Algernon
Well-known member
Are electric car owners the new vegetarians?
It’s worse than that I’m afraid. My EV’s seats are upholstered with VEGAN leather.Are electric car owners the new vegetarians?
No.Are electric car owners the new vegetarians?
Mine doesn't do any of that - and no, I'm not telling you all where I live!Its a set up, you put authorisation on your charger so it wont start without an RFID card or a signal from your phone AND he can stop the charge from his phone at any time...Phone also gives you immediate notification if a charge starts.
45 minutes ! You don't need to fill it up, just put in enough to get home.Exactly why I have resumed using my Diesel Ateca for football again.
its a 240 mile round trip and to charge my id4 takes 45 mins add on queuing time if there are no free chargers and its just not worth the extra wasted time....The Ateca tank will let me do 2 round trips without topping up.
Home charge for the EV is 7p per KWh Motorway anywhere from 68 p to 86 p per Kwh
My first long trip in an EV was with @Papa Lazarou to Stoke away and I was impressed at how easy the whole thing was.Exactly why I have resumed using my Diesel Ateca for football again.
its a 240 mile round trip and to charge my id4 takes 45 mins add on queuing time if there are no free chargers and its just not worth the extra wasted time....The Ateca tank will let me do 2 round trips without topping up.
Home charge for the EV is 7p per KWh Motorway anywhere from 68 p to 86 p per Kwh
The cost of something with a decent range is unfortunately out of many people's budgets. I've got a Born which is priced at approx 40k.
It's on a lease through a work scheme, which saves me the tax and NI. I'd never afford anything like it otherwise.
I can charge it for a around a fiver, so it's far cheaper to run than an ice.
I then get the added benefit of a very low night rate running appliances!
Based on affordability, I'd definitely still be driving an ice if it weren't for the tax/
NI saving.
Completely agree they will come down in price, but they are out of range for many people at the moment.I was chatting to a sales chap at my local Mercedes dealership last week (other half considering an EQA) and he reckoned the split between electric and combustion engine sales had moved to about 50/50.
This tech is largely in its infancy. I suspect the electric cars of 20 years time will have solid state batteries with higher range and greater durability, plus the economies of scale will mean prices come down.
There is supposed to be equilibrium reached between petrol and battery vehicle production costs by late this year/early next, so we should see some price cutting. Tesla have moved their prices downward three times so far, and it’s gradually eroding the EV premium as other manufacturers follow suit.
I agree that at present there’s no “carrot” in terms of EV adoption, apart from the massive reduction in running costs and service costs, and you do need to be able to charge at home to realise the significant cost savings on the running costs.
Having said that, if you can charge at home, buy lease or PCP a new vehicle every few years, and you’re not running electric, it’s an absolute no-brainer to switch. There’s simply no comparison.
Chuck in a home solar battery (soon to go VAT free) and leasing a car as salary sacrifice is very desirable, the whole house can be running on 7p / kwh.The cost of something with a decent range is unfortunately out of many people's budgets. I've got a Born which is priced at approx 40k.
It's on a lease through a work scheme, which saves me the tax and NI. I'd never afford anything like it otherwise.
I can charge it for a around a fiver, so it's far cheaper to run than an ice.
I then get the added benefit of a very low night rate running appliances!
Based on affordability, I'd definitely still be driving an ice if it weren't for the tax/
NI saving.
As i and a few others have mentioned, Clackett and other services are 79p/Kwh. You definitely can't do a full charge for £8Cost about £8 if I remember, cheaper than the coffee! Plus of course, no ULEZ charge.
Corrected. £12.90 and it gave us an 85% charge from 15%. To be honest I thought that cheap as filling a car would be a lot more. It's only a Zoe.As i and a few others have mentioned, Clackett and other services are 79p/Kwh. You definitely can't do a full charge for £8
Ah well, in 20 years time I shall be 95, so probably not in the market for a new car. Never mind, perhaps the hearse will run on ‘leccy.I was chatting to a sales chap at my local Mercedes dealership last week (other half considering an EQA) and he reckoned the split between electric and combustion engine sales had moved to about 50/50.
This tech is largely in its infancy. I suspect the electric cars of 20 years time will have solid state batteries with higher range and greater durability, plus the economies of scale will mean prices come down.
There is supposed to be equilibrium reached between petrol and battery vehicle production costs by late this year/early next, so we should see some price cutting. Tesla have moved their prices downward three times so far, and it’s gradually eroding the EV premium as other manufacturers follow suit.
I agree that at present there’s no “carrot” in terms of EV adoption, apart from the massive reduction in running costs and service costs, and you do need to be able to charge at home to realise the significant cost savings on the running costs.
Having said that, if you can charge at home, buy lease or PCP a new vehicle every few years, and you’re not running electric, it’s an absolute no-brainer to switch. There’s simply no comparison.
Ah well, in 20 years time I shall be 95, so probably not in the market for a new car. Never mind, perhaps the hearse will run on ‘leccy.
and thats exactly what I do.45 minutes ! You don't need to fill it up, just put in enough to get home.
Toyota are being bullish about doing it within 5 years. Their current target is low volume solid state cars available 2027/8, although I bet that gets pushed back a year or two. Before 2030 though, I reckon.I suspect the electric cars of 20 years time will have solid state batteries with higher range and greater durability
New cars are expensive full stop regardless of what powers them. I think sometimes we don't realise how much a new petrol car costs these days.Completely agree they will come down in price, but they are out of range for many people at the moment.....
New cars are expensive full stop regardless of what powers them. I think sometimes we don't realise how much a new petrol car costs these days.
For example some of the most common petrol cars out there, a Vauxhall Astra poverty edition starts at £26,610 going up to £32,620 before any extras are added.
A Ford Focus starts at £28,490 rising to £33,370 before extras like metallic paint. These are not special cars. A BMW 3 series starts at over £40,000 if you want that market.
These too are out of many range for many people, not just electric vehicles.
To put into focus for example an MG4 starts at the same price as the cheapest petrol Astra, no extras needed as comes fully loaded, and it's long range version at less than £30,000, really fully loaded.
Prices are getting closer but don't go thinking you can get a new petrol car for peanuts these days. ALL new cars are expensive and out of most peoples reach.
fair point, but also illustrates the cost difference. an Astra Petrol PE is 26k, Astra Electric PE is 37k.New cars are expensive full stop regardless of what powers them. I think sometimes we don't realise how much a new petrol car costs these days.
For example some of the most common petrol cars out there, a Vauxhall Astra poverty edition starts at £26,610 going up to £32,620 before any extras are added.
A Ford Focus starts at £28,490 rising to £33,370 before extras like metallic paint. These are not special cars. A BMW 3 series starts at over £40,000 if you want that market.
These too are out of many range for many people, not just electric vehicles.
To put into focus for example an MG4 starts at the same price as the cheapest petrol Astra, no extras needed as comes fully loaded, and it's long range version at less than £30,000, really fully loaded.
Prices are getting closer but don't go thinking you can get a new petrol car for peanuts these days. ALL new cars are expensive and out of most peoples reach.
Well, that Astra EV is going to struggle to cut through at that price. It's competing with VW's ID.3, and doesn't compare well at first glance. Better performance in the Astra, but worse battery capacity and range. And given that my Zoe's performance is perfectly acceptable, I personally wouldn't be making the choice because of marginal performance advantage.fair point, but also illustrates the cost difference. an Astra Petrol PE is 26k, Astra Electric PE is 37k.
£11k more for the electic powertrain. this will feed through in used car prices as they get passed through the market.