first, we're probably getting 125% effective on some stuff... IDK. Anyway, that gave EV makers carte blanche to charge out the arse while they've got the protected US monopoly, instead of low margins to stay in biz. While "domestics" that were relying on cheaper parts have cut the small models.
Unicorn herding operations are proceeding, but all the totes of hens teeth and barrels of rocking horse poop give them plenty of hiding spots.