Sedin26
Thread starter
2011 Leaf - thanks for your service and....goodbye!
When I bought this I knew it had a passenger airbag issue so I had the contract worded such that it had to be fixed or else bought back. The dealer went to a lot of trouble to fix it but nothing that is actually economically reasonable worked so today they bought it back at the purchase price minus a couple hundred $.
They gave us loaners - we drove a 2017 Model 3 for a couple of months and then a 2015 Leaf, with all the options, for a couple more months. The Tesla was very nice but a horribly rough ride. The 2015 Leaf was much more pleasant to drive and despite having the 24KwH battery, like the 2011, the range was about triple the 2011. Here's my summary of ownership:
All in all it was a nice vehicle, was ridiculously cheap to operate, and we liked it. The range was mostly good for us, though I have to admit having the Tesla and then the 2015 Leaf just made things easier. We're going to stick with one vehicle for the summer and probably get another one before winter. The good old K24 in our 2005 CR-V keeps chugging along without complaint, at 322,800km and I see no reason why it can't get to 400,000km without issue.
When I bought this I knew it had a passenger airbag issue so I had the contract worded such that it had to be fixed or else bought back. The dealer went to a lot of trouble to fix it but nothing that is actually economically reasonable worked so today they bought it back at the purchase price minus a couple hundred $.
They gave us loaners - we drove a 2017 Model 3 for a couple of months and then a 2015 Leaf, with all the options, for a couple more months. The Tesla was very nice but a horribly rough ride. The 2015 Leaf was much more pleasant to drive and despite having the 24KwH battery, like the 2011, the range was about triple the 2011. Here's my summary of ownership:
- The Leaf was nice to drive and very comfortable
- Charging at home nightly on L1 at 15 amps (I think it does max 12 amps) was more than sufficient
- Range was great around the city - a very nice city commuting car
- Range on the highway was not good. Once you got up to about 55Mph (90km/h) you could almost see the range estimator go down moment by moment
- Range in cold weather was at least 50% less than warm
- Even a Leaf a few years newer is much, much better with range and there is no economically sound method of upgrading the battery
- 2011 and 2012 Leafs commonly have passenger seat airbagsensor issues. You have to buy a whole seat and it's $3K CAD, with no warranty or returns
All in all it was a nice vehicle, was ridiculously cheap to operate, and we liked it. The range was mostly good for us, though I have to admit having the Tesla and then the 2015 Leaf just made things easier. We're going to stick with one vehicle for the summer and probably get another one before winter. The good old K24 in our 2005 CR-V keeps chugging along without complaint, at 322,800km and I see no reason why it can't get to 400,000km without issue.