Taipan wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 10:19 pm
Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 9:48 pm
Slenver wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 9:38 pm
You could, yeah. Would be a bit of a waste though.
And yes, a 'normal' hybrid would make much more sense then.
Oh, I was just clarifying. I thought a PHEV was basically an electric car with an on board generator (engine) that extended the range but it still needed charging after x miles.
Struggling to see the point really, unless you have a quite specific usage pattern with few long journeys.
That's where I'm at. Looking at a RR Evoque PHEV, it will run for 39 miles on leccy power only, which would cover a lot of, if not most of my journeys. But I cant seem to get any figures for hybrid mode? Does that extend the battery range? If so to what? If I go for a 60 mile round trip, does it drop down to poor economy from the 1.5 petrol engine after 39 miles? That can't be right can it?
Pretty much, yeah. The battery will be charged a little from driving around in some PHEVs, but this will of course use fuel, so it's not 'free'. And there will be some regeneration from braking which will also help a little with a couple of mpg, like a mild hybrid.
But ultimately, a PHEV is designed to be charged and run with a full battery. If you don't charge and just rely on regen and the engine charging the battery, then you're just paying a fee to carry all the weight around.
This is why the mpg figures will vary so widely - the standardised tests for economy will require an arbitrary journey length... let's say it's 50 miles, and they will assume you start with full battery and full fuel. So if you have a PHEV with a 50-mile range then the official figures will reflect electric-only economy and might give an equivalent of something impressive like 150mpg. But, if you never charge, then you'll be driving around in a 1 or 1.5 litre petrol engine dragging 2 tons along, and so might get 30-35mpg. In the real world it's likely to be a mix, including long journeys where you use both together for a long stretch. Ideally you'd average something like 70mpg... all figures being examples only
Nerdy edit: Just looked up how the actual economy tests are done. It's actually just 14.4 miles, with a mixture of speeds and gears at specific points and in a range of temperatures from 14-23º. For PHEVs, they do it several times, starting with a full battery and repeating until empty, so it's not quite as biased towards always having a full charge as I thought