In fairness, the Kia EV6 is 45k too... the GT is a rare 577bhp variant. There isn't a Ioniq 5 variant yet, though there's one coming.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Fri Feb 10, 2023 2:07 pmIt's sister car, the Hyundai Ioniq 5, is only £45-60k
Better lookin' too.
Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
- Dodgy69
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
The MG 4 is a nice little EV. Takes off well, nice interior and the looks definitely grow on you.
Yamaha rocket 3
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
I have a friend that works in servicing at a dealer that does MG, the advice was to avoid like the plague as they really struggle to get parts.
Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
For good or ill, ive just bought a Peugeot e 2008, im looking forward to buzzing around now.
Wonder where the clutch went?
Wonder where the clutch went?
- ZRX61
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- Pirahna
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
An article I found interesting about the value (or lack of) of second hand electric cars:
https://cardealermagazine.co.uk/publish ... ead/279724
https://cardealermagazine.co.uk/publish ... ead/279724
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
So about how many miles per KWh?
Or how many miles are you doing per day?
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
Dunno about the former.
The latter varies. Sometimes none, most days less than 50. Twice a week 100.
Range during winter is 200 miles which isn’t the best, but I don’t need more at the moment.
The latter varies. Sometimes none, most days less than 50. Twice a week 100.
Range during winter is 200 miles which isn’t the best, but I don’t need more at the moment.
- ZRX61
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
As soon as he mentioned SunRun I knew he was fucked. Their solar panel installation teams have been installing shit that's not up to code all over Ca...
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
Apologies - not kept up with the thread, but just an update on my life with the Leaf.
Yesterday, spur of the moment trip to Llandrindod Wells to pick up some parts, 48 mile round trip from my house.
50 miles showing on the charge, but this basically tells you there's no way you'll do 50 miles on it.
No problem I thought...
There is a BP Pulse rapid charger in Llandod, half mile from my destination. 20 minute splash n dash and job jobbed.
Checked Zap Map, last used an hour ago.
Got to the charger to come home, screen is frozen on the charger so can't begin. Call the helpline number on the unit, helpful lady reboots the charger, which takes 5 mins.
After the reboot, screen comes to life, game on..
Open the Pulse app to start a charge, poor signal so slow.
I have £3.90 i=credit, but you need £5 minimum to start a charge, so I have to top it up, again slow.
Credit added, plug in, try to charge, error.
Try again, in case it's a glitch. Same error.
Call Pulse again. Was told the Chademo charging side of the unit must be faulty, but they're being fazed out for CCS, and they don't plan on fixing Chademo points as a result.
CCS side was working, so that's why Zap Map said the unit's operational..
So, I realistically don't have enough charge to crawl home, but I can stop in Rhayader and use one of the four fairly new Dragon Charge points en route.
These are 22 kilowatt AC. My Leaf (2016) can only charge at 7 kilowatts maximum on AC. So - it takes 4 hours to charge fully at this rate, which by the book gives you 120 miles. Day was very cold, which the batteries hate, so you're looking at 80 miles. So, my splash and dash, to add 20 miles to be on the "safe side" will take an hour
Rolling up to the charger, the car tells me I don't have sufficient charge to get home. Plug in to the Dragon charger, green light on top of 3 out of the 4 says working, OK.
Plug in, app never works, so scan the QR code and go the the website. Find a charger near me finds the inop. unit next door, but not mine, so can't start a charge
Call the helpline number on the unit.. helpful man checks it out, and as I have a Dragon account, with enough credit, he can start a charge remotely for me.
I then wait for the battery to creep up to 30 miles, to cover my 12 mile trip home (an hour).
Just coming towards home, car shows 12 miles left..
48 mile round trip, 3 stressful, hours
I drive it like a Chelsea Pensioner, make good use of the regeneration system, always on eco mode (restricted power) and wrap up warm so I don't need the heater.
So basically, the day is nigh when the car becomes a shopping trolley. Great investment.
Then
Yesterday, spur of the moment trip to Llandrindod Wells to pick up some parts, 48 mile round trip from my house.
50 miles showing on the charge, but this basically tells you there's no way you'll do 50 miles on it.
No problem I thought...
There is a BP Pulse rapid charger in Llandod, half mile from my destination. 20 minute splash n dash and job jobbed.
Checked Zap Map, last used an hour ago.
Got to the charger to come home, screen is frozen on the charger so can't begin. Call the helpline number on the unit, helpful lady reboots the charger, which takes 5 mins.
After the reboot, screen comes to life, game on..
Open the Pulse app to start a charge, poor signal so slow.
I have £3.90 i=credit, but you need £5 minimum to start a charge, so I have to top it up, again slow.
Credit added, plug in, try to charge, error.
Try again, in case it's a glitch. Same error.
Call Pulse again. Was told the Chademo charging side of the unit must be faulty, but they're being fazed out for CCS, and they don't plan on fixing Chademo points as a result.
CCS side was working, so that's why Zap Map said the unit's operational..
So, I realistically don't have enough charge to crawl home, but I can stop in Rhayader and use one of the four fairly new Dragon Charge points en route.
These are 22 kilowatt AC. My Leaf (2016) can only charge at 7 kilowatts maximum on AC. So - it takes 4 hours to charge fully at this rate, which by the book gives you 120 miles. Day was very cold, which the batteries hate, so you're looking at 80 miles. So, my splash and dash, to add 20 miles to be on the "safe side" will take an hour
Rolling up to the charger, the car tells me I don't have sufficient charge to get home. Plug in to the Dragon charger, green light on top of 3 out of the 4 says working, OK.
Plug in, app never works, so scan the QR code and go the the website. Find a charger near me finds the inop. unit next door, but not mine, so can't start a charge
Call the helpline number on the unit.. helpful man checks it out, and as I have a Dragon account, with enough credit, he can start a charge remotely for me.
I then wait for the battery to creep up to 30 miles, to cover my 12 mile trip home (an hour).
Just coming towards home, car shows 12 miles left..
48 mile round trip, 3 stressful, hours
I drive it like a Chelsea Pensioner, make good use of the regeneration system, always on eco mode (restricted power) and wrap up warm so I don't need the heater.
So basically, the day is nigh when the car becomes a shopping trolley. Great investment.
Then
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
Yesterday I was thinking that an EV might be a good idea if they are nicer to drive than the almost ubiquitous automatics we seem to have now. Thanks for that bump back to common sense.
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
When I picked my car up from fleet HQ last month one of my colleagues (from a different devision) was picking up his (third) new EV at the same time.
He'd been a reluctant convert to EVs, basically having it forced on him for financial reasons. In his own words "he could not have been more wrong". Said man lives near Northampton and has one daughter at Uni in Notts and another in Lincoln. He does the "Uni Run" in his EV in all cases, never once been caught short. He doesn't have a dedicated charger at home, he three pin sockets it...still never been caught out.
Two of my neighbours have Leafs, I've never spoken to them but their cars are always parked on the street....I.e. they don't have charging at home.
Point is...YMM(literally)V, you can find an anecdote to prove anything.
He'd been a reluctant convert to EVs, basically having it forced on him for financial reasons. In his own words "he could not have been more wrong". Said man lives near Northampton and has one daughter at Uni in Notts and another in Lincoln. He does the "Uni Run" in his EV in all cases, never once been caught short. He doesn't have a dedicated charger at home, he three pin sockets it...still never been caught out.
Two of my neighbours have Leafs, I've never spoken to them but their cars are always parked on the street....I.e. they don't have charging at home.
Point is...YMM(literally)V, you can find an anecdote to prove anything.
- Taipan
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
I was flirting with the idea of a Tesla a while back. I'm glad I decided against it now. I still think I'll get a leccy car and bike, but not yet...
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
I'm rather liking my Ampera.
Took it for its MoT the other week.
All the lads in the garage were interested in it...haven't seen any others up here.
It's a very relaxing car to drive, although I only get half way to Inverness on the battery at this time of year, so the engine kicks in for all of the bit down Loch Ness. I also use 'hold' for the first 5 miles or so, so that the engine is on and provides heat.
Have got an old PodPoint charger to fit, to replace the granny charger, and once that is sorted, with the higher amperage, I'll be able to pre-heat it before heading out.
I wasn't sure I'd made a wise purchase when I first got it, but I'm quite happy with it now and think I'll have it for a good few years.
Took it for its MoT the other week.
All the lads in the garage were interested in it...haven't seen any others up here.
It's a very relaxing car to drive, although I only get half way to Inverness on the battery at this time of year, so the engine kicks in for all of the bit down Loch Ness. I also use 'hold' for the first 5 miles or so, so that the engine is on and provides heat.
Have got an old PodPoint charger to fit, to replace the granny charger, and once that is sorted, with the higher amperage, I'll be able to pre-heat it before heading out.
I wasn't sure I'd made a wise purchase when I first got it, but I'm quite happy with it now and think I'll have it for a good few years.
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
Audi advert during the Ch4 F1 coverage had "based on 350kWh charger"
I can't think the Audi organisation of old would had made such an error.
Fehler in der Technik as they might say in Germany.
I can't think the Audi organisation of old would had made such an error.
Fehler in der Technik as they might say in Germany.
- KungFooBob
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
I'm giving serious thought to a BMW 530e M Sport iPerformace (to give it a full title). 2019ish less than 40k, seems cheap at £24k with all the toys.
I can charge the small ish battery at work in three hours and it might just cover my full commute in pure electric mode (one way)
In all honesty I've never driven a hybrid, my commute is quite hilly with lots of traffic lights (Sheffield outer ring road, Manor top, gleadless, etc..). In my diesel volvo it seems the pulling away from the lights uses the most fuel. Would a hybrid do the pulling away in leccy mode and switch to petrol or just give it a boost?
I can charge the small ish battery at work in three hours and it might just cover my full commute in pure electric mode (one way)
In all honesty I've never driven a hybrid, my commute is quite hilly with lots of traffic lights (Sheffield outer ring road, Manor top, gleadless, etc..). In my diesel volvo it seems the pulling away from the lights uses the most fuel. Would a hybrid do the pulling away in leccy mode and switch to petrol or just give it a boost?
- Cousin Jack
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
No idea about the Beemer, but on my Lexus pulling away on a hill, or at anything above a very sluggish getaway on the level causes the engine to fire up. Newer cars may be better, the pure electric capacity on mine is pretty limited.
Cornish Tart #1
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- Count Steer
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
My (not a plug-in) hybrid is the same but it is giving 70mpg average on mainly short journeys so the electric only or added oomph on pulling away does help. However, I imagine the battery pack on a plug-in is bigger so should spend more time in electric mode?Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Mon Mar 06, 2023 9:33 am No idea about the Beemer, but on my Lexus pulling away on a hill, or at anything above a very sluggish getaway on the level causes the engine to fire up. Newer cars may be better, the pure electric capacity on mine is pretty limited.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
- ZRX61
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Re: Would you have an electric car if you had the money for a new car and were in the market for one?
AFAIK you can force a 530e to stay in e mode if you want.
As for how long it stays in e mode or whatever, it varies massively from car to car, which driving mode you're in and how you drive it.
My car will use the e motor to help you up a hill and then regen on the way down (the drive train is linked to the satnag) but only if you're in eco mode. If you push push "the click" on the pedal it will fire up the engine though. Unless you're catching the car in front too quickly though, in which case it won't help you up the hill.
YMMV alot basically.
As for how long it stays in e mode or whatever, it varies massively from car to car, which driving mode you're in and how you drive it.
My car will use the e motor to help you up a hill and then regen on the way down (the drive train is linked to the satnag) but only if you're in eco mode. If you push push "the click" on the pedal it will fire up the engine though. Unless you're catching the car in front too quickly though, in which case it won't help you up the hill.
YMMV alot basically.