djos wrote: ↑12 Oct 2020, 21:35
I d think PHEV's make sense for large SUV's (here in Australia) as they are what most families do their interstate/country driving in. I do think most other passenger vehicles that spend 100% of their time in metro areas are better off being 100% BEV's. PHEV's are far too complicated for my liking and I'd hate to own one outside of warranty when something breaks or the battery pack dies.
The point with PHEVs is that they cover all the bases pretty well. For someone living in a city where public transport isn't great, the EV makes sense. For anyone living outside of cities, the PHEV makes more sense. As the video I linked shows, the PHEV can still be using electricity as much as dino-juice in semi-urban/semi-rural environments. The chap in the video lives in the Cotswolds near Oxford in the UK (although he was driving in another nearby town). I drive around the same area a lot for work and seeing how much that PHEV was using the EV mode makes me think again about one.
I don't see that the PHEV is any more complicated than a BEV - both have motors and regen systems and batteries. Any argument against a PHEV and possible battery pack issues applies just as much to a BEV, of course. So that argument against the PHEV isn't really vary fair.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.