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| # | Post Title | Result Info | Date | User | Forum |
| Answer to: How to inspect an electric car? | 100Relevance | 5 years ago | Dion | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| The nissan leaf is currently the best-selling electric car in the world. Since its inception, the EV has been powered by a lithium-ion battery pack. Early versions of the car had a 24 kWh battery, whereas 2016 and up models have a 30 kWh version. A recent study claims the 30 kWh battery degrades three times faster than the 24 kWh variant. Study findings Although the study has not yet been peer reviewed, it has sparked interest throughout the electric vehicle community. Key findings indicate that, after two years of age, the 30 kWh battery declined an aver ... | |||||
| Answer to: Nissan Leaf opinions | 74Relevance | 5 years ago | Whatchamacallit | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| No issues there, they are much simpler (and less moving parts) than those CVTs. See here for other issues: | |||||
| Answer to: Vehicles reviewed by Scotty | 73Relevance | 2 years ago | G.T. | Video Reviews by Scotty | |
| ... in a video, will redirect you to list of all its reviews Scotty has posted so far. Cars Scotty reccommends The Best and Worst First Cars to Buy (apr. '18) The Best and Worst Project Cars to Buy (Jun. '18) Who Makes the Best All Wheel Drive Car in the World (May '19) 4 Cars That Will Last 300,000 Miles or More (nov. '20) The Most Reliable Cars of 2018 (dec. '18): Toyota Corolla , Mazda Miata , Toyota Prius Prime and C, Lexus GX 5 Used Cars You Should Buy (feb. '19): 2012 Honda Accord , 2012 Ford Fusion , 2013 Honda Civic , 2012 Toyota Corolla , 2011 T ... | |||||
| Answer to: Nissan Leaf opinions | 62Relevance | 5 years ago | infinitifxfan | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| I would wait for the next-gen leaf or the Ariya. The leaf is a nice looking car with good range and practicality but the batteries are not water-cooled, instead, they are passively cooled which makes battery longevity not so great on both generations of the leaf. I would wait for the Ariya or next-gen leaf cuz those will have water-cooled batteries and they will last longer. My dad bought a 2017 Ford Focus Electric brand new instead of the leaf because its water-cooled battery and the lower price were just better for him. It has about 41 000 km and the only thing that broke was the water pump to cool the battery under warranty, but otherwise, it's been very reliable in the 4 years of ownership and we have spent no money in maintenance and repairs (although we do need to replace a speaker cover and mirror glass since they cracked). | |||||
| Used electric car (Nissan Leaf), possible big repair cost | 55Relevance | 5 years ago | MikeEcho | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| ... (in Sweden), which was working fine and I did not had any complaints until suddenly its on-board charger (that charges the DC high voltage battery from AC (120-220V) power) died. nissan cited a price of $3000 just for the on-board charger and as its replacement needs removal of back seats and removing the cooling lines from under the car, I assume the total repair cost would approach $5000 (I did not get a citation for it however). I tried to buy it from breaking yards and even though there are many leaf recyclers in Sweden and particularly Norway, there wa ... | |||||
| RE: Nissan Leaf opinions | 43Relevance | 5 years ago | DevinK9 | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| well depending on the car, trim and deal you get you possibly pay more. The only way you save is through lesser maintenance needs and costs. I own a Prius Prime right now and sticker price was the same as the leaf's but I was concerned about range anxiety and heard negative things about leaf rapidgate issues so I opted for a plug-in hybrid instead but my next will be full electric; whether it be a Chevy Bolt, Hyundai Ioniq EV, Kia Niro EV/e-Niro or the leaf | |||||
| Leasing a Nissan Leaf for 2 years at 99 cents. | 42Relevance | 5 years ago | infinitifxfan | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Hey Scotty, I found this article rather interesting about leasing a nissan leaf for 99 cents, but it can only happen if you have a 2020/2021 nissan Titan XD truck. | |||||
| Answer to: Should I fix up this rusty old SUV | 48Relevance | 4 years ago | Justin Shepherd | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Are you describing the leaf springs themselves, or the mounting points where they attach to the frame? The mounts are replaceable, they're called leaf spring shackles and mounts. Providing you have some hardware around the house, and the frame itself is actually intact, these are replaceable. The Explorer is basically a Ranger with an SUV cabin on top. You don't want one of those leaf spring shackles to break, especially while driving. You can lose control of the truck. It will also potentially bust a hole into the cabin. Chrisfix has a good video on how to replace them. Both rear wheels need to be raised off the ground. (19) How to Replace leaf Springs and Lift your Truck - YouTube Body panels you can find in junkyards. Personally, I wouldn't go too far with it. It's never going to be worth anything. If you want a beater, it may have some life left, but that's it. | |||||
| NISSAN | 46Relevance | 3 years ago | G.T. | Reviews | |
| List of nissans reviewed by Scotty 240SX Altima Armada Frontier Hardbody Maxima Murano Pathfinder Rogue Sentra Titan Versa Xterra Z-series List of Datsuns reviewed by Scotty 620 | |||||
| Answer to: 2019 Nissan Titan opinions | 46Relevance | 5 years ago | Whatchamacallit | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| ... addressed (in that generation) as well as by the second generation, so you may look at both generations. The nissan RWD platforms are generally better in terms of reliability than the FWD platforms. That being said I would still avoid the model years 2020-newer since they moved to the 9-speed transmission (the previous 7-speed is less complex and and why mess with something that has already working and had been refined?). Now the first Gen had a 5-speed, even simpler and true and tried. I also would avoid the first year (2016), and look for 2017-2019 (i ... | |||||
| 11-year-old Nissan Leaf OK if never serviced? | 40Relevance | 3 years ago | David650 | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| I am very interested in buying a 2012 nissan leaf I found for sale by an owner near me, they want 4k for their 2012 nissan leaf with 5.3k miles. The car has had 2 previous owners, and the current owner told me they have never had the car serviced before, all they did was replace the starter battery once. Heading to test drive the car today. Is it okay to buy a car that has never been serviced at a dealer but with this low mileage is that okay? The car was owned in sunny California for its entire life. The battery has a healthy capacity. Thank You | |||||
| Answer to: Nissan Leaf opinions | 40Relevance | 5 years ago | Whatchamacallit | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| What I am saying is the nissan leaf does not have a CVT (or eCVT), unless I am missing something. It doesn’t make sense (for EV). No fully electric vehicle has a transmission, especially a CVT. Hybrids are different, but I am talking about fully electric vehicles (I.e. BEVs), which the nissan leaf is. | |||||
| Answer to: Frustrated with my truck | 39Relevance | 3 years ago | Chuck Tobias | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Pickups in the 1940s used leaf springs in the front. A late model Ford Ranger? I don't think so. I believe the last consumer-grade vehicles that were equipped with front leaf springs were the 1991 Jeep Wagoneer (actually a vehicle that debuted in 1963) and pre-1997 Jeep Wranglers (also an ancient design). Unless maybe you have something like a dump truck nothing current has front leaf springs. | |||||
| Answer to: 2020 Nissan Titan | 46Relevance | 5 years ago | Whatchamacallit | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| ... addressed (in that generation) as well as by the second generation, so you may look at both generations. The nissan RWD platforms are generally better in terms of reliability than the FWD platforms. That being said I would still avoid the model years 2020-newer since they moved to the 9-speed transmission (the previous 7-speed is less complex and and why mess with something that has already working and had been refined?). Now the first Gen had a 5-speed, even simpler and true and tried. I also would avoid the first year (2016), and look for 2017-2019 (i ... | |||||
| Any reason not to get a Kia EV? | 44Relevance | 2 years ago | BobTheHatKing | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| ... car (another EV), most likely used. these are her top choices, as written by her:Nissan leaf SV plus - fine but the efficiency really sucks so have to charge a lotHyundai Ioniq 6- apparently good efficiency and it’s also a sedan Kia Niro - love the safety features and how quiet it is and really efficient I told her her best bet is to get another leaf. They’ve been making those long enough as one of the first EV from a major manufacturer and they’ve had time to perfect them somewhat. nissans have problems with their automatic transmissions and somet ... | |||||
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