The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Xileno

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Edited by Xileno on 05/07/2025 at 19:19

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Ethan Edwards

We now have a Salary sacrifice scheme at work to enable purchase of an EV. 4yr deal. Includes insurance , maintenance ,4k of free Octopus electricity and a free wallbox.

Where were you when I could have used it!. I already have a wallbox and taking this deal for me means I'll retire and find myself immediately needing a new car and insurance but not having any NCD. Few years ago Id have gone for it. Oh well.

They do new and nearly new. But the nearly new are only Audi models starting at 900 quid or so a month! New they do other makes as well but nothing I'm interested in.

Still it's a good deal for my colleagues.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
I’m pretty sure it featured on here - the story of a bloke from Prestatyn who called 999 from his EV Jaguar I-Pace and told the police his brakes had failed and he couldn’t slow the car from 90mph.
The police closed two lanes of the M62 and followed him until he ran out of charge.
The outcome now is that he’s been charged with dangerous driving, causing a public nuisance and two counts of fraud by false representation.
It was one of the news stories that the anti-EV lobby were all over at the time.
There was a similar tale of an MG in Scotland, but I’ve not seen anything of that one since.

Edited by mcb100 on 09/07/2025 at 11:59

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd
I’m pretty sure it featured on here - the story of a bloke from Prestatyn who called 999 from his EV Jaguar I-Pace and told the police his brakes had failed and he couldn’t slow the car from 90mph. The police closed two lanes of the M62 and followed him until he ran out of charge. The outcome now is that he’s been charged with dangerous driving, causing a public nuisance and two counts of fraud by false representation. It was one of the news stories that the anti-EV lobby were all over at the time. There was a similar tale of an MG in Scotland, but I’ve not seen anything of that one since.

I hope JLR sue him for reputational damage and loss of sales/earnings. The story did a lot of damage to the Jaguar brand.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

Very impressed with the deal my friend has just secured on a 23 Plate MG EV.

£16 k for a 23 plate with 24 K miles .

What a great deal from a car supermarket and I imagine will have the balance of the manufacture s warranty .

Certainly a lot of car for very little money .

Hopefully with the nearby Honda dealer recently been appointed a MG dealer the stars are on the ascendancy for MG .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - badbusdriver

Very impressed with the deal my friend has just secured on a 23 Plate MG EV.

£16 k for a 23 plate with 24 K miles .

What a great deal from a car supermarket and I imagine will have the balance of the manufacture s warranty .

Certainly a lot of car for very little money .

Hopefully with the nearby Honda dealer recently been appointed a MG dealer the stars are on the ascendancy for MG .

On Autotrader right now:

Brand new (delivery miles) MG4's (51kWh) kicking off at £18,400

23 plate MG5 (61kWh) with 15k for a fiver under £12.5k

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - daveyjp

Check closely that all services have been done on time. Some EVs were registered and not sold for a very long time, thereby missing the first service.

If any service isn't done you may be waving goodbye to any warranty cover.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - movilogo

Here is a video of Kia EV6 racing against Ferrari Purosangue.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=b82E-4oSfdE

Kia beating Ferrari is new world order.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - madf

Here is a video of Kia EV6 racing against Ferrari Purosangue.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=b82E-4oSfdE

Kia beating Ferrari is new world order.

Yes having instant maximum torque at 0 rpm is a winner

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy

Very impressed with the deal my friend has just secured on a 23 Plate MG EV.

£16 k for a 23 plate with 24 K miles .

What a great deal from a car supermarket and I imagine will have the balance of the manufacture s warranty .

Certainly a lot of car for very little money .

Hopefully with the nearby Honda dealer recently been appointed a MG dealer the stars are on the ascendancy for MG .

I feel sorry for the mug who bought it new and lost a small fortune on depreciation in comparison to selling a similarly-priced ICE car.

If it was a leasing company, I'm still unsure how many of them haven't gone under by now, given how badly they (or their advisors) got it wrong on second hand values for EVs after the lease period is up. Similarly with firms providing PCP deals.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
The other element to this stuff is that it makes an average Joe look like a driving god.
You just can’t get standing starts wrong - not too many revs to break traction, too few revs and it’ll bog down - you don’t need any great technique other than flexing your right ankle.
I’m always a bit wary for the first couple of metres, to avoid a huge shock load to shafts, CV joints, etc, but after that it’s point and press.
Even a regular Dual Motor Tesla Model 3 I drove on a test track hit an indicated 135mph from a standing start after just half a mile.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - madf
The other element to this stuff is that it makes an average Joe look like a driving god. You just can’t get standing starts wrong - not too many revs to break traction, too few revs and it’ll bog down - you don’t need any great technique other than flexing your right ankle. I’m always a bit wary for the first couple of metres, to avoid a huge shock load to shafts, CV joints, etc, but after that it’s point and press. Even a regular Dual Motor Tesla Model 3 I drove on a test track hit an indicated 135mph from a standing start after just half a mile.

Precisely. Even in snow and ice with an I3 I felt always in control. The Honda Jazz auto would lose traction with a series of jolts on ice ... I3 was much smoother in extremis. Dial down the power through an ECO setting and town driving is easy peasy.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T
... you don’t need any great technique other than flexing your right ankle. I’m always a bit wary for the first couple of metres, to avoid a huge shock load to shafts, CV joints, etc, but after that it’s point and press.

The vehicle has changed a lot, but the transfer of torque to ground is still rubber to asphalt. People have said that tyre particles add to pollution, so presumably EVs may not help here ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

What maintenance is required for an EV with no oil to change ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
‘ What maintenance is required for an EV with no oil to change ?’

Cabin filter, battery & motor coolant every few years, latest software update, visual check of suspension & brakes, battery health check. Tyre tread depth check.

Brake fluid is brake fluid and will have a change at x years, and maybe an aircon regas.

Can’t think of much else.

Edited by mcb100 on 11/07/2025 at 16:38

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy
‘ What maintenance is required for an EV with no oil to change ?’ Cabin filter, battery & motor coolant every few years, latest software update, visual check of suspension & brakes, battery health check. Tyre tread depth check. Can’t think of much else.

Presumably as there are moving parts, there must be something to check and occasionally add or change lubrication. I mean, electric trains do need maintenance.

As before, the problem with electrical equipment is that they don't give much warning (compared to 'mechanical' devices) that they are either in need of TLC or replacement. Not so great when something happens mid-journey on an important trip.

Plus a fault may not be able to be rectified at the roadside, because non-generic equipment needs replacing or where something that does will need more than the equipment / expertise contained in a breakdown van or even at a dealership whilst open, including software faults that cannot be rectified by a hard reset of the car.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Xileno

I think we've been at that point with ICE vehicles for some years. When my Mother's Volvo let her down in a motorway (engine just cut out) it was traced to a faulty fuel injection pump relay. Prior to the event, there was no warning at all.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd
‘ What maintenance is required for an EV with no oil to change ?’ Cabin filter, battery & motor coolant every few years, latest software update, visual check of suspension & brakes, battery health check. Tyre tread depth check. Can’t think of much else.

Presumably as there are moving parts, there must be something to check and occasionally add or change lubrication. I mean, electric trains do need maintenance.

As before, the problem with electrical equipment is that they don't give much warning (compared to 'mechanical' devices) that they are either in need of TLC or replacement. Not so great when something happens mid-journey on an important trip.

Plus a fault may not be able to be rectified at the roadside, because non-generic equipment needs replacing or where something that does will need more than the equipment / expertise contained in a breakdown van or even at a dealership whilst open, including software faults that cannot be rectified by a hard reset of the car.

You've described any car from the last 25 years, petrol, diesel, electric or vegetable oil.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy
‘ What maintenance is required for an EV with no oil to change ?’ Cabin filter, battery & motor coolant every few years, latest software update, visual check of suspension & brakes, battery health check. Tyre tread depth check. Can’t think of much else.

Presumably as there are moving parts, there must be something to check and occasionally add or change lubrication. I mean, electric trains do need maintenance.

As before, the problem with electrical equipment is that they don't give much warning (compared to 'mechanical' devices) that they are either in need of TLC or replacement. Not so great when something happens mid-journey on an important trip.

Plus a fault may not be able to be rectified at the roadside, because non-generic equipment needs replacing or where something that does will need more than the equipment / expertise contained in a breakdown van or even at a dealership whilst open, including software faults that cannot be rectified by a hard reset of the car.

You've described any car from the last 25 years, petrol, diesel, electric or vegetable oil.

I wouldn't say that at all. Many faults on ICE cars made in the 2000s, some even well into the 2010s, possibly newer give decent warning of impending issues, though yes, mainly mechanical ones or those that aren't going to literally curtail your journey.

Many are those that 'might' give an MOT failure (say emissions control) next time around, but are otherwise perfectly fine (if a little rough) to drive until you can fit a repair in at the dealership.

Oil leaks obviously (if you are observant) will give some decent notice, as do 'odd sounds' given by various components. When an electrical system goes, it tends to give a few seconds or minutes of warning, if that.

One of the things I've been saying for a long time now is how poor the decision was to make ICE cars over the last 10 years extremely complex (and increasingly less reliable - lots of 'glitchy' behaviour) in order to improve safety a little and to make relatively modest gains in efficiency and emissions in the real world (rather than bench or unrealistic 'road' testing), especially when the extra 'carbon' emitted when diagnosing and replacing all that extra kit is taken into account.

The KISS principle is best. Unfortunately for EVs, because the timescale for their R&D was forced significantly to be shortened, it has meant that (like with a lot of modern electronics) up until now, many owners are effectively beta-testers, having to endure lots of quality control issues and niggles.

Additionally, the manufacturers have to shell out lots of money to repair faults / provide software updates to fix problems they probably already knew of before the car was released to market because it had to in order to avoid huge fines for not selling enough.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Brit_in_Germany
‘ What maintenance is required for an EV with no oil to change ?’ Cabin filter, battery & motor coolant every few years, latest software update, visual check of suspension & brakes, battery health check. Tyre tread depth check. Brake fluid is brake fluid and will have a change at x years, and maybe an aircon regas. Can’t think of much else.

You forgot "replace drive battery because repeated recharging has killed it after two years" ;- |

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Ethan Edwards

Following your logic I'd be buying my third traction battery on both my EVs.

However in the real world, nope original ones still going great thanks. Incidentally you do know all EVs have an EIGHT year battery warranty? Two years...derisory snort!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Brit_in_Germany

Following your logic I'd be buying my third traction battery on both my EVs.

However in the real world, nope original ones still going great thanks. Incidentally you do know all EVs have an EIGHT year battery warranty? Two years...derisory snort!

Whoosh!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
Ford Mustang-E is as follows -

Tyre rotation 10,000 miles
Brake Fluid 3 years
Cabin filter 20,000 miles
Coolant change 200,000 miles
Transmission fluid 150,000 or 10 years.




The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
cdn.group.renault.com/ren/gb/transversal-assets/br...f
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

I wonder what's involved with the coolant change? If Renault are charging c£200 to replace the 12v battery (standard less than £100 item you'd find in any ICE), then the c£500 may not involve any special equipment? Makes it all DIYable when the cars reach 2nd owner on.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

I wonder what's involved with the coolant change? If Renault are charging c£200 to replace the 12v battery (standard less than £100 item you'd find in any ICE), then the c£500 may not involve any special equipment? Makes it all DIYable when the cars reach 2nd owner on.

I think you are a bit out of date as to what a main dealer would charge to replace a 12v battery! More like £400 on many models.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Korando Battery £284 from Halfords. Assume dealer much more expensive + £140 plus vat to change...

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

"Korando Battery £284 from Halfords. Assume dealer much more expensive + £140 plus vat to change..."

If you choose the easy option then you have to expect to pay through the nose. ECP will sell you a Bosch for just over £100 (depending on year/engine) and that's before any "sale" discount.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

"Korando Battery £284 from Halfords. Assume dealer much more expensive + £140 plus vat to change..."

If you choose the easy option then you have to expect to pay through the nose. ECP will sell you a Bosch for just over £100 (depending on year/engine) and that's before any "sale" discount.

Chris, Just a comparison. I would not be daft enough to do that. I have a good indie anyway.

The only reason the Korando goes to a SSangyong dealer for servicing ( I don't need a battery ) is to maintain the warranty as most of us know how "picky" main dealers can be about warranty claims.

Bosch or Varta from eurocarparts.

Stop/Start 030 72AH 760CCA Car Battery - 3 Year Guarantee

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Bosch or Varta from eurocarparts.

Stop/Start 030 72AH 760CCA Car Battery - 3 Year Guarantee

Forgot to put price £185.ish

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

Not out of touch. I was making a comparison.

If a main dealer can charge £200 to replace a battery that can be purchased for £70, that indicates to me that the £500 coolant change may not involve anything exceptional. The £90 brake fluid change is around double what an indy or fast fit may charge and the wiper blade charge is, as usual, extortionate for anyone who can be bothered to find out just how easy a job it is.

EVs (think Leaf) are already in bangernomics territory and the option to DIY the bits that won't fry you will be relevant to many. There's this fallacy that cars haven't been DIY friendly for years. Yes the techy bits may be, but most of the oily bits (engines aside) haven't changed much for decades.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - paul 1963

Trouble is most modern cars need the battery coding to the bms when you change them, not something you can do at home without the correct equipment.

In ORB's case I'd be getting a battery from somewhere like euros and getting my local friendly indi to change it, Bosch, Varta or Yuasa are the brands to trust.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Ethan Edwards

Chris regarding your comment about coolant. Most EVs have coolant but it's in no way related to coolant in ice vehicles. It's to cool the battery cells. It's also not replaced for at least ten years. It's also rather pricey.

Edited by Ethan Edwards on 12/07/2025 at 15:11

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

See service schedule up thread. Renault seem to think coolant needs changing at 5 or 6 years. If it's not water based, what is it.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - galileo

I wonder what's involved with the coolant change? If Renault are charging c£200 to replace the 12v battery (standard less than £100 item you'd find in any ICE), then the c£500 may not involve any special equipment? Makes it all DIYable when the cars reach 2nd owner on.

I think you are a bit out of date as to what a main dealer would charge to replace a 12v battery! More like £400 on many models.

I just bought a 12V Duracell (5 years warranty) from a local motor factor) for the i10 for £113 inc VAT.

Fitted it myself in less than 5 minutes.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - daveyjp

About £80 inc VAT for old battery test, new battery, fitting and new battery test for our Yaris.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

Most cars now require an AGM battery and coding or at least a reset of the BMS. That's why it's not £50.

However you can usually get away with just bunging in any old battery and it may well work but the car will be all confused about it and it might not last that long.

I agree if a main dealer is charging £200 for something you can probably find it for £120 somewhere else.

Edited by pd on 12/07/2025 at 18:03

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
‘ If it's not water based, what is it.’

No idea if it’s the case here, but there’s been waterless coolant for years. It’s glycol based and has a boiling point almost twice that of water. Corrosion concerns are obviously reduced when you don’t have water in a cooling system.

Edit : done a bit of reading and EV’s do seem to use a glycol based coolant as it’s non-conducive.

Edited by mcb100 on 12/07/2025 at 18:57

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Ethan Edwards

This is quite an informative page.

www.prestoneuk.com/blog/a-guide-to-vehicle-fluids-.../

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

I remember reading on Cleveley EVs website about a BMW i3 which had a battery control unit problem and the main dealer had quoted thousands to the customer .

Cleveley isolated the problem , which they replaced for a few hundred then asked the Main dealer in Cheltenham to link it to the cars ECU.

They refused outright and it was only when Cleveley contacted BMW in Germany were they given permission to seek the assistance of the main dealer to complete the programming .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - madf

I remember reading on Cleveley EVs website about a BMW i3 which had a battery control unit problem and the main dealer had quoted thousands to the customer .

Cleveley isolated the problem , which they replaced for a few hundred then asked the Main dealer in Cheltenham to link it to the cars ECU.

They refused outright and it was only when Cleveley contacted BMW in Germany were they given permission to seek the assistance of the main dealer to complete the programming .

There is now a Bimmerlink software pack which withe right OBD connector enables anyone to code an I3 battery.Takes about 5 minutes.. Costs for Bimmer and OBD about £60. Easy peasy DIY..

(The battery will work wtihout coding but it is likely life will be shortened as charging rates are different for old and new batteries.

(My I3 battery states 2021 on case Voltage measured at terminals is 12.8V so it seems ok.)

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T
.... there’s been waterless coolant for years. It’s glycol based and has a boiling point almost twice that of water. Corrosion concerns are obviously reduced when you don’t have water in a cooling system.

Compared to water, glycol is rather viscous and will need to be thinned, or a tougher pump will be called for. Not only that, water is an excellent coolant because of its heat capacity - meaning it transports waste heat away efficiently. Pity it's corrosive really ....

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
A government announcement today heralding the introduction of official signage along major routes showing directions towards EV charging hubs.
I’d imagine most EV regulars are well versed in using their car’s satnav to find chargers, but it may alleviate concerns for those wary of transitioning who keep hearing the mantra of ‘but the charging infrastructure just isn’t there’.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
Also, today, £25 million’s worth of support aimed at councils to lower the cost of cross pavement cable solutions for those without a drive and further announcements this week to reduce the upfront cost of moving to EV.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

Most UK cities will have Victorian terraced housing where residents feel it's a result if they are able to park in their own rather than a neighbouring street. A cross pavement cable solution is no solution at all. I don't know what the answer is, but there needs to be one.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
One of the downsides of living in the world’s oldest industrial nation.
Our terraced housing was built to get as many of the workforce living as close as possible to the new mills/mines/factories - I’m not sure how many ‘Coronation Streets’ we still have, but still a sizeable number.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T
Our terraced housing was built to get as many of the workforce living as close as possible to the new mills/mines/factories.

More likely the same reason as today - price of land, get as much as possible on a given area. Plus the fact that working-class families had very few worldly goods to accommodate, compared with today. Just a lot of children .....

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

Anyone living in a block of flats are also looking for a solution?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

Maybe the answer is sc***age scheme with the guaranteed trade in of at least £10 k off a new EV

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - daveyjp

Sc***page schemes make no sense. If you need to pay someone to buy something the market isn't working.

If someone really wants an affordable EV there are plenty of used ones out there with thousands off list price, but that means no VAT for government.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Sc***page schemes make no sense. If you need to pay someone to buy something the market isn't working.

If someone really wants an affordable EV there are plenty of used ones out there with thousands off list price, but that means no VAT for government.

No, It means less VAT for Gov.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Terry W

Maybe the answer is sc***age scheme with the guaranteed trade in of at least £10 k off a new EV

I doubt most who bemoan the cost of new EVs are any more likely to buy a new ICE. Likely to be PCP or leased, not bought outright. Prices are anyway converging.

Most cars are second hand - around 2m are sold each year, there are over 30m registered in the UK. If each new car is traded after (averagely) 3 years the number of first owner cars is 6m - 20% of registrations.

Although just a snapshot - Autotrader shows just 3k EV more than 5 years old, but 240k petrol and diesel. If you typically buy cars more than 5 years old (70% of cars on the road), there is very little in the way of EV to chose from.

More than that - there is no need to even think about buying an EV until 2030-35 - until then there will be more fossil fuelled than EV available s/h.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Brit_in_Germany

Anyone living in a block of flats are also looking for a solution?

Germany has a solution - there is a legal obligation to allow charging points to be installed.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Terry W

Detached and semis are 43% of UK housing stock and very likely to have off road parking.

Bungalows, terraced and flats are somewhat mixed - a mix of allocated, communal, and no parking spaces. Assuming a third of these will have off road parking adds 19%. Individual "communities" need to work out how this should be managed.

In total 60-70% of UK dwellings could have off road parking.

There is a clear city/rural split - taking London as a location:

  • 54% of dwellings were flats or maisonettes - 17% nationally
  • 54% own a car in London - 80% nationally

Even within London there is a clear difference between inner and outer boroughs.

Those needing to recharge without off road space, need a solution - even if it affects only a minority of car owners (perhaps ~20%). Options may include work chargers, retail parks and stores, dedicated recharging sites etc. May need some funding.

Some forum members will certainly disagree. But on the basis that transition to EV is a sound long term strategy, solutions not barriers to progress need to be found.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - RT

Detached and semis are 43% of UK housing stock and very likely to have off road parking.

Bungalows, terraced and flats are somewhat mixed - a mix of allocated, communal, and no parking spaces. Assuming a third of these will have off road parking adds 19%. Individual "communities" need to work out how this should be managed.

In total 60-70% of UK dwellings could have off road parking.

There is a clear city/rural split - taking London as a location:

  • 54% of dwellings were flats or maisonettes - 17% nationally
  • 54% own a car in London - 80% nationally

Even within London there is a clear difference between inner and outer boroughs.

Those needing to recharge without off road space, need a solution - even if it affects only a minority of car owners (perhaps ~20%). Options may include work chargers, retail parks and stores, dedicated recharging sites etc. May need some funding.

Some forum members will certainly disagree. But on the basis that transition to EV is a sound long term strategy, solutions not barriers to progress need to be found.

Large numbers of semi's don't have enough off-road parking space for all the vehicles in the household - since semi's outnumber detached quite substantially, that throws your numeric logic out of the window.

Having a single off-road parking space with EV charger isn't the solution for many properties.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Terry W

Large numbers of semi's don't have enough off-road parking space for all the vehicles in the household - since semi's outnumber detached quite substantially, that throws your numeric logic out of the window.

Having a single off-road parking space with EV charger isn't the solution for many properties.

Properties with more than one car owner, and only one space, already manage to park with one or more on the road.

EVs do not need to be plugged in continuously. Once or twice a week will suffice for most.

A 7kw home charger will charge a typical EV from empty to full in ~8 hours and provide a range of ~200 miles.

It may just occur to the house occupants that they need to take turns - a complex concept which would clearly lead to irreconcilable argument!!!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - RT

Large numbers of semi's don't have enough off-road parking space for all the vehicles in the household - since semi's outnumber detached quite substantially, that throws your numeric logic out of the window.

Having a single off-road parking space with EV charger isn't the solution for many properties.

Properties with more than one car owner, and only one space, already manage to park with one or more on the road.

EVs do not need to be plugged in continuously. Once or twice a week will suffice for most.

A 7kw home charger will charge a typical EV from empty to full in ~8 hours and provide a range of ~200 miles.

It may just occur to the house occupants that they need to take turns - a complex concept which would clearly lead to irreconcilable argument!!!

So if two or more drivers in the same household all need a full overnight charge, someone has to move the cars aroiund in the middle of the night.

Your logical flaw is to assume the average applies to most - it doesn't, it's simply the arithmetic mean between a large range of usage patterns.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
The root cause of the concern isn’t necessarily off-street parking. It’s energy prices.
No one, when all is said and done, can fuel a petrol or diesel at home unless you live above a petrol station.
Given average mileage (c7200pa), a typical EV will need charging every 10 days - this can be achieved whilst doing something else and will take 30-50 mins on a rapid charger.
Cost? The Renault 4 I’m running at the moment is operating at 4.1 miles per kW/h - the vast majority of that is motorway, so not its most efficient habitat. Around town I’d maybe hope for 4.5.
But at 4.1, and paying 75p per kW/h on a public charger and it’d be 18.3 pence per mile.
40mpg and supermarket petrol prices gives me 14.4 pence per mile.

I’ve no crystal ball, but if fuel prices were to drop in line with much of Europe either by increasing our solar/wind/hydro/etc or by removing the quite simply bonkers system we currently have whereby electricity is priced by the means of producing the last kW/h (usually gas), we ease the major objections to public charging.
Sure, it’ll still be cheaper at home but those have to use the public network won’t be penalised as heavily.

Edited by mcb100 on 13/07/2025 at 19:14

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - daveyjp

Agreed. Buying an EV for 7,500 miles makes as much sense as buying a diesel over a petrol to get better mpg.

The opportunity cost of the price of petrol for such low mileage far outweighs the many perceived downsides of EVs.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

Agreed. Buying an EV for 7,500 miles makes as much sense as buying a diesel over a petrol to get better mpg.

The opportunity cost of the price of petrol for such low mileage far outweighs the many perceived downsides of EVs.

Apart from the fact that the EV for most people is just simply far nicer to drive the miles in.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T

As this thread is now in its 17th 'volume' it is clear that we can argue the pros and cons of EVs versus ICE cars indefinitely. But apart from the theoretical contribution to reducing CO2 emissions, and thereby the advance in global warming, I can't help feeling that much of the drive behind it is to give the motor industry a new kind of vehicle to sell - rather like that sqrappage scheme of fond memory. It will have inflated the global demand for battery materials, which the Chinese are cornering skilfully, and the CO2 emissions have probably been transferred to the necessary mining and manufacturing enterprises.

I rather doubt that this switch will achieve much more than an general feeling of complacency ? As long as everyone expects to cover the same miles as usual, things won't change that much - except the replacement of filling stations by charging points.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
The difference is that the pro-EV side of the argument can produce huge amounts of data and science validating the long term environmental benefits of the change to electrification.
Anti-EV, less so.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.
The difference is that the pro-EV side of the argument can produce huge amounts of data and science validating the long term environmental benefits of the change to electrification. Anti-EV, less so.

What data "people" or manufacturers put out either side depends on what they feel is right for them.

For ORB and youngrovergirl the important is this.

For me/us to buy an EV would be a lot of money, (which we do have LOL )

But... I will not have a car that is not covered by a manufacturers warranty, and by that I mean a reputable manufacturer who will stand by their product, so that leaves only a few that have longer than a 3 year warranty.. So as an example not a Mokka.. Someone I know with a 3 and a bit year old e-Mokka out of warranty and aircon u/s. Waiting to find out how much it'll cost to fix. Then there is the range problem. I would want an achievable 350 mile range. That means a lot of money. Also I want the seating position I have in the Korando. that means an SUV. That also means a lot of money.

All that for potentially another 19 months driving. Too expensive.

For those who can live with the limitations (and there are !!! ) Electric may well be ok and that is their choice.

But as above the cost for me to do all I want ( in an e-car ) is unacceptable.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

At the end of the day EVs are just cars. There are good ones and bad ones, comfortable ones and not so comfortable ones, ugly ones and pretty ones, badly built ones and well built ones, fast ones and slow ones, cheap ones and expensive ones, reliable ones and not so reliable ones and new ones and used ones, ones with long warranties and ones without.

Nothing changes.

Up to now the EV choice has been a bit limited, particularly on the used market, but as ever with these things it will change.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T

There are good ones and bad ones, comfortable ones and not so comfortable ones, ugly ones and pretty ones, ....

For 'pretty' read 'less ugly' :-)

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy

At the end of the day EVs are just cars. There are good ones and bad ones, comfortable ones and not so comfortable ones, ugly ones and pretty ones, badly built ones and well built ones, fast ones and slow ones, cheap ones and expensive ones, reliable ones and not so reliable ones and new ones and used ones, ones with long warranties and ones without.

Nothing changes.

Up to now the EV choice has been a bit limited, particularly on the used market, but as ever with these things it will change.

To be fair, there are precious few 'cheap' EVs compared to ICE, but then all cars are a lot more expensive than was the case just 5 years ago, never mind 10+, taking 'official' inflation into account.

Modern cars also aren't exactly the most stylish either, and especially EVs, the vast majority of which which look like boxes with lights and wheels, and remind me of the hideous monstrosity that Homer Simpson 'designed'.

A few are nice looking (the VW ID3 is), as are some which are body clones of ICE models.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - RT
The difference is that the pro-EV side of the argument can produce huge amounts of data and science validating the long term environmental benefits of the change to electrification. Anti-EV, less so.

What data "people" or manufacturers put out either side depends on what they feel is right for them.

For ORB and youngrovergirl the important is this.

For me/us to buy an EV would be a lot of money, (which we do have LOL )

But... I will not have a car that is not covered by a manufacturers warranty, and by that I mean a reputable manufacturer who will stand by their product, so that leaves only a few that have longer than a 3 year warranty.. So as an example not a Mokka.. Someone I know with a 3 and a bit year old e-Mokka out of warranty and aircon u/s. Waiting to find out how much it'll cost to fix. Then there is the range problem. I would want an achievable 350 mile range. That means a lot of money. Also I want the seating position I have in the Korando. that means an SUV. That also means a lot of money.

All that for potentially another 19 months driving. Too expensive.

For those who can live with the limitations (and there are !!! ) Electric may well be ok and that is their choice.

But as above the cost for me to do all I want ( in an e-car ) is unacceptable.

I guess I'm in a similar position - I've already had my licence suspended once on medical grounds so brace myself at every renewal that I may lose it permanently - I have a 10-year old VW Touareg, bought new that is absolutely superb in everything except saving me money at the pump - but the cost to "upgrade" to a similar sized, and equipped EV would be enormous, more than the diesel cost for the next 10-15 years, and I don't expect to be driving that long.

I tow a caravan, often up to the Scottish Highlands, so I've done software emulations to see how an EV would cope with such journeys but the mess-about of unhitching the caravan 4-5 times and leaving it parked somewhere while I recharge the EV compared to a single 5-minute refuel with diesel when public chargers are no cheaper than the cost of diesel makes it a non-starter - yes, I'd save money on local journeys as that would use home changing but local journeys are short, by definition, so don't amount to much even over a full year.

As a spotty kid, I daydreamed about having a V8 Bentley - perhaps I'll indulge myself in my dotage!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

But as above the cost for me to do all I want ( in an e-car ) is unacceptable.

It's the wonderful world of choice which, at the moment for a while, we all have.

Out of interest though why do you need 350 miles? In truth many people think they do but when you work it out they don't. 250 is a point where range starts to become a non-issue.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - RT

But as above the cost for me to do all I want ( in an e-car ) is unacceptable.

It's the wonderful world of choice which, at the moment for a while, we all have.

Out of interest though why do you need 350 miles? In truth many people think they do but when you work it out they don't. 250 is a point where range starts to become a non-issue.

Is that 250 miles WLTP range or real-world range?

WLTP figures are themselves idealised journey-based with real-world range only about 85% of WLTP - for those looking after their battery long term, they'll just use the 80-20% part of their battery so that's down to 51% of WLTP.

The WLTP figures for diesel/petrol cars are equally optimistic but the theoretical range is much higher to start with and you can use 100-10% of it without long term issues.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Out of interest though why do you need 350 miles? In truth many people think they do but when you work it out they don't. 250 is a point where range starts to become a non-issue.

Having read some of the tales of woe about peoples problems with battery depredation in Cold and very Cold weather in the UK at certain times of the year.. With Aircon/heating seat heating and wipers on it means I MIGHT be lucky to get 250.

Would I chance having close to zero power and then a motorway closure, either stuck on it or a long diversion. Would you chance it with your young grandchildren in the car? As far as I am aware the AA/RAC and others don't carry mobile battery chargers with them...

Anyways, I have a very simple way to fill up with petrol in a garage, it's a nit of plastic in my pocket, I don't need a mobile signal or an App, and the last time I looked there are very few petrol pumps out of action.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

Out of interest though why do you need 350 miles? In truth many people think they do but when you work it out they don't. 250 is a point where range starts to become a non-issue.

Having read some of the tales of woe about peoples problems with battery depredation in Cold and very Cold weather in the UK at certain times of the year.. With Aircon/heating seat heating and wipers on it means I MIGHT be lucky to get 250.

Would I chance having close to zero power and then a motorway closure, either stuck on it or a long diversion. Would you chance it with your young grandchildren in the car? As far as I am aware the AA/RAC and others don't carry mobile battery chargers with them...

Anyways, I have a very simple way to fill up with petrol in a garage, it's a nit of plastic in my pocket, I don't need a mobile signal or an App, and the last time I looked there are very few petrol pumps out of action.

I'd agree "real world range" but to be honest 250 reliable, or even 200, is enough for most people. I did actually do 250 miles in one hit week before last (in a diesel I should add) but I think that's the longest I've done for ages. Would I chance zero power on a motorway? No, but I wouldn't chance the range reading 20 miles on a petrol or diesel either on a motorway.

For most people, most of the time, 200 miles is a fair limit on UK driving stints (usually 4 hours) and 50 extra range leaves plenty for contingencies. So, yes, 250 real world is a reasonable demand but 350 isn't really needed and just means you transport a large battery you never use around with you all the time.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Out of interest though why do you need 350 miles? In truth many people think they do but when you work it out they don't. 250 is a point where range starts to become a non-issue.

Having read some of the tales of woe about peoples problems with battery depredation in Cold and very Cold weather in the UK at certain times of the year.. With Aircon/heating seat heating and wipers on it means I MIGHT be lucky to get 250.

Would I chance having close to zero power and then a motorway closure, either stuck on it or a long diversion. Would you chance it with your young grandchildren in the car? As far as I am aware the AA/RAC and others don't carry mobile battery chargers with them...

Anyways, I have a very simple way to fill up with petrol in a garage, it's a nit of plastic in my pocket, I don't need a mobile signal or an App, and the last time I looked there are very few petrol pumps out of action.

I'd agree "real world range" but to be honest 250 reliable, or even 200, is enough for most people. I did actually do 250 miles in one hit week before last (in a diesel I should add) but I think that's the longest I've done for ages. Would I chance zero power on a motorway? No, but I wouldn't chance the range reading 20 miles on a petrol or diesel either on a motorway.

For most people, most of the time, 200 miles is a fair limit on UK driving stints (usually 4 hours) and 50 extra range leaves plenty for contingencies. So, yes, 250 real world is a reasonable demand but 350 isn't really needed and just means you transport a large battery you never use around with you all the time.

There you go, ... Chipping away at my Guaranteed required minimum with 50 mile left. Started at 350, taken to 250 and now 200.. DOH !!!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

or most people, most of the time, 200 miles is a fair limit on UK driving stints (usually 4 hours) and 50 extra range leaves plenty for contingencies. So, yes, 250 real world is a reasonable demand but 350 isn't really needed and just means you transport a large battery you never use around with you all the time.

There you go, ... Chipping away at my Guaranteed required minimum with 50 mile left. Started at 350, taken to 250 and now 200.. DOH !!!

Fair point but I guess the point I was trying to make a reliable 250 (so 200 plus 50 reserve) is enough for a lot of drivers, even if they think they need more.

Of course, if you really are doing 300-400 mile non-stop stints regularly then yes I'd agree an EV is not for you yet.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - paul 1963
The difference is that the pro-EV side of the argument can produce huge amounts of data and science validating the long term environmental benefits of the change to electrification. Anti-EV, less so.

What data "people" or manufacturers put out either side depends on what they feel is right for them.

For ORB and youngrovergirl the important is this.

For me/us to buy an EV would be a lot of money, (which we do have LOL )

But... I will not have a car that is not covered by a manufacturers warranty, and by that I mean a reputable manufacturer who will stand by their product, so that leaves only a few that have longer than a 3 year warranty.. So as an example not a Mokka.. Someone I know with a 3 and a bit year old e-Mokka out of warranty and aircon u/s. Waiting to find out how much it'll cost to fix. Then there is the range problem. I would want an achievable 350 mile range. That means a lot of money. Also I want the seating position I have in the Korando. that means an SUV. That also means a lot of money.

All that for potentially another 19 months driving. Too expensive.

For those who can live with the limitations (and there are !!! ) Electric may well be ok and that is their choice.

But as above the cost for me to do all I want ( in an e-car ) is unacceptable.

Going through this bit by bit ORB,

You could potentially afford one apparently so why not? Guessing you've never driven one? You should, there a revelation in terms of performance, ease of operation and silence.

Plenty of E cars available with more than 3 years warranty ( ten years on Suzuki for example, new E Vitara available to order now btw!).

In all honesty do really need 350 miles range? Do you often do 350 miles without a stop?

Plenty of Electric suv type vehicles.

If the 19 months driving could really be a thing then a long warranty wouldn't matter much, you could always lease one.

I'm 99% sure my next car will be Electric.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Paul see reply above and this reply to me.

"Is that 250 miles WLTP range or real-world range?

WLTP figures are themselves idealised journey-based with real-world range only about 85% of WLTP - for those looking after their battery long term, they'll just use the 80-20% part of their battery so that's down to 51% of WLTP.

The WLTP figures for diesel/petrol cars are equally optimistic but the theoretical range is much higher to start with and you can use 100-10% of it without long term issues."

==========

When my fuel warning light comes on it appears at about 50 miles to go. I can easily fill up to 100%. Apparently one should only charge an Ev to 80% and not let it drop below 20%

60% of my 350 miles is ................... answers on postcard please. And no I don't want a Suzuki, there are far more comfortable cars in any form than a Vitara.

Those who like Suzukis, Good for them. Not me. Poor instrument visibility ( grey needle on grey Speedometer in normal daylight ) and poor seats are the two things I do not like. ( Cars "Look" OK ) S Cross better looking than the Vitara to me.

I had a nephew I took on a tour of northern Italy a couple of years back as a graduation present and the little so and so was telling me I was mean after he said I was happy to generously tip a waiter for a superb meal in a lovely restaurant in Florence when we could travel after Lockdown, but not happy to treat him to 5 star hotels. I do hate it when people tell me when I must spend the money i have worked and saved so hard to give ME a comfortable retirement.

Edited by Orb>>. on 14/07/2025 at 14:48

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - paul 1963

Paul see reply above and this reply to me.

"Is that 250 miles WLTP range or real-world range?

WLTP figures are themselves idealised journey-based with real-world range only about 85% of WLTP - for those looking after their battery long term, they'll just use the 80-20% part of their battery so that's down to 51% of WLTP.

The WLTP figures for diesel/petrol cars are equally optimistic but the theoretical range is much higher to start with and you can use 100-10% of it without long term issues."

==========

When my fuel warning light comes on it appears at about 50 miles to go. I can easily fill up to 100%. Apparently one should only charge an Ev to 80% and not let it drop below 20%

60% of my 350 miles is ................... answers on postcard please. And no I don't want a Suzuki, there are far more comfortable cars in any form than a Vitara.

Those who like Suzukis, Good for them. Not me. Poor instrument visibility ( grey needle on grey Speedometer in normal daylight ) and poor seats are the two things I do not like. ( Cars "Look" OK ) S Cross better looking than the Vitara to me.

I had a nephew I took on a tour of northern Italy a couple of years back as a graduation present and the little so and so was telling me I was mean after he said I was happy to generously tip a waiter for a superb meal in a lovely restaurant in Florence when we could travel after Lockdown, but not happy to treat him to 5 star hotels. I do hate it when people tell me when I must spend the money i have worked and saved so hard to give ME a comfortable retirement.

Ouch!! I was being a bit tongue in cheek ORB, sorry for any offence xx

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Ouch!! I was being a bit tongue in cheek ORB, sorry for any offence xx

Absolutely no offence taken Me tongue in cheek too.

And I haven't spoken to the Nephew since.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Adampr

Paul see reply above and this reply to me.

"Is that 250 miles WLTP range or real-world range?

WLTP figures are themselves idealised journey-based with real-world range only about 85% of WLTP - for those looking after their battery long term, they'll just use the 80-20% part of their battery so that's down to 51% of WLTP.

The WLTP figures for diesel/petrol cars are equally optimistic but the theoretical range is much higher to start with and you can use 100-10% of it without long term issues."

==========

When my fuel warning light comes on it appears at about 50 miles to go. I can easily fill up to 100%. Apparently one should only charge an Ev to 80% and not let it drop below 20%

60% of my 350 miles is ................... answers on postcard please. And no I don't want a Suzuki, there are far more comfortable cars in any form than a Vitara.

Those who like Suzukis, Good for them. Not me. Poor instrument visibility ( grey needle on grey Speedometer in normal daylight ) and poor seats are the two things I do not like. ( Cars "Look" OK ) S Cross better looking than the Vitara to me.

I had a nephew I took on a tour of northern Italy a couple of years back as a graduation present and the little so and so was telling me I was mean after he said I was happy to generously tip a waiter for a superb meal in a lovely restaurant in Florence when we could travel after Lockdown, but not happy to treat him to 5 star hotels. I do hate it when people tell me when I must spend the money i have worked and saved so hard to give ME a comfortable retirement.

The electric Vitara is an all-new model and has slightly less cumbersome looks than the current one. I can't speak about the seats

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
‘ Apparently one should only charge an Ev to 80% and not let it drop below 20%’

EV urban myth. You’d try not to leave them parked for periods of time above 80 or below 20, but in use it makes not one jot of difference - especially so with the newer FLP batteries.
Law of diminishing returns applies when rapid charging when it may take 20-25 minutes to get from 90-100% - at that point you’d get going at 90% and use that 25 minutes further down the road to put in a whole load more than 10% into a battery with a lower state of charge.
It’s oft quoted, but range anxiety is a phenomenon only suffered by people that don’t drive an EV.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

Just learnt that certain EVs have concealed door handles that are electrically operated . These can fail in a fire or accident leaving the occupants with no means of escape .

Its recommended to find the location of the emergency manual internal door releases which can be behind a door panel or under a carpet or in an external flap.

Is this situation common to all cars whether ICE or Hybrid or EV ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

Just learnt that certain EVs have concealed door handles that are electrically operated . These can fail in a fire or accident leaving the occupants with no means of escape .

Its recommended to find the location of the emergency manual internal door releases which can be behind a door panel or under a carpet or in an external flap.

Is this situation common to all cars whether ICE or Hybrid or EV ?

Nothing to do with EVs, lots of ICE cars have similar handles.

They all have to have an emergency release.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Just learnt that certain EVs have concealed door handles that are electrically operated . These can fail in a fire or accident leaving the occupants with no means of escape .

Its recommended to find the location of the emergency manual internal door releases which can be behind a door panel or under a carpet or in an external flap.

Is this situation common to all cars whether ICE or Hybrid or EV ?

Nothing to do with EVs, lots of ICE cars have similar handles.

They all have to have an emergency release.

Surely if you are inside the car you can just pull the internal door lever thingy. For Heavens sake.. Look in the manual for the emergency release.

How (excuse the choice of words ) effin stupid is that. Oh Tesla. and others open your phone. download the owners manual and by the time you've found the correct page.. oh you are carbonised.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - gordonbennet

Lots of cars with electric deadlocking are potential death traps, the doors auto lock once moving with the inside handles having no effect until the doors are electronically unlocked again, in a serous crash which took the battery out you could be in trouble, i've read of people being locked in their cars following electrical breakdown on motorways, not an enviable situation on an 'smart' unlit section.

Sadly in increasingly avoidable UK cities its almost vital that you travel around in your own personal locked in prison, personally i prefer old fashioned locks which can be opened from the inside without electrical power.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T
You’d try not to leave them parked for periods of time above 80 or below 20, but in use it makes not one jot of difference - especially so with the newer FLP batteries. Law of diminishing returns applies when rapid charging when it may take 20-25 minutes to get from 90-100% - at that point you’d get going at 90% ....

I have always wondered what the given number actually means - 90% of what exactly ? I guess many owners would assume that it may indicate 90% of the miles they might hope to achieve, i.e. the distance quoted by the makers ?

It's much the same with a phone, the last few percent takes a long time. I think the percentage should more usefully give the % of charging time to complete.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
‘ I have always wondered what the given number actually means - 90% of what exactly ? I guess many owners would assume that it may indicate 90% of the miles they might hope to achieve, i.e. the distance quoted by the makers ?’

90% of the available battery capacity. By which I mean a battery has a gross capacity and a net (usable) capacity. The manufacturer will assign maybe 3% as a buffer so it can’t be distressed by either being fully charged or discharge. The 3% (in our case) goes uncharged when charged, or sits charged and unavailable when the state of charge is running low.

So a 100% state of charge on our notional battery will be 100% of the gross capacity, minus 3%.

No needles with a travel marked ‘E’ at one end and ‘F’ at the other on an EV, merely a digital display showing percentage of charge remaining.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

MCB..

So a 100% state of charge on our notional battery will be 100% of the gross capacity, minus 3%.


All this talk about how wonderful e cars are is fine and good, but put yourself in my theoretical shoes. A 250 mile journey in winter with heating on and a minimum buffer of 50 miles. plus the potential long detours.

How much is the Kia EV5 with a 390 mile alleged range...

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
I’ll start at the end of your comment. It’s not an ‘alleged’ range. It’s the result of following the strictly prescribed requirements of the WLTP test. The temperature is a set 23 degrees centigrade and it’s a combined figure taken from an average of four tests -
Low Speed - up to 35mph
Medium Speed - up to 47mph
High Speed - up to 60mph
Extra High Speed - up to 81mph
So because an EV’s range is better in town than on a motorway/high speed road, those tests will bring down the average.
It’s a comparison tool between different cars - nothing more, nothing less.

I have to ask a question - how big is your bladder? I, for one, can’t do 250 miles without a stop. I’d make a convenience stop, and if I had concerns about range I’d plug in. The R4 I have has quite modest charging capabilities (100kW), but with 15 minutes of charging it’ll happily take on 100+ miles of range. I wouldn’t fill a petrol tank at motorway services, I’d put in £10 to get me home. Same with electricity.
If I was down to my last few percentage of charge, I’d be more confident of finding a rapid charger than I would be of finding a petrol station.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

1. My bladder is fine for my age.

1a. I used to regularly drive Geneva to Calais and vice versa without stopping.

Sorry you still miss the point what is the point id the temperature drops and I have to break down to find my real range driving fro Somewhere in North Wales To Colchester in the dead of winter in sub zero temperatures and I can freeze in the car and get home or keep warm and I am sure that you are aware that road closures and diversions do happen.

If I fill up the Korando I have a Guaranteed range of 350 miles come hell or high water.

The downside to your argument is that to have that range I have to add £nearly £30.000 to be in the same position. I could but a Kia EV5 if the fancy took me but why on earth should I because the apostles of doom are telling me I should, without the harm and damage that the mining is causing.

The best and most economic car for my pocket and the environment is the one I have.

I plan to leave with a full tank going and coming. and fuel pumps are never blocked for more than 5 minutes on average. And you want me to spend £27000 plus my car to save 20p a mile.

You're aving a larf..

Edited by Orb>>. on 14/07/2025 at 20:16

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
You brought up the subject of the KIA EV5, not me. Im not suggesting you do anything. You do you.

If you’re happy with your Korando, keep it. No skin off mine anyone else’s nose.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.
You brought up the subject of the KIA EV5, not me. Im not suggesting you do anything. You do you. If you’re happy with your Korando, keep it. No skin off mine anyone else’s nose.

The Kia EV5 is one of the few I would trust, but the point you miss is that the cost is too great to be considered.

Your business is trying to convince people to buy electric but you do not explain the downsides, In your world everything is perfect and will be if we all follow the Apostles of the revolution and sod the poor peasants dying of pollution where the rare earths are mined.

And you still have not replied about range loss in sub zero temperatures with heating etc on. Or does that not matter?

Edited by Orb>>. on 14/07/2025 at 20:55

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
Incorrect.
My job is to explain the benefits of EV, but I’m realistic enough to understand that they’re not for everyone. But they will work for more people than you’d think.
Currently, because of a general lack of joined up thinking, they’re not for me as I can’t charge at home. I drive a lot of them because I’m in the fortunate position of other people paying for public charging.
I would not recommend someone who can’t access sensibly priced charging (at home or work) to spend their own money on a new one.
Of course there are downsides - if I ever get my council to sort out the ability to get a cable legally across a pavement, I genuinely fancy a Renault 5. It’s ideally about 30 miles short of real world range in cold conditions for my greater than average mileage, but I’d live with it for a car that genuinely appeals to me as opposed to a means of getting around.
Out of curiosity, which rare earths are you referring to?
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T
Currently, because of a general lack of joined up thinking, they’re not for me as I can’t charge at home.

This is a serious difficulty with an EV for many potential owners, as the needs of an ICE car do not usually make it awkward to use without significant extra cost !

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Adampr

This does seem a very long way of saying "I don't want to buy an EV"...

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

Nothing against E cars. Let it be an acceptable purchase which it isn't with the unanswered questions about loss of range in adverse conditions.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Ethan Edwards

Sorry ORB but that's half right.

"Apparently one should only charge an Ev to 80% and not let it drop below 20%"

You can comfortably charge to 100% overnight if you are using the car in the morning. Yes at 20% you should be arriving at a charger. But it you have to move on and find another charger its no big deal. Just don't leave it at say 3% overnight.

These are guidance, good practice. The EV won't spontaneously explode if you break a guideline now and then.

Now if you intend to leave the car for a week or two, not using it for some while. Then it's good practice to have it in a state of charge between 20 and 80 percent. If you intend to use the car tomorrow then by all means top it up to 100% night before. Or if it is needed with no notice then fine you have up to 80% of your change at your immediate disposal. And if it's a long trip then a public charger might be needed.

To summarise its not hard and fast, it's a guideline.

Edited by Ethan Edwards on 14/07/2025 at 21:18

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
There is honestly no way of giving you a definitive answer to your concerns about cold weather.
Did you pre-condition the battery before setting off? Does it have a heat pump? What’s the external temperature? What would you like the internal temperature to be? Is it a Genesis that has an option to just heat the area in which the driver sits?
Completely unquantifiable, but as a ballpark figure I’d be looking at a 15-20% loss in cold conditions.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

The losses in winter on a motorway journey are not usually that significant because you are only warming the battery and cabin up once. Once up and running the main extra power is to cover thermal cabin losses to the outside.

In other words, the "winter effect" is less on one 3 hour journey than 12 15 minute journeys spaced apart when on every occasion you are starting with a cold battery and cabin.

In terms of range ignore the WLTP and look at battery size and consumption (just like an ICE car). Unless you are buying some stupid brick shaped SUV which weighs the same as Mars it'll do 3m/kWh safely and often 4. So if you have a 75kWh battery you can be pretty sure it'll do at least 225 miles in bad and probably 300 in ideal conditions.

If you are doing your 250 mile journey in the winter you might want to stop after 175 miles and bung in 15 minutes of charge. That'll cover your eventualities. That may well be inconvenient but it depends on whether you are doing said journey 3 times a week or 3 times a year. If it is 3 times a week maybe a pain, if 3 times a year then for your 45 minutes out of your life a year the rest of the time you are getting a nicer to drive car for all your other motoring. It is horses for courses.

As for cost well the whole thing pre-supposes you are changing your car anyway. ICE cars are not cheap so may well cost you £27,000 so it is at the point of change you make the decision not just change anyway.

Incidentally I had a bit of a "hoon" drive back across rural Essex in a Tesla rather enjoying myself this evening. Despite really not hanging around the thing did, I kid you not, 5.46 miles per kWh. That's £0.013 per mile in a 445bhp four wheel drive saloon on my home rate. That is just bonkers. Really bonkers. The mere fact that is possible says to me we are in a golden age of motoring. Enjoy while it lasts.

Edited by pd on 14/07/2025 at 23:54

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

10 % subsidy returning according to this

autorepairfocus.com/uk-government-launches-ev-ince.../

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
Interesting way of bringing EV sales to a shuddering halt whilst manufacturers scramble to work out which of their cars are eligible for the grant, and customers hear about this and don’t want to commit until there’s a definitive list of available cars.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - movilogo

In general how the manufactures and dealers profit margins compare between ICE/HEV and EVs?

Do EVs cost more or less to manufacture? Common logic says EVs should be cheaper as they have fewer parts but I don't know whether manufacturers pay huge price for batteries.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - movilogo

Interesting way of bringing EV sales to a shuddering halt whilst manufacturers scramble to work out which of their cars are eligible for the grant, and customers hear about this and don’t want to commit until there’s a definitive list of available cars.

Quiet so.

Also, previously govt. told us all EVs are better than ICE cars. Now they are telling us there are tiers within EVs. Why not offer a flat grant to all EVs? Apparently they are all zero emissions so should be treated in same manner.

Edited by movilogo on 15/07/2025 at 10:14

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

It appears that the Government wish to exclude Chinese built cars so will this include Tesla , Polestar, Honda , Volvo and MG ?

Including the Mini ? I thought this was built in China when plans to build them at Oxford were sc***ped ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Adampr

It appears that the Government wish to exclude Chinese built cars so will this include Tesla , Polestar, Honda , Volvo and MG ?

Including the Mini ? I thought this was built in China when plans to build them at Oxford were sc***ped ?

It's really just a more gentle tariff. Make British and other "allies" cars a little cheaper to make the Chinese cars comparatively more expensive. I imagine Mini will be allowed the subsidy because they reckon they will start production in the UK next year.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy

Interesting way of bringing EV sales to a shuddering halt whilst manufacturers scramble to work out which of their cars are eligible for the grant, and customers hear about this and don’t want to commit until there’s a definitive list of available cars.

Quiet so.

Also, previously govt. told us all EVs are better than ICE cars. Now they are telling us there are tiers within EVs. Why not offer a flat grant to all EVs? Apparently they are all zero emissions so should be treated in same manner.

If EVs are so 'great', why do they need grants at all? People keep banging on about how 'simple' they are in comparison to ICE ones, and yet they are still (even with the current crop of ICE cars with so much emissions controls and efficiency/hybrid tech) a good deal more expensive.

The Telegraph even had the cheek the other day to tout the new Citroen e-C3 as being 'cheap'. It's list price is £21k for the 'base' model. That's NOT cheap for a small supermini with a range of 150-200 miles in good conditions.

Besides, I suspect that most people who are buying a new EV can already afford them, and don't need £3.5k towards it.

Those who can't, but could afford such cars based on the pre-Pandemic era prices still won't afford the price premium, and certainly won't appreciate the approx. 50% depreciation in its first year and much higher depreciation than ICE cars over the likely ownership period.

Besides, I'd bet many buying smaller cars live in properties (like myself) who will likely never have access to home charging because of the physical / technical constraints (amongst many issues owning EVs) of where we live won't then consider them.

Yet we are now forced to contribute our taxes towards subsidising those who can already afford such vehicles.

[Post edited following complaints - Mod]

Edited by Xileno on 15/07/2025 at 15:49

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T

<< I suspect that most people who are buying a new EV can already afford them, and don't need £3.5k towards it. >>

Do I detect a twinge of status envy ? Whether or not the suspicions are correct, a grant of £3.5K should persuade some fence-sitters to join those who 'don't need' to hesitate, thereby doing what the govt intends ?

I'm afraid no-one can help how the taxation they are 'forced to contribute' is spent. Wouldn't it be nice if we could opt out of paying any, if we disliked everything it paid for ? :-)

Edited by Andrew-T on 15/07/2025 at 15:51

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

Even with Quentin Wilson on board he will have a job on his hands to persuade the fence sitters

One person interviewed on Breakfast TV this morning spoke about his personal experience in that he couldn’t find anyone who would buy his used EV or even accept it in part exchange .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Adampr

Even with Quentin Wilson on board he will have a job on his hands to persuade the fence sitters

One person interviewed on Breakfast TV this morning spoke about his personal experience in that he couldn’t find anyone who would buy his used EV or even accept it in part exchange .

It does seem that there could be another hit on used prices if new become cheaper, but I guess the point of the subsidy is probably to keep the PCP market going until such time as used prices find their correct level.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - pd

Even with Quentin Wilson on board he will have a job on his hands to persuade the fence sitters

One person interviewed on Breakfast TV this morning spoke about his personal experience in that he couldn’t find anyone who would buy his used EV or even accept it in part exchange .

There have been some quite strong prices paid at auction for EVs in the last couple of weeks. For whatever reason there has definitely been a change in sentiment.

Might just be they have reached a point where the value is obvious and buyers have gone back into the market but they e certainly stabilised at the moment.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy

<< I suspect that most people who are buying a new EV can already afford them, and don't need £3.5k towards it. >>

Do I detect a twinge of status envy ? Whether or not the suspicions are correct, a grant of £3.5K should persuade some fence-sitters to join those who 'don't need' to hesitate, thereby doing what the govt intends ?

No. Why should better off people get less well-off taxpayer money so they can get a more expensive product where there already is a cheaper alternative? And I'd say this whether I could afford such cars or not.

Do I detect more than a twinge of not caring about the less well off so the well off can gain more money and power?

I'm afraid no-one can help how the taxation they are 'forced to contribute' is spent. Wouldn't it be nice if we could opt out of paying any, if we disliked everything it paid for ? :-)

Taxpayer money should never be used to subsidise the lifestyles of the well off and powerful, just as much as the feckless. The sooner that is understood, the sooner this once great nation can get back on its feet.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T

<< Why should better off people get less well-off taxpayer money so they can get a more expensive product where there already is a cheaper alternative? And I'd say this whether I could afford such cars or not. >>

I am sure you make the same argument about winter fuel payments, with which I completely agree - I would gladly do without ours I assume that it may be simpler/cheaper to give to all, rather than deciding who is or isn't eligible. When things get tight, however, historical perks that many feel entitled to, are tricky to retract !

The socialist politicians who decided that sales of EVs should be encouraged did that for internal party reasons, worried that MPs were drifting off the party line, and trying to adhere to something in the last manifesto (largely forgotten now).

Your basic argument amounts to Why should some people be so much Better Off ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Orb>>.

I am sure you make the same argument about winter fuel payments, with which I completely agree .

We don't need the winter fuel payments, but my sister does. A near 80 year old pensioner with a tiny workplace pension inherited from her husband who was a skilled worker forced to retire in 1979 when the steelworks closed and had to work minimum wage jobs where he was as that was all there was. 10 years into a mortgage and 4 children. Never moaned but got on with it. OAPs certainly deserve it and I believe there is a cut off point anyway via taxation

I didn’t miss it and others will not, but if i get it this year ok.

However my pensions are taxable, so HMRC get a fair bit back.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Engineer Andy

<< Why should better off people get less well-off taxpayer money so they can get a more expensive product where there already is a cheaper alternative? And I'd say this whether I could afford such cars or not. >>

I am sure you make the same argument about winter fuel payments, with which I completely agree - I would gladly do without ours I assume that it may be simpler/cheaper to give to all, rather than deciding who is or isn't eligible. When things get tight, however, historical perks that many feel entitled to, are tricky to retract !

The socialist politicians who decided that sales of EVs should be encouraged did that for internal party reasons, worried that MPs were drifting off the party line, and trying to adhere to something in the last manifesto (largely forgotten now).

Your basic argument amounts to Why should some people be so much Better Off ?

No. People are very welcome to be better off, but why should poorer people subsidise those people's living when a) they can afford the product or A. N. Alternative themselves, b) don't wish to buy the product anyway because it isn't for them / don't like it, or c) the 'policy' is built on a LIE.

For someone who seemingly doesn't like socialism, you sure are a great proponent for wealth transfer and dependency on state handouts, just in this case from the less well off to the well off and powerful (lining the pockets of the rich via huge taxpayer subsidies).

If EVs and Net Zero are 'so great' and 'save us money', why are they all in need of huge subsidies and mandates to force people to buy / use them? Want EVs - buy them at full cost with your own money. I'm not stopping you.

Unfortunately, many of us can't afford to buy/run them and don't have (and won't likely ever) any facility to charge them at home, nor can we afford the huge cost of depreciation or replacement of a significant portion of the battery pack, nor can we (on old ones) run a an old EV that only has a range of well under 100 miles, and in many cases will have a range of less than 50.

It's easy virtue signalling when you've got lots of disposable cash at hand, especially when you may well have benefitted from far more generous workplace and government pensions, vastly more affordable housing, etc than those in following generations, where reality set in (those cushy pensions never were affordable) and you can't 'have it all'.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - FP

"... why should poorer people subsidise those people's living when... the 'policy' is built on a LIE."

You state that as if it's an incontrovertible fact.

It's not.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - SLO76
“ The downside to your argument is that to have that range I have to add £nearly £30.000 to be in the same position”

Not if you buy used, or even lease a new EV. In both cases the EV option is often the same price or cheaper. Our ID3 was cheaper than an equivalent petrol engined Golf, yet it’s quicker, quieter, more spacious and vastly cheaper to run. I also don’t see why anyone would need a guaranteed 350 mile range. I’m 48 and would typically have a wee pit stop after 2/3hrs. By the time I’ve had a pee, grabbed a bite to eat and a caffeine infusion our ID3 is back up to 80/90% and ready to cover another 200 miles or so. So I’ve paid less than a petrol car, it is more spacious inside thanks to there being no space robbing engine and it’s costing buttons to fuel and it only needs a cheap “service” every two years to keep the remaining 5yrs of battery warranty valid. It’s not for everyone, but upfront cost is increasingly not a reason for ignoring EV’s.

Edited by SLO76 on 15/07/2025 at 23:57

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

"Our ID3 was cheaper than an equivalent petrol engined Golf"

But ID3 depreciation over the next couple of years MAY exceed that of a petrol Golf which will have cost more initially, thereby balancing things out. You've already commented on the ID3 shortcomings in infotainment and interior quality and additionally, rattles - almost unheard of in a 3 year old car now. The ID3 may become the next generation Leaf for those wanting a competent EV who are able to overlook it's shortcomings.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - paul 1963

Chris, I think SLO was being hypercritical, every car has some minor niggle if you look hard enough, my Swift is lovely in many respects but some of the interior plastics are rather hard, does it really matter? Not really, I don't drive along rubbing the dash top.

The rattles he mentioned are probably only noticeable because of the utter silence.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Chris M

But VW has always been known for quality interiors. They dropped the ball with the ID3 MK1. Hard plastics are fine for some and they'll happily live with an ID3 and appreciate it's strong points but many VW owners want quality and will look elsewhere.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - SLO76
Can’t deny the lack of quality inside the ID3 compared to a Golf or a Mazda 3 for example. The actual quality of the bodywork is very much up to standard however. The rattle is more noticeable because of the near absence of engine and road noise. If VW upgraded the interior quality and did away with the unhelpful tech the car would be a perfect family hatchback. As it stands it is merely very very good.

Depreciation will be higher, despite the lower starting point, and will never be as harsh as it was from new. Running costs are also far far lower both regarding fuel costs and maintenance. We are planning on longterm ownership - though that will change if it proves troublesome.

I’ve every confidence that the market for used EV’s will firm up with more people converting and higher range models like the ID3 resolving range anxiety issues. I feel completely confident in just jumping in and going, we no longer feel the need to plan ahead as we did with longer drives in the Leaf. It’s not an issue to stop for a quick fast charge, as availability is much better than it was only two years ago when we first started our EV trip.

Edited by SLO76 on 16/07/2025 at 11:41

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

Adam Vaughan the Environment Correspondent of the Times has come up with an interesting theory about why Europe is experiencing one of the hottest summers on record and it came as a surprise to me .

This is what he says

Perversely, the continent's cleaner power stations and cars are adding to the discomfort: that they've reduced the "filthy particulates in the skies above Europe" may be great for our health, but it only makes life hotter for us, "as less of the Sun's energy is reflected back to space".

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Terry W

Adam Vaughan the Environment Correspondent of the Times has come up with an interesting theory about why Europe is experiencing one of the hottest summers on record and it came as a surprise to me .

This is what he says

Perversely, the continent's cleaner power stations and cars are adding to the discomfort: that they've reduced the "filthy particulates in the skies above Europe" may be great for our health, but it only makes life hotter for us, "as less of the Sun's energy is reflected back to space".

Whether atmospheric pollutants and aerosols reflect or absorb sunlight depends on the chemicals involved. Particles also have an impact on cloud formation which reflect sunlight.

However I think the Times correspondent may have it wrong:

  • carbon produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels in vehicles, absorbs sunlight, warming the atmosphere
  • gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide trap heat emitted from the earth's surface, contributing to the greenhouse effect and warming the planet

Not the whole story - but don't believe all you read in the papers even if it reinforces preconceived biases!!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - madf

Adam Vaughan the Environment Correspondent of the Times has come up with an interesting theory about why Europe is experiencing one of the hottest summers on record and it came as a surprise to me .

This is what he says

Perversely, the continent's cleaner power stations and cars are adding to the discomfort: that they've reduced the "filthy particulates in the skies above Europe" may be great for our health, but it only makes life hotter for us, "as less of the Sun's energy is reflected back to space".

Whether atmospheric pollutants and aerosols reflect or absorb sunlight depends on the chemicals involved. Particles also have an impact on cloud formation which reflect sunlight.

However I think the Times correspondent may have it wrong:

  • carbon produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels in vehicles, absorbs sunlight, warming the atmosphere
  • gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide trap heat emitted from the earth's surface, contributing to the greenhouse effect and warming the planet

Not the whole story - but don't believe all you read in the papers even if it reinforces preconceived biases!!

Mr Vaughan is a journalist. SO he is quoting an opinion.

Has he done any experiments and had them ratified? None reported.

I treat what he writes as if he were a normal journalist...prone to making it up at times.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Andrew-T

<< I think the Times correspondent may have it wrong:

  • carbon produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels in vehicles, absorbs sunlight, warming the atmosphere
  • gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide trap heat emitted from the earth's surface, contributing to the greenhouse effect and warming the planet

Not the whole story - but don't believe all you read in the papers even if it reinforces preconceived biases!! >>

As a (once-)trained scientist, I am interested to know what you are disputing in these two bullet points. The heat-trapping is well confirmed by experiment, possibly not globally, but certainly on a lab scale. And carbon, at least in the form which emerges from an exhaust, is black, well known to be the most efficient colour for absorbing heat.

Of course you may not want to believe these statements, but that doesn't make them wrong.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Adampr

<< I think the Times correspondent may have it wrong:

  • carbon produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels in vehicles, absorbs sunlight, warming the atmosphere
  • gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide trap heat emitted from the earth's surface, contributing to the greenhouse effect and warming the planet

Not the whole story - but don't believe all you read in the papers even if it reinforces preconceived biases!! >>

As a (once-)trained scientist, I am interested to know what you are disputing in these two bullet points. The heat-trapping is well confirmed by experiment, possibly not globally, but certainly on a lab scale. And carbon, at least in the form which emerges from an exhaust, is black, well known to be the most efficient colour for absorbing heat.

Of course you may not want to believe these statements, but that doesn't make them wrong.

I think Terry was suggesting those are established facts that counterbalance this journalist's notion that atmospheric particulates that may reflect sunlight are a good reason to encourage pollution.

The Times has always been on the conservative (big and small c) side of things but I never thought it would lower itself to the level of the Express.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Adampr

In fairness to the Times, the preceding paragraph was

"Europe is warming at twice the global average rate, meaning that it is bearing the brunt of climate change. The ever-rising carbon emissions that humanity is pumping into the atmosphere are the main reason, scientists told The Times. Europe’s large landmass and its proximity to the Arctic, which is heating up at three times the global rate, are two more."

I'm not sure why they felt the need to include that nonsense about particulates though

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Steveieb

The author of this report has been involved in environmental matters for a considerable time , previously being part of the environmental team both at the Guardian and New Scientist which are a far cry from the Express !

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - mcb100
It’s apparently called ‘Global Brightening’ and caused by a diminishing of carbon particulate emissions.

It’s not a phenomenon that increases the effect of sunshine onto the planet, more a case of reverting back to pre-industrial times, amplified by the greenhouse gases caused climate change.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 17 - Xileno

This thread is now closed, please CLICK HERE to go to Volume 18 *****

Edited by Xileno on 18/07/2025 at 08:01