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Zaphod42 · 51-55, M
I was shocked my dad’s Prius only had a puncture repair kit. Happy my SUV has a full size spare.
zonavar68 · 56-60, M
@Zaphod42 A guy at my work owns a BYD. It has no spare. He got a flat on the way to work. He had to call BYD support to get the car picked up but he had to find a tyre shop with a replacement tyre of the right size/type himself. He still loves the car despite that. Once something becomes a religion anything can be justified in it's name.
zonavar68 · 56-60, M
@Zaphod42 I think it's part of a push to re-form the servicing market to be more favourable/inclusive of EV's based around creating a situation where nearly all vehicle drivers are required to subscribe to some sort of road service provider either through the dealership or manufacturer or via one of the insurer-run ones and rely on other people to help in an incident or emergency instead of people being able to do basic things like wheel/tyre changes, checking/filling coolant, washer fluid, engine oil plus doing a walk-around to visually inspect before use.
Even EV's (which are heavier than equivalent make/model non-EV's) require to have tyre/wheel changes, and all sorts of safety/operational checks. I bet almost no EV drivers walk around their vehicle to inspect it before use.
I wouldn't put it past insurance companies to start asking if someone has (or wants) a road service subscription as part of pricing policies.
Even EV's (which are heavier than equivalent make/model non-EV's) require to have tyre/wheel changes, and all sorts of safety/operational checks. I bet almost no EV drivers walk around their vehicle to inspect it before use.
I wouldn't put it past insurance companies to start asking if someone has (or wants) a road service subscription as part of pricing policies.