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Vintage Electric Cars Benefit From New Electric Car Sales TooVintage Electric Cars Benefit From New Electric Car Sales Too

Vintage Electric Cars Benefit From New Electric Car Sales TooVintage Electric Cars Benefit From New Electric Car Sales Too

May 25, 2012
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If you’re in the market for an electric car, the chances are you’ve resigned yourself to the fact that you’re going to need to spend upwards of $30,000 in order to get a modern, convenient electric car. 
If that’s too much, you can always go second hand with any number of previous-generation or self-converted electric cars on popular Internet auction sites like eBay. 
But over the past few months we’ve noticed a steady rise in price of much older electric cars: ones made long before even the famous EV1 was built. 
We’re of course talking about vintage cars, vehicles that were made at a time when gasoline cars were difficult to maintain, required inordinate amounts of fettling, and were smelly, complicated and noisy.
Presumably driven by a renewed interest in electric cars, these vintage cars are being sold from private collections and given new lives, as museum pieces or passing onto new, eager, electric-car-loving owners.  
Take this particularly fine example of a 1918 Milburn Electric. 
One of only 40 survivors, it has a built-in charger, new batteries and a believed 3,752 genuine miles. 
Much like the 2012 Nissan Leaf, it can drive for between 80 and 100 miles on a single charge, but has a more sedate cruising speed of 20 mph. 
1918 Millburn Electric: Ebay
Sit in the drivers’ seat — which is actually in the rear of the car as was the fashion at the time — and you’ll find no steering wheel, infotainment system or smart phone connectivity. 
Instead, you’ll find two levers: one for speed, and one for steering. 
With just a few hours to go at the time of writing, the car is currently sitting at a reserve-not-met price of $20,400. For those interested, that’s only nine thousand dollars cheaper than a base-level 2012 Mitsubishi i.
Admittedly, this particular vintage car isn’t quite the mind-blowing $550,000 price commanded by an 1899 Columbia Electric Laundaulet at auction last year, but then again, it is a sprightly 19 years younger. 
Of course, no-one would ever dream buying a vintage electric car to use daily, but we do hope this particular Milburn Electric finds a home where it is appreciated, loved, and regularly driven. 
After nearly 100 years, we think it only right and proper. Don’t you? 
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