Sunday, October 6, 2013

Take a Leaf out of my book

We just spent (a happy?) three hours at Nissan Sunnyvale sorting out a lease on a Leaf (try saying that fast!).
I had the idea that the monthly payment could be less than what we've been paying for gas, so we took the (basic) S model without any options in order to keep the costs to a bare minimum.
 
The only extra I really considered was the Charge Package (that includes a 6.6 kW onboard charger), but having talked to a number of people who've had the car for a while it seems that you don't need to make any special arrangements for charging if you're only expecting to do around 30 miles a day.

Upfront

It seems pretty certain that leasing is the right thing to do now. The electric vehicle market is developing very rapidly and so it's very likely that great looking technology today will soon be the boat anchors of tomorrow (viz. computers and phones). Buying a Leaf today seems like a $30K gamble with quite long odds!

I got a chance to ride in a workmate's Leaf and was surprised at how spacious and peppy it is, but the thing that finally made me decide to go ahead was hearing from colleagues that they'd managed to arrange $99/month leases. This is substantially less than the amount we've been spending on gas each month so, at least at face value, there's a certain satisfaction in being able to go green and save money!

Nissan has a Vehicle Purchase Program which, depending who you are and where you work, can result in significant savings ($2545 in my case), so the first thing to do is head to the VPP site and get a claim identification number.

With my claim ID in hand I called the dealership on Friday and they put together three deals:

    • 2 year, $99/month
      • $4500 upfront
      • $99/month including tax
      • Total $6876 or $3438/year or $289/month
    • 2 year, $2000 down
      • Discount $2545 and $17,550 sticker price
      • Monthly $119 + tax $129
      • $2000 down payment
      • Costs (title, license, tax, etc) $1417
      • Total $6513 or 3256/year or $271/month
    • 3 year, $2000 down
      • Discount $2545 and $17,550 sticker price
      • $2500 back from state subsidy (claimed separately)
      • Monthly $195 + tax $212
      • $2000 down payment + costs $3570
      • Total $8702 or $2900/year or $241/month
Even though the 3 year deal was the best overall value and the $99/month the least cost month-to-month, we went all Goldilocks and settled on the 2 year $2000 down deal to get a reasonable monthly payment on a short-term lease!

At the dealership

With the deal sorted out the big challenge was find two hours to sit in the dealership to do the paperwork. Yin and I found a gap amongst the weekend's soccer Saturday afternoon and headed there with Mark in tow. In the event we were there from 4-7PM so it was a significant commitment! That said, the process itself was straightforward and efficiently handled. They said they might do as many as 40 deals a weekend and more than 80 Leafs a month. The salesman said the Leaf accounts for 40% of their business these days!

Early on in the process the salesman brought up two partnership deals.

The first was to give us a Blink membership package which appears to have no real value to us other than making us conscious of their existence!

We're anticipating doing all our charging at home, so the second deal - free purchase and installation of a home charging station under the California Energy Commissions's EV Program - has real value. The salesman said they only get assigned ten or so installations every month or so and we got one on a first-come, first-served basis. There'll be a follow-up with a crew surveying and installing AeroVironment's Home EV Charging Station in the next few weeks, it seems. That'll give us a 240v charger that'll greatly reduce charge times.

Of course there are always a couple of gotchas in any car deal and this occasion was no exception!

Firstly, we're limited to driving 12,000 miles a year with a charge of 15c/mile kicking in after that. Shouldn't be a problem, though, since we have lots of bicycles too!

Secondly, six monthly maintenance is a requirement of the lease and so we ended up spending an extra $425 on a prepaid agreement. The salesman assured me it was good value and the finance guy showed me Edmunds numbers purportedly giving me average maintenance costs, but I would have been happier if they'd been a lot more straightforward about the actual pros and cons of the deal. I still don't know if it was worth it!

Thirdly, with my pen poised over the bottom line, I saw a $395 lease "disposition fee" in the fine print! It seems you might actually have to pay it if you don't end up buying the vehicle or at least lease another from Nissan. I was assured that the fee is often waived as a matter of customer loyalty. We'll see in two year's time!

When the finance guy presented the contract the monthly charge came to $136/month. Of course, this was only $160 or so more than the original quote but (being a lifelong pedant) I felt I had to make the point that it wasn't the original deal. As a result the finance director swooped in and overrode the system in our favor. Nice!

Chaaaarge!

We've no idea how to use the car, of course. In fact, I'm writing this from a Starbucks in Union City since James has a soccer game this afternoon and am feeling quite antsy about our prospects of getting home. I guess that's the usual "EV range anxiety syndrome" kicking in!

One thing I did take a look at is PG&E's EV charging plans. Seems that the EV-A rate plan is the one for us and as a consequence we'll want to charge the car between 11PM and 7AM to take advantage of off-peak rates. Turns out that there's a charge timer built into the car itself, so you can plug in when you park but defer charging until the price is right!

More on running the car later ...

(By the way, we did get back home with 29 miles range remaining ... so no sweat ... not that I was worried, of course!).

Maintaining second thoughts

Even as I signed it, I wasn't very happy with the prepaid maintenance agreement, and I finally had second thoughts when an acquaintance at Red Star revealed the maintenance costs for the Leaf he's been leasing for the last two and a half years:

 

  • 6mo: $19.95 (they only charge for wheel rotation)
  • 12mo: $71.93
  • 18mo: $19:95
  • 24mo: $109.00
  • 30mo: $0.00

... nowhere near the $425 of the agreement. Armed with that knowledge I went back to the dealership to sign the cancellation form and am expecting a refund in the mail. No problem.

Shady deal

While I was back at the dealership I visited the parts department to buy a sunshade for the windshield (turns out that you want to use every means possible of avoiding turning on the AC in order to maximize your range!).

Imagine my surprise when the cashier asked if I was signed up for Nissan's One To One Reward loyalty program and informed me that I get $75 credit upfront! Paid for my shade, and left enough to cover the cost of the first service. Sweet!

 

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Freedom from the tyranny of the inbox!

It seems that email has long ago ceased to be the undisputed boon it once was and is now a millstone around most people's necks!
I've tried all sorts of tricks over the years to minimize the time it takes to stay on top of my email with no real success. Its enough to make you want to cry sometimes.
Never being one to give up, I'm trying a new approach I came up with after a chat I had with my mate Simon recently. The goal he emphasized is to arrange things to stay focussed on just those few messages that you really don't want to drop, and spend little or no time worrying about the rest.
The description that follows assumes that (being the enlightened and emancipated person you are) you're using Apple's Mail program on Mac OS X, but I'm sure (well almost sure) other mail readers and operating systems have similar features (actually, many probably don't!).
Here's the idea:
  • Mail searching has become so reliable that its feasible just to drop all the mail you want to keep into an "archive" mailbox or two and be done. i.e. no more fiddling about filing mail messages into hierarchical folders so you can find them again!
  • With this in mind, create a mailbox "On My Mac" and setup a Mail rule to move all incoming messages to it. (I've setup separate mailboxes per month to archive each of my active accounts on the premise that thousands of messages in a single folder may not be a good thing, and the desire to separate work and personal email):
  • The next step is to take advantage of Apple Mail's "Smart Mailbox" capability and setup two mailboxes to show unread and flagged messages. This feature provides the means to focus on only the important messages:
  • With this setup done, the process for keeping on top of email is simplified to keeping an eye on the "Unread messages" smart mailbox, and following these steps when new mail arrives:
    1. Delete mail you don't want to keep.
    2. Read mail that justifies your attention and it'll automatically drop out of the "Unread messages" smart mailbox.
    3. Flag mail that requires more than a cursory reply and it'll automatically show up in the "Flagged messages" smart mailbox.
    4. Unflag mail once you've dealt with it and it'll automatically drop out of the "Flagged messages" smart mailbox.
With this method, you'll find that you never look at your inbox, that unread mail is kept to a minimum, and that you can stay focussed on the mail that requires your considered attention.
QED.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Hobie heaven

I've long been interested sailing, and have been pretty handy at the tiller of a dinghy for some time.
We recently spent a week at Donner Lake in the Sierra Nevadas, and got the chance to mess about with a Hobie Wave.
The picture shows the placid affair on the first occasion, but the next day the wind came up nicely and we all got thoroughly wet cutting through the chop!
I'm really tempted to buy a boat like this - a new Hobie Wave costs ~$4500 - and trailer it around the Bay Area.
We've got both the Shoreline Aquatic Center right by us,  with more adventurous places like Coyote Point at Redwood City, the San Francisco Bay, Half Moon Bay or even Santa Cruz all around. Sailing paradise.
I remember having great fun any time I got to hang out with friends sailing as a teenager growing up in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, so its something I want my kids to enjoy too.