Ekh
Elio Addict
Quality doesn't cost money, it saves you money in the long run. Automotive quality shows up in safety, first of all. Then it shows up in fewer warranty repairs. Finally, it shows up in customer satisfaction and credibility of the brand. There's a ratio that holds true a scary amount of the time: catch a problem in the design phase, that's $10. Catch it in manufacturing, that $100,000 bucks. Have to do a recall? That's $10,000,000. So quality is not only cheap, it's free.I won't be the least surprise! It starts to dawn on me that while EM is trying very hard to save as much money by innovating, but will quality suffer? Quality cost money- add to that expensive American labor and $6,800 seemed too good to be true. And if what they are claiming "half the car , half the cost holds true", then we're all recipient of the lowest priced American made enclosed trike! It remains to be seen how EM will pull this off and while my faith in them are on shaky ground and my patience is running thin, I need to give EM "A+" for effort to get to this point, changing the laws, etc. My hope lies on the final prototype P5 with it's new engine- it'll be placed on a microscope, scrutinized, and tested hopefully by the very people that will fund this project all the way to the finish line. Fingers crossed.
Elio is working for quality by use of proven parts, by exhaustive prototype testing, and by using very, very experienced people to take charge of manufacturing set-up. My best guess is that we'll see our Elios for $7,300 and that they will deliver 81 to 83 mpg in standardized testing, and will actually get up to 100 mpg driving through the back lands of Montana, where the road is straight and level for a hundred miles. (Straight and level, no traffic).