Not sure you're going to find that for either propulsion type. Both will probably be "on condition" rather than "at X miles" and depend greatly on usage pattern, care, and even manufacturing variability. An engine may run fine for a long time with proper lubrication and care, and short of a catastrophic failure may just slowly lose compression and/or start burning oil. An EV battery is similar; short of physical damage or cells randomly going bad, the degradation is gradual and depends on charging habits, environment, etc. and that becomes a matter of when it's lost enough range or charging speed that it no longer meets your needs.Belushi TD wrote: ↑Fri Nov 03, 2023 6:23 pm What I'm looking for is info as to when you would actually have to replace the engine vs replacing the battery.
Barring damage or catastrophic failure, most EVs won't need replacement batteries until they're the equivalent of that clapped-out Accord that's on its fourth or fifth owner, with faded clearcoat, stained seats, CEL on, a bit of a shake, and on which new tires would double the value. They might only have two thirds of their original range by that point but for high school/college kids, or as a beater commuter, they'll serve just fine. But that assumes something else doesn't kill them first (e.g. an accident, rust, or flood damage).