Seasidesage
New member
Mmm, interesting - thanks for this. Was this through Zenith?
No a different leasing company
Mmm, interesting - thanks for this. Was this through Zenith?
The prices are eye watering at the mo but hopefully by the end of the decade, they will have come down, capacities and ranges will have increased and there will be a grater number of charge points/options. £30K for an eVW up is too much - despite it being the ideal urban get about.
I am more interested in emotorbikes. 50mph with 60 miles range would do it and is in range financially.
Good to hear, with my order for the Model 3 having just been approved! Was interested to hear that even in a 240v outlet (normal socket?) it gives 23 miles for each hour of charging.2.5 years into my Model 3, which Junior is now using for High School. 37K miles and the best car (iPhone with wheels) we ever had. We have a garage and plugs into a 240V outlet - 23 miles per hour charging. It is the short lived Mid Range version and 250 miles of range. Car keeps getting better with software updates regularly. Federal Govt kicked in $7,500 incentive, now gone but NJ now has $5,000 for new EVs.
Liked it so much so, I bought a pre-owned 2017 Model X for the Mrs with 26K miles. Comes with 100K warranty and free supercharging and full self driving, so it was a no brainer. Range isn't great - 210 miles - but we make it work on longer trips. No Fed or State incentive on used BUT no sales tax which save us 7%.
WARNING - The cold is a bugger on the batteries and winter range and zombie drain is quite something. Our Canadian neighbors manage to get by, so not a massive complaint.
Over here we are beginning to see VW coming into the market and Chevy has a much better Bolt for 2022. Tesla owns the market here and you see them everywhere. S, 3, X, Y.
I have an order in for the CyberTruck......looking forward to that. I AM AN EV convert.
Can the batteries be stolen from under the car? I had my catalytic converter stolen when my car was parked in a busy car park in daylight. Had to pay excess and lost my NCD.
[MENTION=263]zefarelly[/MENTION] & [MENTION=12090]Garage_Doors[/MENTION]
https://www.sparkmotos.co.uk/
Good to hear, with my order for the Model 3 having just been approved! Was interested to hear that even in a 240v outlet (normal socket?) it gives 23 miles for each hour of charging.
As for the CyberTruck, the only disappointment from my kids when I said I was ordering a Tesla, was that it wasn't the truck!! Don't think it would have been the most practical around the streets of Brighton and Hove... (and the wife's company scheme didn't offer this model either).
[MENTION=263]zefarelly[/MENTION] & [MENTION=12090]Garage_Doors[/MENTION]
https://www.sparkmotos.co.uk/
It doesn’t. You get just over 20 miles worth of charge per hour charging on a home charge point (7 kW), which is about 3x what you get from a standard 3 pin socket. You’ll definitely want to get the charger installed for both the convenience and practical charge times. There’s a £500 subsidy for this so it shouldn’t cost much if anything.
Have any EV drivers, Tesla owners especially, had their cars shut down unexpectedly?
I wonder what would need to happen to allow a fast charger to be installed??
Our beloved S3 is going to need replacing soon and we have discussed EV but I think we're reaching a conclusion that the infrastructure here makes it unwise for the moment. We live very remotely in a mountainous area, we're 30 mins drive for a small town and I'm not aware of any charging stations there or anywhere else nearby. The impact of the hills and mountains is a bit of an unknown, there are plenty of opinions out there. Shrewsbury is our nearest 'big' town where I'm sure we could get a charge but that's 90 mins away. Secondly, and my electrician tried to explain this to me, our house has a dedicated supply, it doesn't share a sub station or anything so has a limited total supply (as far as I understand what he was saying). In practicality, when you put the kettle on, the lights dim so I wonder what would need to happen to allow a fast charger to be installed??
Our beloved S3 is going to need replacing soon and we have discussed EV but I think we're reaching a conclusion that the infrastructure here makes it unwise for the moment. We live very remotely in a mountainous area, we're 30 mins drive for a small town and I'm not aware of any charging stations there or anywhere else nearby. The impact of the hills and mountains is a bit of an unknown, there are plenty of opinions out there. Shrewsbury is our nearest 'big' town where I'm sure we could get a charge but that's 90 mins away. Secondly, and my electrician tried to explain this to me, our house has a dedicated supply, it doesn't share a sub station or anything so has a limited total supply (as far as I understand what he was saying). In practicality, when you put the kettle on, the lights dim so I wonder what would need to happen to allow a fast charger to be installed??
I get 28 miles charging per hour on my Tesla home charger. I bought the one from the Tesla shop and installed it myself.
Yeah, you can't put up a hedge round here without Snowdonia NPA having an interest!!Oh, nothing much...
100 amp... There's 1 rapid charger (1 connection) within an hour of us, a handful of semi-fast ones, mostly at peoples houses! I think we'll have to wait a while.Contact your Distribution Network Operator (DNO) and find out would be a good start. What size fuse do you have on your main input feed. ?
Check out Zap Map for local chargers, see if it practicable. https://www.zap-map.com/live/
this will be a common problem across the countryside, and some spots in towns and cities. similar to broadband, the electric infrastructure isnt rolled out the same everywhere, the service obligations only needed basic provision. so there's a lot of work to be done to make switch to EV work, or millions will be left as second class transport citizens.
Our beloved S3 is going to need replacing soon and we have discussed EV but I think we're reaching a conclusion that the infrastructure here makes it unwise for the moment. We live very remotely in a mountainous area, we're 30 mins drive for a small town and I'm not aware of any charging stations there or anywhere else nearby. The impact of the hills and mountains is a bit of an unknown, there are plenty of opinions out there. Shrewsbury is our nearest 'big' town where I'm sure we could get a charge but that's 90 mins away. Secondly, and my electrician tried to explain this to me, our house has a dedicated supply, it doesn't share a sub station or anything so has a limited total supply (as far as I understand what he was saying). In practicality, when you put the kettle on, the lights dim so I wonder what would need to happen to allow a fast charger to be installed??