Being 4th with no brand history (like Prius) and only two months of sales is pretty good. I have yet to see one in the flesh, but the pictures alone were off-putting. Worse yet, I have already learned that 25 mile EV range would have drove me nuts - I already get antsy when the Clarity gauge drops into the teens, imagine the anxiety of nearly staring in the teens!I'm not surprised about the Bolt hitting 1,177 in January. It is a pretty decent car.
What does surprise me is the 1,496 Prius Prime. Other people obviously feel different about the styling. My wife and I didn't give the Prime a second look after 10 minutes looking at the car. So I think the Prime is being supported by Toyota reputation, a lower price, and those that like the radical look.
I'd hoped the Clarity would pop up this month and show up with over 1,000 sales. Still being 4th from the top of the list isn't bad.
I think the Prius Primes look cool. The regular new Prius design looks terrible, but they tweaked it in all the right places with the Prime in my eyes. I don't know how they sold so many since you can't even find one anywhere. The Toyota dealer near me didn't think he would ever see one in his lot. However, the lack of a fifth seat, no Android Auto, lower ev range along with that weird battery shelf in the trunk really turned me off of the car. I almost made the decision to fly out to the East Coast and buy one when I thought the tax credit was going to go away. Then, like a angel descending from heaven, I checked out Honda's website and saw the Clarity staring at me from a huge photo on the front page and my prayers were answered. It checked every box I needed checked and the rest is history. But I was *that* close to being a Prime owner.
I feel like I just wrote this - verbatim...even down to several calls/texts with a NY dealership.I think the Prius Primes look cool. The regular new Prius design looks terrible, but they tweaked it in all the right places with the Prime in my eyes. I don't know how they sold so many since you can't even find one anywhere. The Toyota dealer near me didn't think he would ever see one in his lot. However, the lack of a fifth seat, no Android Auto, lower ev range along with that weird battery shelf in the trunk really turned me off of the car. I almost made the decision to fly out to the East Coast and buy one when I thought the tax credit was going to go away. Then, like a angel descending from heaven, I checked out Honda's website and saw the Clarity staring at me from a huge photo on the front page and my prayers were answered. It checked every box I needed checked and the rest is history. But I was *that* close to being a Prime owner.
Mine was a Maryland dealer.I feel like I just wrote this - verbatim...even down to several calls/texts with a NY dealership.
They split in two - 8th at 594 (PHEV) and 12th at 262 (BEV).What happened to the numbers? Yesterday the Clarity PHEV was showing something like 800+ in 4th place sold in January. Today the same chart dropped it to 8th place with something like 400+. What's the deal?
It was the incredible $199/month lease that caused quite a number of deal seekers to jump on the BEV. With the CA and utility company rebates, and subtracting the cost of what I would have paid in gasoline, the car would have cost me nothing over the course of the lease, and if gasoline prices went up, I'd actually be saving money driving the BEV.Thank you. But isn't it a surprise that 262 BEV Clarity cars have been leased. With such a low EV range I just didn't expect it to sell well.
Thanks. It helps to know people's reasoning.It was the incredible $199/month lease that caused quite a number of deal seekers to jump on the BEV. With the CA and utility company rebates, and subtracting the cost of what I would have paid in gasoline, the car would have cost me nothing over the course of the lease, and if gasoline prices went up, I'd actually be saving money driving the BEV.
I spent two weeks trying to score a BEV and just missed out on a few that a dealer had on the lot, but wasn't willing to hold for me while I made the 1 hour drive to the dealership. In the end, I'm glad I went with the PHEV as it better suits the needs of my family, whereas the BEV would have been mostly a commuter and local errand vehicle.
Thanks. It helps to know people's reasoning.
$199/month for a commuter car, with no use of gasoline, and 20,000 miles per year, is unbelievable. It basically is a "free" car plus price of electricity.