First post by new owner:
My son, who has two EV's (a Tesla and a Bolt EUV) won't get an EV unless it can lock into and always be in single pedal mode. He liked the EV6/Ioniq 5 for his significant other; however, was fearful he would get into her car, expecting single pedal driving, and make a mistake and get into an accident. She liked the Bolt (all local driving for her and it was quite less expensive, too) and he was pleased that the single pedal mode would stay on (he taught her to drive his Tesla using single pedal all the time). I, on the other hand, as a retired accident reconstructionist, saw too many accidents caused by muscle memory kicking in during emergency maneuvers that aided in causing said accident (or made it worse) because drivers reverted to what they knew and were in an unfamiliar vehicle, which is the norm. Wife and I looked at a very nice, competitively priced, late year Model S and loved the way it accelerated and drove. In addition, however, to the one pedal driving staying on, it had a switch on the steering wheel to activate the turn signals. These were red flags for me because of 50+ years of driving using a turn signal stalk and no deceleration in the way that single pedal works might compromise me and/or my wife, in an emergency maneuver. I'm sure that, if I were younger, I would be able to learn it well, like my son; however, we decided to err on the side of safety. JMHO.
For now, we decided to purchase a new EV6 Wind AWD to enjoy an EV with a little more convention on the inside and out, including conventional turn signals and no i-pedal unless we choose to turn it on (not to mention that the insurance on the S would have been 3+x more than the EV6, amongst other factors, too). Delivery will be 12/26.
Excited to be here and learn from all of the other members.