Jump to content
Create New...
  • Drew Dowdell
    Drew Dowdell

    Chevy Increases Bolt Range

      ...Up 21 miles over previous years....

    Chevrolet has announced that for 2020, the Chevrolet Bolt will have a longer range between charges. The new maximum range on a full charge is now 259, a 21 mile increase over previous year cars. 

    Chevy achieved this by making a small change in the battery cell chemistry. This allowed the team to increase range without changing the structure of the battery pack. The change increases the battery pack's capacity from 60 kWh to 66 kWh.  The drivetrain itself has not changed and remains a 200 horsepower / 266 lb-ft unit. 

    Chevy is also offering two additional colors for 2020, Cayenne Orange Metallic (additional cost option) and Oasis Blue.

     

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    2 hours ago, balthazar said:

    Going to disagree with you here. 1. it should sell in higher numbers being it's a CUV, but note it would also, unquestionably, be more expensive. Bolt is the #4 selling electric, but a E-Equinox would be $50K. Recall the flutter over the Blazer RS @ $50K. So the sales question is up in the air. As for profit, no one else has managed that, and volume isn't helping that scenario either, so far. 

    Bolt's on pace to sell 15,900 this year. Let's say the E-Equinox sells 20,000 @ $47K. Do you realistically expect more volume than that? And if not, is that "selling"??

    Current Equinox is on pace to sell 348,000 units this year.

    I see your point but you’re speculating on that price. They would only need to sell at 10% of the equinox current sales numbers to be on track to being a more mainstream option as opposed to the niche the Bolt is. Just my opinion though. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    It's speculation only to a small degree.
    Sonic & Bolt are in the same size & configuration class.
    Sonic is $16K, Bolt is 36K.

    Equinox starts at $24K. What's your MSRP guess on a electric version of an Equinox?

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    3 minutes ago, balthazar said:

    It's speculation only to a small degree.
    Sonic & Bolt are in the same size & configuration class.
    Sonic is $16K, Bolt is 36K.

    Equinox starts at $24K. What's your MSRP guess on a electric version of an Equinox?

    Except Bolt and Sonic do not share one thing so that’s not really an apples to oranges comparison. 

     

    Honestly if they could keep it at $40-42K, there would be a fair number of takers for it. Hell, a top of the line Equinox pushes and than some in certain configurations. For the record I’ve seen Bolts prices at $45K and if they can get the Nox to that price, it’s certainly a better option than the smaller and quirkier looking Bolt. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    It's not about them sharing anything. 
    It's about bringing a small 4-dr hatch to market in the same 'entry-level' size class. Similar consumer preference as to product size/function, and similar material costs… only major difference as far as the investment is in the power train. In other words, is there anything BESIDES the power train in your opinion that makes the Bolt 'worthy' of a $36K tag?

    IMO; no. That cost differential is ALL in the power train costs.

    Screen Shot 2019-08-28 at 8.54.32 AM.png

    Hence, the Sonic comparison. The track record on EVs dictates that an BEV Equinox would be expected to be approx. $50K. 

    Want to watch BEVs explode in volume? Take a $24K Equinox and offer up a $28K BEV version with the Bolt's range. When that's actually going to happen in anyone's guess.

    Edited by balthazar
    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, surreal1272 said:

    I see your point but you’re speculating on that price. They would only need to sell at 10% of the equinox current sales numbers to be on track to being a more mainstream option as opposed to the niche the Bolt is. Just my opinion though. 

    Yup.  Nothing "empirical", which seems to be required in my posts on the subject.  Nothing but hot air.

    • Disagree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 hours ago, surreal1272 said:

    They would only need to sell at 10% of the equinox current sales numbers to be on track to being a more mainstream option as opposed to the niche the Bolt is.

    Bolt is selling at 63% of the combined volume of the Sonic + the Spark.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 hours ago, surreal1272 said:

    Except Bolt and Sonic do not share one thing so that’s not really an apples to oranges comparison. 

    A theoretical Equinox-size EV wouldn't share anything either. It would have to be a ground up design to be worth anything and not just attempt to shimmy batteries and electric motors under the skin. 

    As far as I know, we were just talking Equinox size and not actually an Equinox EV. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, Robert Hall said:

    Compact and midsize mainstream BEV CUVs could go a ways towards mainstreaming BEVs.   A subcompact like the Bolt is limited in appeal. 

    Everything is ‘limited’ in appeal. Bolt is selling really well for an electric, and still pretty well vs. other Chevy compact hatches.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    15 hours ago, balthazar said:

    It's not about them sharing anything. 
    It's about bringing a small 4-dr hatch to market in the same 'entry-level' size class. Similar consumer preference as to product size/function, and similar material costs… only major difference as far as the investment is in the power train. In other words, is there anything BESIDES the power train in your opinion that makes the Bolt 'worthy' of a $36K tag?

    IMO; no. That cost differential is ALL in the power train costs.

    Screen Shot 2019-08-28 at 8.54.32 AM.png

    Hence, the Sonic comparison. The track record on EVs dictates that an BEV Equinox would be expected to be approx. $50K. 

    Want to watch BEVs explode in volume? Take a $24K Equinox and offer up a $28K BEV version with the Bolt's range. When that's actually going to happen in anyone's guess.

    Not going to happen not does it need. Most people would buy it even if it were at $40K (which I have already pointed out with the fact that there are equinoxes already selling for that kind of money) simply because it’s a reasonably sized CUV. 

     

    We will just have to agree to disagree about that Sonic comparison. 

    12 hours ago, ocnblu said:

    Yup.  Nothing "empirical", which seems to be required in my posts on the subject.  Nothing but hot air.

    And I pointed it out as such while you literally offer not a damn thing because well “EVs suck”. One day you’ll show us on a doll where the EV boogeyman touched you. 

    7 hours ago, ccap41 said:

    A theoretical Equinox-size EV wouldn't share anything either. It would have to be a ground up design to be worth anything and not just attempt to shimmy batteries and electric motors under the skin. 

    As far as I know, we were just talking Equinox size and not actually an Equinox EV. 

    Never said otherwise as I also figured it was implied. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 hours ago, balthazar said:

    Bolt is selling at 63% of the combined volume of the Sonic + the Spark.

    And the Sonic is going bye bye so...

     

    We are talking about two different sets of numbers too. 

    Edited by surreal1272
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    14 minutes ago, surreal1272 said:

    Never said otherwise as I also figured it was implied. 

    Then I'm confused why you mentioned the Sonic and Bolt not sharing anything as if the Equinox and Equinox EV would share things if we all agree it would be on its own dedicated EV platform. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    10 minutes ago, ccap41 said:

    Then I'm confused why you mentioned the Sonic and Bolt not sharing anything as if the Equinox and Equinox EV would share things if we all agree it would be on its own dedicated EV platform. 

    Don’t know why you’re confused. Balthazaar brought up the Sonic as a comparison in price to the Bolt which I think was not applicable as they are two completely different platforms, one obviously using more development dollars than the other. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, ocnblu said:

    Everybody knows what an EV's limitations are.

    We know the limitations (and the history) of the ICE as well. Maybe we should just sidestep that little fact (or should I say “facts”?) to save your delicate sensibilities. Every year in the last ten years has shown progress on just about every front where EVs are concerned (from increased range, faster charges, to increased infrastructure). These are all facts that have addressed these “limitations”. Is it all the way there yet? No but again, the progress doesn’t lie. Only you. 

    Edited by surreal1272
    • Agree 1
    • Disagree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    20 minutes ago, ocnblu said:

    link please.

    Really? That’s your response? There’s numerous articles on this very website starting with this very article. The Bolt is gaining 21 miles per charge. That’s progress albeit small progress. That’s just one of several examples available without ever leaving this very website. 

     

    Good grief car salesman. If you’re going to troll, at least make it a challenge. 

     

    Now about your lying, well that is all over this website as well. Turns out it’s not so “random” and about as obvious as your insecurities about anything you don’t happen to agree with. 

     

    Surreal, don't think I don't remember when you dug in your heels insisting the Bolt IS NOT a CUV... now you say it is.

     

    That was a lie.

     

    Maybe that thought was a little too random for you. 

    Edited by surreal1272
    • Haha 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    15 hours ago, surreal1272 said:

    Don’t know why you’re confused. Balthazaar brought up the Sonic as a comparison in price to the Bolt which I think was not applicable as they are two completely different platforms, one obviously using more development dollars than the other. 

    Because your reply to Balthy implied that while there is a huge price gap between the ICE Sonic and EV Bolt because they are not sharing anything that the ICE Equinox and theoretical Equinox-sized EV would share things. 

    I must be missing something because his comparison seemed straight forward and not apples and oranges.

    Sonic -> Bolt - 20k price gap

    Equinox -> EV Equinox-sized vehicle - theoretical 20k price gap

    13 hours ago, surreal1272 said:

    We know the limitations (and the history) of the ICE as well.

    Do we? They're still making advances in the internal combustion engine.I don't think they've maxed them out at all yet. They're just cracking into the variable compression engines and GM has brand new fancy technology in both the 2.7T and new 5.3. 

    • Agree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, ccap41 said:

    Because your reply to Balthy implied that while there is a huge price gap between the ICE Sonic and EV Bolt because they are not sharing anything that the ICE Equinox and theoretical Equinox-sized EV would share things. 

    I must be missing something because his comparison seemed straight forward and not apples and oranges.

    Sonic -> Bolt - 20k price gap

    Equinox -> EV Equinox-sized vehicle - theoretical 20k price gap

    Do we? They're still making advances in the internal combustion engine.I don't think they've maxed them out at all yet. They're just cracking into the variable compression engines and GM has brand new fancy technology in both the 2.7T and new 5.3. 

    I read about HCCI in Car and Driver over a decade ago.  Then I read much more recently that Mazda's SkyActiv engines are all HCCI.  So will GM actually DO HCCI or simply switch to full BEV by 2025?

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 minute ago, riviera74 said:

    I read about HCCI in Car and Driver over a decade ago.  Then I read much more recently that Mazda's SkyActiv engines are all HCCI.  So will GM actually DO HCCI or simply switch to full BEV by 2025?

    Only the Skyactive-X engines are HCCI. 

    • Thanks 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    9 minutes ago, riviera74 said:

    I read about HCCI in Car and Driver over a decade ago.  Then I read much more recently that Mazda's SkyActiv engines are all HCCI.  So will GM actually DO HCCI or simply switch to full BEV by 2025?

    I am thinking the next Bolt Platform gen 2.0 more than making the existing engines HCCI.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2 hours ago, ccap41 said:

    Because your reply to Balthy implied that while there is a huge price gap between the ICE Sonic and EV Bolt because they are not sharing anything that the ICE Equinox and theoretical Equinox-sized EV would share things. 

    I must be missing something because his comparison seemed straight forward and not apples and oranges.

    Sonic -> Bolt - 20k price gap

    Equinox -> EV Equinox-sized vehicle - theoretical 20k price gap

    Do we? They're still making advances in the internal combustion engine.I don't think they've maxed them out at all yet. They're just cracking into the variable compression engines and GM has brand new fancy technology in both the 2.7T and new 5.3. 

    Yet there are limitations to even those. The ICE has been out for well over a century yet those gains have been very gradual and there have been limitations. Examples? All the motors not being made anymore because they hit certain limitations like the Triton 5.4L. It was never going to hit certain MPGs targets as well as higher horsepower targets. That’s just one example of limitations. For the record, I never said there hasn’t been progress made with ICE but the resident EV hater seems to think that the limitations of EVs are damning enough to dismiss them entirely while ignoring the obvious progress they have made. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    6 minutes ago, surreal1272 said:

    Yet there are limitations to even those. The ICE has been out for well over a century yet those gains have been very gradual and there have been limitations. Examples? All the motors not being made anymore because they hit certain limitations like the Triton 5.4L. It was never going to hit certain MPGs targets as well as higher horsepower targets. That’s just one example of limitations. For the record, I never said there hasn’t been progress made with ICE but the resident EV hater seems to think that the limitations of EVs are damning enough to dismiss them entirely while ignoring the obvious progress they have made. 

    There are limitations on literally everything. EVs, Gasoline, diesel, hydrogen... Of course each individual engine has its limits and that is why new engines come out every year with new/additional technology, like the examples I listed. 

    I don't think we are at the engineering limits of gasoline engines yet.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    12 minutes ago, ccap41 said:

    There are limitations on literally everything. EVs, Gasoline, diesel, hydrogen... Of course each individual engine has its limits and that is why new engines come out every year with new/additional technology, like the examples I listed. 

    I don't think we are at the engineering limits of gasoline engines yet.

    I would agree that we are NOT at the engineering limits of ICE auto's. Yet with that said, for the sake of our planet, future health of kids, family, loved ones, etc. it is in our best interest to push forward with better tech and obsolete older tech if possible sooner rather than later.

    • Agree 2
    • Disagree 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 minutes ago, dfelt said:

    I would agree that we are NOT at the engineering limits of ICE auto's. Yet with that said, for the sake of our planet, future health of kids, family, loved ones, etc. it is in our best interest to push forward with better tech and obsolete older tech if possible sooner rather than later.

    I always think it is a great idea to continue to innovate and create new forms of propulsion, even if they don't work out. The need to continue to push limits is where there are groundbreaking breakthroughs. 

    • Agree 3
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • google-news-icon.png



×
×
  • Create New...

Hey there, we noticed you're using an ad-blocker. We're a small site that is supported by ads or subscriptions. We rely on these to pay for server costs and vehicle reviews.  Please consider whitelisting us in your ad-blocker, or if you really like what you see, you can pick up one of our subscriptions for just $1.75 a month or $15 a year. It may not seem like a lot, but it goes a long way to help support real, honest content, that isn't generated by an AI bot.

See you out there.

Drew
Editor-in-Chief

Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search

Change privacy settings