Bruce, GM's EV, the first one, was test driven by the local newspaper reporter in Fort Lauderdale many years ago. Gary Stein is not someone I would want to be associated with because of his politics and open contempt for Christianity, so you know how "liberal" or "left of center" he was by American standards. He mocked people of faith by calling them names in his writings and the Sun Sentinel made him an editor.
All that said, he was given a GM EV to use and never even made it to work that day. It was dark and raining. He had to use the a/c to defog and needed to drop off his daughter at school before going to work at the paper's building downtown. This would have been a trivial task in a gasoline powered car. He ran the batteries stone cold dead and the vehicle had to be flat bed towed back to the dealer.
He was forced to admit that battery powered cars were not ready for the real world.
A "real" car in my opinion is one that has effective defogging, no matter how it is done, meets exactly the same personal protection standards as a passenger car, does not require a motorcycle license to operate and is insured as a passenger car and not as a motorcycle. I do not expect an EV to be able to travel turnpikes or the Interstate highway system, but must be able to keep up with primary state road speeds for the full duration of it's battery power. If I can't go 50 mph I can't drive safely in south Florida except up and down the back streets. I also expect an EV to be able to go 50 miles before requiring a recharge so I can go to work and back without having to plug it in at work. I don't buy gasoline at work and I don't see why my employer should be expected to recharge my car just so I can get home.
The 150 watt-hours/mile for the Tesla is utter B.S. No one drives a steady 30 mph on a flat level road in real life and using headlights, windscreen wipers and defogging in humid weather makes 300 watt/mile a more realistic number. I don't like the extra complexity of power steering, but older people are not going to want a vehicle that is hard to steer, so power steering should at least be an option.
A Tesla would cost $3.81 worth of electricity here in south Florida to fill up assuming you use over 1,000kwh/month, $3.20 if you kept your monthly use under 1,000.
That sounds like a great deal until you consider you have to spend $100k to do it. I make $12/hour and we're only getting 35hrs/week at work so I'll sure as hell never see that kind of money. I can't even afford a new gasoline car. That's "real."