3 years with a Chevy Bolt

Last week, I turned in our Chevy Bolt, as it’s 3 year lease was due.

I wrote briefly about our first two months with the car.

The Bolt was a good car, but not a great experience. The Bolt was our third EV car, but we won’t be getting another one from GM.

tl;dr: good car, bad company

The Bolt on it’s last day with us

The only real failure was about 6 months in where the car basically stopped on the highway as the power system shut down. I was able to get off the highway and pull into a parking lot. The dealership had to replace the entire battery pack to fix the problem.

Not many other mechanical issues during the rest of the time with the car. Much simpler in terms of regular maintenance compared to other cars.

We went on several long trips without a lot of issues and learned a bit about charging strategies.

The Bolt has several drawbacks that are frustrating. It lacks adaptive cruise control, which for a cutting edge car, makes no sense. We had cars 10+ years ago that had adaptive cruise control and the lack of it is a significant drawback for highway travel.

In terms of charging, the Bolt has a lot of trouble doing a high speed charging with any charger above 50kW. Yes, it’s supposed to auto-negotiate and be able to use a higher power CCS charger, but in practice, it doesn’t work. We tried several times and it always ended in failure. Incredibly frustrating when you are mid-journey and the car won’t charge.

As more and more CCS chargers are installed with 100kW+ capabilities, this a real issue. Charging is everything with EV cars. Chevy needs to remedy this ASAP.

Over the three year period, there was basically one significant software upgrade to help with Apple Carplay that I noticed. Nothing else that the average driver would see. The UI remained mediocre and full of shiny but useless screens. It’s like the UI was designed by people that didn’t drive the car and had just watched movies about people who did. The phone app was basically useless for anything other that seeing the battery level and even that took several minutes to update.

In today’s world of regular app updates, GM seems disconnected and oblivious, clinging to a past of locked in time automobile software. When pizza delivery apps have better interfaces than an expensive automobile, it shows a clear disregard for the way the world works today.

When I leased the car, the Tesla Model 3 was not available and I went with a 3 year lease believing that there would be lots of EV models to choose from for a replacement. I thought GM would have several cars to choose from when the time came and the Bolt was just first of many new models.

However, from GM there is nothing new. The only EV car Chevy sells is the Bolt and all they’ve added is a tiny amount of increased range. No significant new features and no other models. Unbelievable.

They promise adaptive cruise control is “coming soon” and a few new car models in 2022. Pretty pathetic for GM to be so far behind. The next model released is going to be a Cadillac. Yes, a Cadillac, because people associate innovation with Cadillac. What in the world are they thinking? Could they pick a brand with less resonance with anyone under 65?

Tesla completely owns the EV market at this point and has followed up the Model 3 with the Model Y, all within the timespan of my Bolt lease, while GM offers literally nothing new.

In default features, GM is 3–5 years behind Tesla. Elon Musk isn’t taking his foot off the innovation pedal so I have no idea how GM will ever catch up. GM is even dawdling on building charging infrastructure, while a Telsa charging network is fully operational.

GM is not alone is being behind. VW is behind, trying to deploy hybrids instead of EVs. Ford has delayed a pickup truck which would a winner, at least two years.

Lastly, if you want a Chevy or GM car, you still have to deal with a dealership. Dealerships are basically run by con men, intent on shaking every last penny out of your pocket. Dealerships work on misinformation and intimidation with a follow-up of robo-calls about service appointments & recalls to try to suck money out of GM’s wallet as well.

GM used to have Saturn, a bastion of sensibility in the 90s that broke the model and made the dealership an extension of the brand and an unstressful environment. I had a Saturn and loved the car and the process. Of course GM killed it and is sticking with their 1950s operating model.

The Bolt was a good car, but I don’t think the company behind it has any real commitment to making a new kind of car and changes to what car ownership is like these days. They make a lot of press announcements, but not a lot of cars. Go to a Chevy dealership and sees for yourself, even the salesmen shit-talk the Bolt because they don‘t make as much commission.

EV car #4 arrives soon. Let’s see how that journey goes.

Halloween 2019

Cruft Manor has Halloween traditions: Every year, we give out full size candies, made a listing of all costumes, and make a timelapse movie.

~250 Full Size Candies, ready for the trick or treaters!

I let the kids choose their favorite candy themselves. This can sometimes lead to a prolonged choosing process and debate. The moments of “OMG” and “wow” are wonderful as they realize the candies are full size.

This year I heard “this is the house I told you about, with the big candy” which makes me smile.

When people come to the door, I ask every person what they were dressed as and wrote down their answers. I am careful to ask what they are, accepting their answers rather than interpreting what I see.

The Trick Or Treaters View

Michele carved pumpkins and again made of our bee hives.

As has become tradition, I made a timelapse movie of handing out candy to the kids. This year, I started when the first trick or treaters appeared a little after 6 PM.

3 hours in a little over 2 minutes

The time-lapse takes place over a little more than three hours that is reduced to just over two minutes for your viewing pleasure.

Here are few of the fun costumes I saw this year.

Dwight Schrute & Napoleon Dynamite

Treebead from Lord of the Rings

A unicorn with a story to tell

Evan Hansen & Connor Murphy

This Halloween makes it 15 years of data to compare, though 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018.

Here are the top ten costumes for the last fifteen years compared.

Again, wide diversity this year. Spider-man was on top, with Black panther and M&Ms candies breaking into the the top ten. Longtime favorites like cats and ninjas were not seen much. Continuing the trend of the last few years, there were no politics oriented costumes this year. No big new trends appeared.

Our total number of visitors was about the same, 162, slightly up from last years 157. Again, several homes on our street had their lights off and probably lead to lower traffic to our house.

This year’s complete costume list of 162 people:

5 Spider-man
5 Witch
4 Black Panther
4 Harry Potter
4 M&Ms
3 Naruto
3 Unicorn
2 Biker Girl
2 Captain America
2 Clown
2 Ghost
2 Gorilla
2 Gravity Falls Twins
2 Harley Quinn
2 Horsehead
2 Rilakkuma
2 Sally from Nightmare Before Christmas
2 StayPuft Marshmallow Man
2 Superman
2 Wonder Woman
1 Air Force Pilot
1 Alien
1 Archer
1 Aria from Inherited
1 Audrey
1 Banana
1 Bank Robber
1 Baseball Player
1 Basketball Player
1 Batgirl
1 Belle
1 Belly Dancer
1 Big Fat Monkey
1 Black Ninja
1 Bunny
1 Captain Marvel
1 Chuckie
1 Cinderella
1 Clipper Fan
1 Coach
1 Coco
1 Connor Murphy
1 Cookie Monster
1 Cow
1 Crash Test Dummy
1 Dad
1 Darth Vader
1 Deadpool
1 Dinosaur
1 Dog Biting my Butt
1 Doll
1 Domino
1 Dwight Schrute
1 Elastigirl
1 Elsa
1 English Immigrant
1 Evan Hansen
1 Evie
1 Flapper
1 French Immigrant
1 Ghostbuster
1 Ghostface
1 Giraffe
1 Graffitti Painter
1 Gryffindor Student
1 Heisenberg
1 Hot Dog
1 Hydro Waka Flocka
1 Ice Cream
1 Identity Theif
1 Inflatable Dragon
1 Iron Judge
1 Iron Man
1 Jasmine
1 Joker
1 Ketchup
1 Killer Clown
1 Ladybug
1 Legal Vampire
1 Lunatic Cultist from Terraria
1 Mad Hatter
1 Mario
1 Michael Meyers
1 Mickey Mouse
1 Minnie Mouse
1 Mom
1 Napolean Dynamite
1 No Skin Joker
1 Oreo
1 Panda
1 Papyrus the Skeleton
1 Pirate
1 Police Officer
1 Poncho
1 Princess
1 Pumpkin
1 Pumpkinhead
1 Purge Master
1 Rapunzel
1 Ravenclaw
1 Santa
1 Scarecrow
1 Scary Skeleton
1 Scream
1 Shark
1 Skeleton
1 Skeleton Ninja
1 Skywing Dragon
1 Smoker the Bear
1 Snow White
1 Soldier
1 Sonic
1 Student
1 Teddy Bear
1 Teenage Ninja
1 Thor
1 Tiger
1 Tigger
1 Tinkerbell
1 Toad
1 Treebeard from LotR
1 V for Vendetta
1 Vampire
1 Velociraptor
1 Violet
1 Winnie the Pooh
1 Yoshi
1 Zombie

162 Costumed Visitors

We gave away our library of books

Michele, my wife, and I are voracious readers. She tends toward Scandinavian crime novels and I tend toward hard sci-fi, with us both dipping our toes into fantasy novels from time to time.

Over our 20+ years together, we collected quite a library of books, filling upwards of three Billy bookshelves. When the girls where little, our date night usually consisted of dinner and then a trip to the book store where we’d wander and each pick up 2–3 books to chew through.

Once the Kindle arrived, things began to change.

Reading a paper book, I found myself frustrated that I couldn’t press on the word to see a definition or highlight a passage. Fairly quickly, we moved to only reading on Kindles and not buying paper books.

After some time, we began to look at our wall of books with different eyes. Michele wanted more space for art and knick-nacks, and I was happy to get stuff out of the house.

So we basically gathered up all the books we had and donated them to the library.

Part of our library, (sorted by author of course), ready to be donated.

It was simple, easy, and we felt good about making an improvement to our local library. The hope that others would have a chance to enjoy these books exists when they are in the library, but not when they are on our shelves, gathering dust.

It’s been 5 years now since we gave them all away and we regret nothing.

Recently there’s been a lot of hyperventilation about Marie Kondo “keeping only 30 books” recommendation.

The truth is, she’s right. You don’t need all those books.

We still pick up books from time to time, either with art/photos or books with far more design than simply text. But the vast majority of what we read are novels with only text.

Coming to realize that having the books was more about keeping score than ever going back to reread them was half the battle. Books are often deeply associated with the time in your life you read them, and I can understand the emotional connection. Happily, your memories don’t leave your home when the books do.

In the end, it’s just a book. With so much amazing new books being written, it’s unlikely we’ll ever go re-read a novel, and if we wanted to, we’d read it electronically, not on paper. Even better, most libraries are now offering to check out books electronically via Overdrive and other systems for free.

Take a look at your own bookshelves and ask yourself honestly; “when was the last time you touched, let alone read them?”

Halloween 2018

Cruft Manor has Halloween traditions: Every year, we give out full size candies, made a listing of all costumes, and make a timelapse movie.

~200 Full Size Candies, ready for the trick or treaters!

I let the kids choose their favorite candy themselves. This can sometimes lead to a prolonged choosing process and debate. The moments of “OMG” and “wow” are wonderful as they realize the candies are full size.

Michele carved pumpkins and made this one in honor of the new bee hive we are keeping in the backyard.

As has become tradition, I made a timelapse movie of handing out candy to the kids. This year, I started when the first trick or treaters appeared a little after 6 PM.

The time-lapse takes place over a little more than three hours that is reduced to just over ninety seconds for your viewing pleasure. My old GoPro is still shooting 4×3 and I need to move to 16×9 next year.

When people come to the door, I ask every person what they were dressed as and wrote down their answers. I am careful to ask what they are, accepting their answers rather than interpreting what I see.

Cruft Manor ready for visitors

This Halloween makes it 14 years of data to compare, though 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017.

Here are the top ten costumes for the last fourteen years compared.

Wonder Woman took the top spot this year. Fairly generic costume versions also stayed high, with variations on zombies and skeletons popular. As I saw last year, there we literally no politics oriented costumes this year. Not a lot of standout stuff year that stuck me as a new trend.

Here are few of the fun costumes I saw this year.

Miguel from Coco & Floppy Man from Car Dealership

UPS Box

Inflatable Green Suit

Our total number of visitors was a little down, well under 200. Several families nearby had their lights off and probably lead to lower traffic to our house.

This year’s complete costume list of 157 people:

5 Wonder Woman
4 Pirate
3 Devil
3 Skeleton
2 Clown
2 Harry Potter
2 Skull
2 Unicorn
2 Werewolf
2 Zombie
2 Bee
2 Big Bad Wolf
2 Bunny Rabbit
2 Captain America
2 Chuckie
2 Cow
2 Fortnite Skin
2 Incredible
2 Iron Man
2 Myself
2 Princess
2 Purger
2 Spiderman
2 Superman
1 “payday”
1 50s Girl
1 A Bush
1 Air Force
1 Angel
1 Anna from Frozen
1 Annabeth Chase
1 Ariel
1 Ash (Pokemon)
1 Barbie
1 Bat Fan
1 Batgirl
1 Batman
1 Beanie Baby
1 Belle
1 Bike Rider
1 Black Panther
1 Bob Ross on a Dinosaur
1 Bumblebee from Transformers
1 Cat
1 Charlie Brown
1 Chubby Baby
1 Cinderella
1 Danny Zuko
1 David S. Pumpkins
1 Daygo — anime
1 Deadly Knight
1 Demon
1 Día de los Muertos
1 Dinosaur
1 Drug Dealer
1 Elena from Avalon
1 Elf
1 Flapper
1 Flash
1 Floppy Man from Car Dealership
1 Foxy the Pirate
1 Frankenstein
1 Furby
1 Gangster
1 Gingerbread Man
1 God
1 Goddess
1 Grim Reaper
1 Gryffindor
1 Harleen Quinzel
1 Harley Quinn
1 Hermoine Granger
1 Huntress
1 Inflatable Green Suit
1 Kevin from Up
1 Killer Clown
1 Koala
1 Little Red Riding Hood
1 Little Soldier
1 Massaba Bella
1 Max
1 Michael Meyers (with soundtrack)
1 Michael Meyers Jester
1 Michael Phelps
1 Miguel from Coco
1 Minnie Mouse
1 Monkey
1 Monster
1 Panda Bear
1 Phantom
1 Police
1 Princess Jasmine
1 Princess Leia
1 Pumpkin
1 Puppy
1 Queen of Hearts
1 Ravenclaw
1 Rosie the Riveter
1 Sad Dodger
1 Scarecrow
1 Scary Skeleton
1 Shark
1 She-Hulk
1 Shredder
1 Skater
1 Skeleton Bride
1 Skull Trooper
1 Slappy from Goosebumps
1 Spaceman
1 Star Lord
1 Stitch
1 Supergirl
1 SWAT
1 Taga — anime
1 Television Set
1 Tinkerbell
1 True from Magic Kingdom
1 Unicorn w/ Wings
1 UPS Box
1 Vampirina
1 Wolfman
1 Yoda
1 Yukata
1 Zom”bee”
1 Zombie Cinderella
1 Zombie Princess

157 Costumed Visitors

Tips for Friday

I posted these practical tips on Twitter. 

Might as well share them here where things are not so ephemeral.

Do not leave ferrous metal items outside in the rain.

Clean your knife after each use.

Righty tighty, lefty loosey.

Check tire air pressure before leaving on a long car trip.

Use canned air to clean electronics with fans inside at least once every 3 months.

Butter is better for baking in almost every case, except pie crusts, for which lard is best.

When making sausage, keep the meat and fat as cold as possible during the grind process.

Hold the door for others.

Leave no food out overnight in your kitchen or campground to avoid trouble from insects and animals.

Keep a fire extinguisher and work gloves in your car at all times.

Let dogs smell the back of your hand before attempting to pet them.

Always say hello to crows. They are intelligent and will know who you are.

Men should carry a handkerchief in their back pocket at all times.

Lawn & yard waste should be cut into pieces less than a foot long before putting into a trash barrel.

Print out your boarding pass for a flight, mobile apps slow the process for everyone.

Check your luggage, do not carry on.

When in a new town looking for a place to eat, find the place with the most local cars parked in front.

Have your package addressed and ready before going to the post office.

Have a flashlight with you when you travel.

Backup all your computing devices to the cloud.

Keep your passports & important documents in a fireproof, waterproof safe or container.

Always use synthetic motor oil.

Whenever you have the chance, be charging your electronics. ABC — Always Be Charging.

Do not keep your phone in the room your sleep in overnight.

Always read the instructions.