Kilowatt hour is a way to measure how much energy a battery can store. If you see a battery rated at 80 kilowatt hours, it means it can power something that uses one kilowatt for 80 hours.
The Tesla Cybertruck is a new electric truck from Tesla that looks very different from regular trucks. It’s made to be tough and has a lot of cool tech inside.
Neuerklasse is a new platform from BMW for their electric cars. It helps make the cars more efficient and fun to drive while using the latest battery technology.
A DC fast charger is a special charging station for electric cars that can charge the battery much quicker than regular chargers. It's useful when you need to charge your car quickly on a long trip.
The Nissan Leaf is a well-known electric car that is affordable and practical. It's been around for a while and is a good option for people who want to drive an electric vehicle.
Fleet CO2 is the total amount of carbon dioxide that a group of cars produces. Companies try to lower this number to be better for the environment and to follow the law.
The Dacia Spring Electric Cargo is a small electric van that's great for city driving and delivering goods. It's one of the cheaper electric cars, and the latest version has better features than before.
Lithium ion phosphate batteries are special batteries used in electric cars. They are safe and last a long time, making them a good choice for powering vehicles.
Battery degradation is when a battery loses its ability to hold a charge over time. This is important for electric cars because it affects how far they can drive before needing to be charged again.
Geotab is a company that collects and analyzes data about vehicles, especially electric ones. They help businesses manage their fleets and understand how well their vehicles are performing.
Telematics is a technology that helps cars send and receive data. It can help track things like location and vehicle health, making it easier to manage fleets of vehicles.
Stellantis is a big car company that makes many different brands of cars, like Jeep and Peugeot. It was created when two companies joined together.
Car
Leap Motor B03X
The Leap Motor B03X is a small car made for city driving. It's meant to be affordable and comfortable for people in Europe.
Car
Leap Motor B05
The Leap Motor B05 is a larger car that comes with more features like a big battery and a nice roof that lets in light. It's a step up from the smaller B03X model.
ADAS means special technology in cars that helps keep drivers safe and makes driving easier. It can include things like automatic brakes and systems that help you stay in your lane.
The Leap Motor B10 is a hybrid car that can run on electricity and also has a small engine to help charge the battery. This way, you can use it like an electric car most of the time.
The Alpina B10 is a special version of a BMW car that makes it faster and more luxurious. It's designed for people who want a sporty ride but still want to be comfortable, and now it even has a hybrid option for better fuel efficiency.
Car
Mazda CX6E
The Mazda CX6E is a new electric SUV that Mazda has introduced. It represents their efforts to create more electric cars and work with companies from China.
Car
Volvo Trux FL Electric
The Volvo Trux FL Electric is a truck made by Volvo that runs on electricity instead of gasoline or diesel, making it better for the environment, especially in cities.
The Lucid Air is a fancy electric car that can go really far on a single charge. It's known for being high-tech and stylish, but some owners have reported problems with its software that the company is trying to fix.
LIVE
Let's do the 60-Second Savings Challenge!
Step 1. Download Rocket Money.
Step 2. Link your accounts and see every subscription you're paying for.
Tap 1 you don't use and cancel it. That's money back every month.
Step 3. Create a financial goal.
$50 every paycheck or let the app automatically move small amounts of cash when you can afford it.
In a week, you'll forget you set it up.
In a month, you'll see real dollars piling up.
In a year, you'll be shocked at how much money you've saved.
Bonus Challenge!
Upload an internet or phone bill and let Rocket Money try to lower it.
You only pay if they find you savings.
On average, Rocket Money members can save up to $740 a year when using all the app's premium features.
Users love the app with over 186,000 5-star ratings.
Make saving money the resolution you actually keep.
Start the 60-Second Savings Challenge at rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
That's rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
Rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
The number one resolution for people last year was to save more money,
but nearly half gave up by February.
Don't let that be you.
Download Rocket Money to reach your financial goals this year.
Track your spending, cut waste, and automate savings in one simple app.
Rocket Money shows you all your expenses and categorizes them so you know exactly where
your money's going and where you're overspending.
From there, the app cuts waste by canceling your unused subscriptions and lowering your bills.
No customer service needed.
With that money freed up, the app will automatically set some cash aside for your goals.
Whether it's an emergency fund, paying off debt, or saving for vacation,
Rocket Money's got you covered.
Users love the app with over 186,000 5-star ratings.
And on average, users can save up to $740 a year when using all of the app's premium features.
Make saving money a priority this year.
Go to Rocketmoney.com slash cancel to get started.
That's Rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
Rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
With our program, our members are losing more weight.
With expert nutrition and side effects support.
Better results.
Expert support.
Lose more weight.
Make it last.
I can't imagine doing a GLP One without Weight Watchers.
Get started for as low as $25 at WeightWatchers.com slash GLP One.
For over 60 years, we've helped millions of members find what works for them.
Now, it's your turn.
Weight Watchers, watch it work.
Welcome back to the podcast.
Today, a quad-motor BMW IM3.
The Bolt returns to the USA.
And California's subsidies.
Plus stay tuned.
Later in the show, I'll tell you why a single YouTuber forced Lucid into a software climbdown.
On EV News China today, our spin-off podcast, looking at what's happening in the Eastern,
Hey, no bonus show today to start the week, but check out some recent ones about the Tesla
Cybertruck going, trying to get homologated for Europe and another bonus show about which
countries are doing the best job of encouraging EV uptake.
I've called that one the carrot or the stick, both are in your feed right now.
Had some lovely comments about both over the weekend.
BMW wants its new electric IM3 to feel like an M car first and an EV second, they say.
The company's talking about M3 grade pace when it comes out in 2027.
800 volt system made for fast charging and sustained output.
The prototype first surfaced under heavy camouflage in 2024, but BMW now describes
the project as a full-blooded M model rather than a re-skin.
It'll share the platform with the petrol M3, though BMW implies similarity stopped there.
The headline hardware is a four-motor layout with one motor per wheel, with two motors on each
axle. Obviously, BMW says the car can run in all-wheel drive or rear wheel drive and can
disconnect either axle for efficiency, for example, only on motorways using the rear axle,
saving energy. Software does much of the heavy lifting, though. BMW says it's
heart of joy. Control system juggles torque across four motors in real time, keeping grip and
balance where drivers need them. The battery pack will be over 100 kilowatt hours with cell
chemistry and cooling tuned for high currents and repeated track use. BMW expects the pack to
act as a structural element, adding stiffness rather than sitting in the chassis. This will
not be an EV that pretends sound and sensation. Don't matter, though, say BMW. They talk about
multiple driving modes, including simulated gear shifts, like the Koreans do with the GT cars,
and dedicated sound profiles aligned with its Neuerklasse platform, pricing,
and on-sale data. I'm afraid I can't tell you. This one's important, though,
the Chevrolet Bolt. 2027 model year, what are we, a couple of weeks into January of 2026.
It's now in American showrooms, four years after GM retired the old one, and at the time
said it was done. And then very quickly went, oh no, no, we're going to bring it back.
The car looks, well, much as before, but the hardware changes matter. GM has grafted its
Altium battery tech into the familiar package. Don't mention Altium anymore. And switched to
LFP cells, because that's why we don't talk about Altium anymore, because they're doing LFP stuff
from CATL. And the whole Altium thing was their partnership with LG. But it brings the usual
virtues of LFP technology, lithium, iron, phosphate. The chemistry is more durable.
It wants to be charged to 100% every day, with no worry about degradation,
different to the NCM chemistries. The refreshed bolts now peaks at 150 kilowatts,
night and day better than the old bolt. And if you're thinking on a DC fast charger,
well, 150 isn't exactly class leading anymore. That's exactly what the bolt is meant to be.
That is the perfect sweet spot of cost and convenience. It's a huge jump over its predecessor.
You can do that on a long journey if you want to. Range has gone up a little.
The EPA rated number is 262 miles, although frankly, the bolt was always really good for range.
But it's the price, not the range, which will be the big number that hopefully dealers put far
and wide, because they should do. Starting price 28,595. Now, the current trims that are on sale,
29,990 for the LT or 32,995 for the RS. But in time, it'll go down to 28,595,
the cheapest electric vehicle on sale in the United States. And if you are shopping for this
or an Nissan Leaf, try and find dealerships that are over the road from each other,
then you can just pop between them and go, well, over there, they just gave me another 100 dollars
because those are the two vehicles that are going to go head to head this year,
in terms of being America's cheapest EVs. The nameplate carries more weight than its modest
looks suggest, launched in 2017 as the first serious all EV, not a compliance car or a
testbed for technology. The bolt won universal praise for its price and size, if not charging.
Strong sales didn't save it, though, from an extended recall and the limits of GM's old,
previous EV platform, then they retired it. Now GM calls this bolts a limited time offer.
I've never quite worked out what they mean by that. How often this bolt lasts depends on demand.
So if I were you and there's one in your local area and even just anywhere, get it shipped,
and you want a vehicle like this, this is incredible value for a brand new car.
Obviously, the federal tax credit has gone, but California plans to step in. California plans
to spend $200 million to stop its EV market from stalling. The money folded into Governor Gavin
Newsom's budget proposal for next year aims to replace the sum of the money lost from the federal
tax credit. The move matters beyond state lines, though, because California makes up a large
share of American EV sales and has one of the country's densest public charging networks,
a new pot of state cash will steady demand in a country that's cooling on EVs.
Details are thin. Officials have yet to spell out who would qualify, how much they would get,
which vehicles will count. But reports suggest the incentives may come as on-the-hood discounts
written into the deal and taken off the price at the point of sale.
I'm not a huge fan of that model. In fact, if you'd like to hear more about what I think about
carrots and sticks, I've got a whole half-hour bonus show in your feed right now about which
countries are doing it well and how California has traditionally done it within the wider American
story. It's kind of fascinating when you look at the historical context as well.
Lots of people who think you need to help people go EV just go money off the car.
It's just one way of doing it. And if we look at other places that are very successful,
China is at 60% EV now, and most of those are full BEVs, by the way. You say, well,
China sold 1.3 million EVs last month in December, and most of them were BEVs.
People's might, you can see their cogs start ticking and go, hang on a minute, how many?
Yeah, China was 60% EV last month. Obviously, Norway's 100%. Lots of places have taken
different ways of getting EVs on the road. California's new one would be cash on the hood.
Lots of people like that. It's easy. The other thought is that sometimes
car makers then don't feel the pressure as much to keep the costs down. There's other things that
regulators, states, politicians can do. More power can be leaned into infrastructure and
helping people that wouldn't be able to go EV otherwise. So we'll wait and see. The governor
previously backed away from replacing the federal tax credit like for like, citing budget strain,
reviving this idea, now signals a bet that triggered subsidies, and those that if you
jump through these hoops, maybe it's income or something else, that you target them as well,
costs less, but also doesn't mean the EV momentum stalls, because California's got some really
ambitious targets on reducing emissions. Okay, let's talk Dacia. That is the Romanian,
and these days I think a bit North African where they make the cars, bit of Renault. Dacia will
sell two battery electric mini cars in Europe as they cut their fleet CO2. This is important
because they want to meet EU emissions targets. And if you have excess credits, then you can make
a bit of money by selling them to people who haven't met them. The China built Spring starts at 16,900
euros in France. They've updated the Dacia Spring, by the way. It's a much better car than it used
to be. And if you don't mind buying one that's six months old, it's a stellar deal. I saw one that
was a pre-wredged car near me in Christchurch. I mean, pool and doorset, but further along the
coast a little bit. It was six, eight months old, still sitting on the lot all these months later,
pre-wredged car from February or March. Nobody wanted it. And it was down to 9995. It's gone now.
And it was in a really awful shade of brown. Kind of, I said to my wife, Nappy Brown,
because, you know, our little girl still in overnight nappies. It's not a color that I would
want on my car. And why Dacia painted it that certain shade of brown? I have no idea. But
if you don't mind it, it was a 10 grand brand new car. No one else had driven it. And it's a
stellar deal. So the spring is assembled by Renault in Wuhan, Renault Dongfeng in Wuhan,
using China's low cost EV supply chain. The other car we're talking about would be
a version of the Renault Twingo, but they don't know what it would be called yet. But effectively,
again, a small city car. But that little Renault Twingo, the little Nissan Micra, a Dacia version.
Oh, man, our small car market is exploding. And I'm absolutely here for it every day. I love it.
So, basing it on the new Twingo, built alongside Renault's other cars at their Slovenian plant,
should qualify for any European e-car category, like the Japanese K car category, but the EU
wants to bring that in over here. Lithium ion phosphate battery for both. The two mini cars
have similar technology, but be different in look and positioning. The spring's getting a little bit
long in the tooth now. But still, the Dacia spring has been improved. Not amazingly. It used to be
the slowest DC fast charging you could buy. New. I think they slightly improved it, though. All
right, we'll take a break. We'll come back and we'll talk about battery degradation and leap
back in a moment.
With that money freed up, the app will automatically set some cash aside for your goals. Whether it's
an emergency fund, paying off debt, or saving for vacation, Rocket Money's got you covered.
Users love the app with over 186,000 five-star ratings. And on average, users can save up to $740
a year when using all of the app's premium features. Make saving money a priority this year.
Go to rocketmoney.com slash cancel to get started. That's rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
Rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
Weight Watchers now offers access to affordable GLP once. It works for members like...
I'm Hailey and I've lost a hundred pounds. Weight Watchers has everything I need,
from weight loss medications to nutrition support and help with my side effects. It's all in one
place. Weight Watchers handles the insurance for you and offers affordable cash pay options. With
our program, our members are losing more weight with expert nutrition and side effects support.
I'm Mike and I've lost 135 pounds. Weight Watchers prescribing GLP1 medications.
It's been life-changing. I'm Sharia and I lost 80 pounds on Weight Watchers. I realize that it
would take more than a prescription to lose weight and feel good on a GLP1. Better results,
expert support, lose more weight, make it last. I can't imagine doing a GLP1 without Weight Watchers.
Get started for as low as $25 at WeightWatchers.com slash GLP1.
For over 60 years, we've helped millions of members find what works for them.
Now, it's your turn. Weight Watchers, watch it work.
The number one resolution for people last year was to save more money. But nearly half gave up by
February. Don't let that be you. Download Rocketmoney to reach your financial goals this year.
Track your spending, cut waste, and automate savings in one simple app.
Rocketmoney shows you all your expenses and categorizes them so you know exactly where
your money is going and where you're overspending. From there, the app cuts waste by canceling your
unused subscriptions and lowering your bills. No customer service needed. With that money freed
up, the app will automatically set some cash aside for your goals. Whether it's an emergency fund,
paying off debt, or saving for vacation, Rocketmoney's got you covered. Users love the app,
with over 186,000 five-star ratings. And, on average, users can save up to $740 a year
when using all the app's premium features. Make saving money a priority this year.
Go to Rocketmoney.com slash cancel to get started. That's Rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
Rocketmoney.com slash cancel. Weight Watchers now offers access to affordable GLP1s.
Weight Watchers has everything I need, from weight loss medications to nutrition support
and help with my side effects. With our program, our members are losing more weight,
with expert nutrition and side effects support. Weight Watchers prescribing GLP1 medications,
it's been life-changing. Better results, expert support, lose more weight, make it last.
Get started today for as low as $25 at WeightWatchers.com.
Welcome back to the podcast. Now, let's talk about battery degradation.
Geotab's latest haul of real-world data gives EV skeptics little comfort across more than 22,700
EVs. They took in 21 makes and models and many years of telematics. Geotab found an average
annual battery degradation of just 2.3%. That points to battery packs that age
rather slowly and suffer very little drop in capacity. This matters for anyone betting on EV
fleets. Battery health drives total cost of ownership and second-hand values. The new analysis
challenges some of the dogma around EVs that batteries don't last very long. People base
that on their mobile phones, and I would agree. Mobile phone batteries are terrible,
but they're not built like EV batteries. Might be lithium-ion, but it's entirely different.
Charging behavior. Not total mileage was the thing that they say stood out as the differentiator.
Vehicles that rely on very high-powered DC fast charging can degrade at 3% per year.
Those that have been AC-charged much slower degrade by about half.
Hotter climates, they say, only add a little more degradation than mild climates. The heat
hurts, but not if you live somewhere really hot and still AC-charge the things. Other data I've seen
over the years says charging doesn't really matter, but this is what the Geotab data says.
Patterns as well matter. Fleet managers fear things like battery degradation and what their
fleet could be worth at the end or things like that. Higher-use vehicles show only 0.8% more
degradation per year than very low-use vehicles. So again, if you're on a fleet and that fleet's
going to be doing 50,000 miles per year per vehicle, it's a trade-off that doesn't really matter.
The data undercuts the need for rigid daily charging rules. The data really says charge it
largely however you want, so it won't really matter for battery degradation, which isn't a big deal
anyway. For all of this to work in fleets, they need accurate state of health data.
Telematics now moves from a tool for things like routing your vehicles day to day and safety as
well to a thing that must incorporate battery life and getting the most value out of every
efficient use of every kilowatt hour. Eagle-eared observers will have heard our latest premium
partner sponsor, Test EV, come on board for Australia and New Zealand. We'll talk to them
on Saturday. Nathan Gore-Brown from the firm will join us to talk about battery health testing.
Now let's talk a little bit about Leap Motor. Rolled out three new electric models at the
sales from 800 points across the continent last year as simply a starting place. The ambition
lands in a market where Chinese brands chase volume but big incumbent brands. Leap Motor
leans on its tie-up with Stellantis to extend its reach into 800 sales points across Europe.
They're targeting 1700 sales points as well though. The aim says the chief executive of Leap
Motor International, the bit that is mostly owned by Stellantis in order for it not to be technically
a Chinese company. The aim there is to sell high-quality affordable vehicles. There's a new
compact city model coming for Europe called the B03X. That's going to anchor the new lower end
of the range. Very comfortable but very cheap. Above it sits a C-segment B05 with a 67 kilowatt
hour pack inside it. Quite a big screen in that panoramic roof. Nice software, lots of ADAS.
And Leap Motor is also going to offer a hybrid version of its B10, an extended range version
actually, where the engine will just be a 1.5-litre generator charging the battery. And as long as it
comes with a plug socket, I'm kind of okay with that because use it as an EV whenever you can.
80 kilometers of electric only range, that one will start at 29,000 euros when it arrives here.
Leap Motor still trails better known rivals but a broader lineup and a key partner in Europe with
Stellantis goes a long way. Mazda is tapping Chinese technology for a new European EV. This is
fascinating. Mazda has unveiled the CX6E at the Brussels Motor Show. A new all-electric crossover
for Europe that leans on Chinese engineering. It's effectively the Chinese EZ60. Maybe I'll
that's the Chang'an D-PAL SO7 car? It's the same platform, not a rebadging. This is Mazda's second
collaboration with Chang'an, a sign that the Chinese are increasingly influential. For now,
the CX6E, rear-wheel drive, 78 kilowatt hour lithium-ion phosphate pack, 0-62 in 8 seconds,
300 miles WLTP range, 10-80 in 24 minutes. Yeah, I'm listing off all the stats and they all sound
kind of good as well. A big 26-inch dual-split display, wireless Apple CarPlay, Android Auto,
for Mazda fans, and maybe for a few people who are new to the brand, this might be a quite nice EV.
Now, Mercedes-Benz opening high-speed chargers in British Columbia. Mercedes-Benz switching
on its first DC fast charger in Canada with three hubs in Abbotsford, Bitmeadows and
Sassawassen. Sorry Canadian listeners. Five more sites are planned. They've got a mix of CCS-1
and Nax connectors, a four cable layout so drivers can plug in pretty much with whatever car you
turn up at. They're the Alpetronic HYC 400. The units are rated for 400 kilowatts, obviously,
if all the cars turn up, you don't get that. But the network will support plug and charge as well,
and more importantly, whatever plug is on the side of your car, that, okay, it's a modest
build out, I get it. But it's an important beginning of a build out of just not making
adapt to hell, something for everybody. Volvo Enix, they've cut their electric semi down to
city size. The new Volvo Trux FL Electric has a 3,000 pound gross vehicle weight rating. It loses
an axle and the pitch is clear. This is a purpose built zero emission vehicle for inner city work.
This is not a long haul tractor. This is a shorter layout, more compact for the cities,
145 kilowatt hour battery pack, 180 kilowatts electric motor in this. And so anything that goes
through lots of stop start routes, frequent loading bays, really important for these kind
of commercial vehicles to go electric, 125 miles of range or 200 kilometers. But this is built for
city duty cycles, go back to the depot, plug it in, charge it up probably overnight,
and off you go again the next day. Volvo adds new technology, more ergonomics, a much nicer
place for drivers than the vehicles it is replacing in combustion world. And Volvo Trux has a huge
track record now in not only trucking, but electric trucking, which is what many fleet
managers need that haven't quite dipped their toe in the electric waters.
And finally, extraordinary story. Lucid has been forced into a software climb down.
What was a level headed but scathing YouTube video review has done what thousands of owners
grumbling couldn't do. That's forced Lucid Motors to admit their software sucks at times
and that they're going to fix it. The maker of the Lucid Air sedan acknowledged a string of glitches
and an overhaul. So this is important because Lucid sells itself on engineering prowess and
premium pricing. So somebody on YouTube who is an incredible creator, his name is Jason Fenske,
he runs Engineering Explained and he does YouTube videos for mere mortals like us,
which explain engineering, hence the name, but he's such a good communicator and he can make
complex topics understandable to idiots like me. And he wasn't very happy with his Lucid. Now we,
you know, we haven't got platforms like him, but he has got millions of followers
and his Lucid video went to over a million views very quickly. And Lucid noticed it.
Imad Dalala, who now oversees all product development at Lucid, reached out, they connected with
Jason on the phone, had a long phone call about all of the problems in his Lucid Air
and promised that over the air updates would fix anything that they can.
The broken plug and charge functionality is being resolved. His bonnet that doesn't open or
close properly would be realigned. Look, we don't have platforms like this guy, but trust me,
he wasn't abusing his platform. He's one of the nicest people on YouTube. He comes across as a
genuinely good guy and I've been watching his channel for just many years and he's forced a
big car company into really big changes. Some of them will be tangible. The firm plans to redesign
its cup holders even with a new layout. He said that he made a follow-up video and said that
the other people on the call, without saying it, like, all agreed, the cup holders suck. So
isn't that amazing? We know car companies are building an electric car or any kind of motor car,
but it's one of the most difficult engineering challenges out there, apart from sending people
into space. It's really difficult to do and no one expects Lucid to get it right first time
and what is amazing is they just fessed up and owned up. You know what? We completely agree.
Let's get you on a telephone call with our boss and we'll fix this for all of the owners.
So there's going to be a more reliable phone as the key, more reflective voice commands,
improved carplay and Bluetooth integration, stuff like changing your driver profile while the car
is moving. They said they couldn't do that because, you know, what if your seat started moving
to your partner's setting and then put you in an unsafe position? I kind of get that,
but then a lot of older cars, you can just do that. They had buttons for the maybe the two
profile settings and, you know what? You just take your finger off the button or you put your
finger back on setting number one and it puts the seat back where you are. If you were moving,
I don't know, like too far away from the steering wheel to reach it or something silly.
I understand their point, but this is kind of a solved problem, Lucid. Either way, either way,
a lot of the things are being fixed and despite his complaints, Jason praised Lucid's engineering
and said that he would be keeping the Lucid air to the end of his lease and hadn't decided whether
at the end of it to buy it or give the vehicle back, but would keep it. Ongoing software friction
leaves him unsure whether he would ever buy one. Lovely story to end up. That's your podcast for
today. Thanks to our premium partners, National Car Charging on the US mainland and the Low Heart
Charge in Hawaii and Test TV, Avalu's trusted partner to independent EV battery health testing
in Australia and New Zealand. Have a good and sit-amara and remember, there's no such thing as
a self charging hybrid. Five years ago, I was paying $65 a month for my subscriptions. Today,
those same subscriptions cost $111 and I don't even use half of them anymore. That's why now I
use RocketMoney to manage my subscriptions for me. The app gives you a list of all of your
subscriptions and reminds you of upcoming payments, so you're not hit with any surprise charges.
On top of that, it also sends you alerts when subscription prices go up, so you always know
the price you're paying. If you decide you no longer want a subscription, you can cancel it
right from the app. No customer service needed. And the best part is, RocketMoney even reaches out
and tries to get you refunded for some of the money you lost. On average, people that cancel
their subscriptions with RocketMoney save $378 a year. And overall, RocketMoney has saved its
members $880 million in canceled subscriptions. Stop wasting money on things you don't use.
Go to rocketmoney.com slash cancel to get started. That's rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
Rocketmoney.com slash cancel.
About this episode
A quad-motor BMW iM3 is set to redefine performance EVs, aiming for M3-like speed with advanced torque management and a robust battery pack. The Chevrolet Bolt makes a comeback with improved specs and a competitive price, while California proposes subsidies to stimulate EV sales. The episode also highlights a YouTuber's influence on Lucid Motors, prompting them to address software issues after a critical review. Additional discussions cover battery degradation insights and new electric models from Leap Motor and Dacia.