What's going to get us to leave the car.

Maybe you're not looking.
Only 60% of all car owners have off street parking and not every EV plugs in every night plus overnight demand for electricity is almost nothing.

Ev ownership will increase gradually as will the charging infrastructure so those who cant charge at home will charge at work, supermarkets restaurants etc.
Right now there are over 30,000 charging points in Britain and growing every day, just like petrol stations grew when the car first came out.
The difference is businesses dont need to build petrol stations in their car parks



Only the sale of new hybrids will be banned, you will still be able to buy second hand.
I hope your right !
I just don’t think it’s so simple.
 
When an electric car is more affordable than the regular family saloon then people will look to them

And in regards charging points

I can pop to a petrol station and fill up my car in in 2 minutes so a petrol station can serves hundreds of car each day - one charging station takes how long to “fill” up a car ? And will it ever get as quick to charge an Electric car ?

we are years away from

1. Running out of oil

2. Developing an electric car that is of the equivalent of a good old petrol car both in terms of cost and ease of use.
 
I hope your right !
I just don’t think it’s so simple.

I'm no time traveller so I can only guess, but all the indications are it's not if but when.
Once people see more and more charging points appearing and EVs become cheaper than ICE cars, I think the change will happen quite quickly.
Remember it's only 10 years old, things this big take time

Why is it so hard to find one.?
That’s what is the biggest complaint from EV owners.
.

Click on the link and search your area

https://www.zap-map.com/live/
 
I'm no time traveller so I can only guess, but all the indications are it's not if but when.
Once people see more and more charging points appearing and EVs become cheaper than ICE cars, I think the change will happen quite quickly.
Remember it's only 10 years old, things this big take time



Click on the link and search your area

https://www.zap-map.com/live/
I live in a place called Huyton and according to this link there’s one charger.
It’s quite a big suburb.
 
When an electric car is more affordable than the regular family saloon then people will look to them

And in regards charging points

I can pop to a petrol station and fill up my car in in 2 minutes so a petrol station can serves hundreds of car each day - one charging station takes how long to “fill” up a car ? And will it ever get as quick to charge an Electric car ?

You're thinking about this the wrong way.
Petrol stations wont be replaced by charging stations with 6 plugs, charging plugs will be all over the place. Outside your local indian, cinema, golf club, gym, starbucks, McDonald's car parks, anywhere you park up for half an hour.
And at service stations.........

Portland-Airport-EV-chargers.jpeg

we are years away from

1. Running out of oil

2. Developing an electric car that is of the equivalent of a good old petrol car both in terms of cost and ease of use.


1. We are years/decades even from running out of oil but what's wrong with being ready when it does.

2. I disagree.
The cost of buying an EV right now is higher I agree but it is falling all the time but the running costs are a fraction of ICE cars.
According to Bloomberg, the cost of an EV will be cheaper than an equivalent ICE car as soon as 2022.

As for charging.........
You pop into Asda, park up, plug in, spend half an hour shopping, come out, unplug and you've added 150miles of range for about £6.
Do the arithmetic.
And if you have off street parking, it's even cheaper.
Then you drive home. No need to stop off at the petrol station on the way out.
So its actually quicker to charge while you're shopping.

I've said before and I'll say again, we're not there yet but we're getting there faster than most people think.[/QUOTE]
 
You're thinking about this the wrong way.
Petrol stations wont be replaced by charging stations with 6 plugs, charging plugs will be all over the place. Outside your local indian, cinema, golf club, gym, starbucks, McDonald's car parks, anywhere you park up for half an hour.
And at service stations.........

View attachment 29173




1. We are years/decades even from running out of oil but what's wrong with being ready when it does.

2. I disagree.
The cost of buying an EV right now is higher I agree but it is falling all the time but the running costs are a fraction of ICE cars.
According to Bloomberg, the cost of an EV will be cheaper than an equivalent ICE car as soon as 2022.

As for charging.........
You pop into Asda, park up, plug in, spend half an hour shopping, come out, unplug and you've added 150miles of range for about £6.
Do the arithmetic.
And if you have off street parking, it's even cheaper.
Then you drive home. No need to stop off at the petrol station on the way out.
So its actually quicker to charge while you're shopping.

I've said before and I'll say again, we're not there yet but we're getting there faster than most people think.
[/QUOTE]

A 7kW home charger significantly reduces the charging time, with little change in the cost of electricity. A full 168-mile charge on the 40kWh Nissan Leaf would take less than six hours, vastly improving convenience for those occasions when you need to top up in a hurry. Over a year and 9,000 miles, the maths between an electric vehicle and a petrol equivalent show some significant savings. At an average economy of 45mpg, a petrol car will cost £1,209 to run in fuel alone. A 40kWh Leaf with a real-world range of 168 miles would cost £300 for the 12 months. It’s also worth noting that you can save even more by investing in solar panels and a household battery to generate and store electricity.


Lifted this from an article about cost to charge a Nissan leaf

So my fuel costs would drop by £890 a year if I did 9000 miles

No going petrol station

Top up overnight whilst I sleep

Defo up for this
 
A 7kW home charger significantly reduces the charging time, with little change in the cost of electricity. A full 168-mile charge on the 40kWh Nissan Leaf would take less than six hours, vastly improving convenience for those occasions when you need to top up in a hurry.

Not forgetting the £500 grant from the government towards buying and having the charger installed
 
Not forgetting the £500 grant from the government towards buying and having the charger installed

Indeed Bob that is very attractive

I been working all out at work

Say I do 1000 miles a month

That's about 3 tanks of fuel

£150 at the moment (without rises in fuel)

This would be roughly 10 charges £63 for the month (without the rises in electric )

Could get on board with that

I'd defo start to replace the little drives to my mum's with it

My mum uses the bus to come to mine where possible now to try and cut down her use
 
Problem in my eyes with EV's is the price to buy. My main car is a Citroen Grand picasso HDi Blue. Emissions wise it's better than my smaller petrol engined car i drive (mrs drivesthe citroen). We need a car that size for the kids and all the other things we do. A low mileage 2018 Nissan Leaf which is 5 seater and not big enough would set us back up to £21K for a decent one or around 15K for an older one.
For an equivalent 7 seater I'd be looking at a Nissan e-NV200 @ £26k and it looks like a van.

Also, i would be dubious of buying used in the first place. Batteries have a finite lifespan. Even the manufacurers are saying the new superchargers reduce battery life. Last year Top Gear bought a 10 year old Nissan Leaf. New it did 120miles, after 10 years it did 30. Insurabce companies classed it technically as a write off.

Many families at the moment cant afford to buy EV's new. What if you live in a terrace? how do you charge? A cable out of a window down to where your car is causing a trip hazzard? EV technology is outpacing the infrastructure to support it.

If they are to start phasing out pertol/diesel in 2035 then they need to up their game and also offer very good scrappage deals. My family needs two cars due to where we work and where the kids go to school. Public transport is not an option for me.
Change needs to happen but it's not going to be soon enough and average people are the ones who will suffer. Just my ranting opinion :rolleyes:
 
Last edited:
When an electric car is more affordable than the regular family saloon then people will look to them

And in regards charging points

I can pop to a petrol station and fill up my car in in 2 minutes so a petrol station can serves hundreds of car each day - one charging station takes how long to “fill” up a car ? And will it ever get as quick to charge an Electric car ?

we are years away from

1. Running out of oil


2. Developing an electric car that is of the equivalent of a good old petrol car both in terms of cost and ease of use.
Do do you advocate waiting until we start running out of oil before doing anything to replace it? Is this a problem for you or would you rather take the comfortable route and leave it for your children to face the consequences?
 
Problem in my eyes with EV's is the price to buy. My main car is a Citroen Grand picasso HDi Blue. Emissions wise it's better than my smaller petrol engined car i drive (mrs drivesthe citroen). We need a car that size for the kids and all the other things we do. A low mileage 2018 Nissan Leaf which is 5 seater and not big enough would set us back up to £21K for a decent one or around 15K for an older one.
For an equivalent 7 seater I'd be looking at a Nissan e-NV200 @ £26k and it looks like a van.

Also, i would be dubious of buying used in the first place. Batteries have a finite lifespan. Even the manufacurers are saying the new superchargers reduce battery life. Last year Top Gear bought a 10 year old Nissan Leaf. New it did 120miles, after 10 years it did 30. Insurabce companies classed it technically as a write off.

Many families at the moment cant afford to buy EV's new. What if you live in a terrace? how do you charge? A cable out of a window down to where your car is causing a trip hazzard? EV technology is outpacing the infrastructure to support it.

If they are to start phasing out pertol/diesel in 2035 then they need to up their game and also offer very good scrappage deals. My family needs two cars due to where we work and where the kids go to school. Public transport is not an option for me.
Change needs to happen but it's not going to be soon enough and average people are the ones who will suffer. Just my ranting opinion :rolleyes:
You've literally summed up my issues with going full EV. Even if things go as planned for us this year meaning we can go down to 1 car, we still will need the main car to be a 7 seater ideally. The Nissan is literally the commercial van but instead they've simply swapped the rear panels for windows. Plus the max range isn't long about to drive and visit family, if you factor in stops it takes nearly an hour for an 80% charge which could possibly mean a 2nd stop, so a 2.5hr drive I can do non stop currently becomes 4.5hrs.

There's no way im buying 2nd hand because of battery degradation you simply don't know what life is left in the battery. So new becomes the only option which isba whole other dilemma of nothing is affordable. People keep saying the price wilk become lower than comparative ICE cars, but that's not simply being shown by manufacturers, if anything each new one that comes out the cost of buying one is getting significantly higher than other cars.
 
Problem in my eyes with EV's is the price to buy. My main car is a Citroen Grand picasso HDi Blue. Emissions wise it's better than my smaller petrol engined car i drive (mrs drivesthe citroen). We need a car that size for the kids and all the other things we do. A low mileage 2018 Nissan Leaf which is 5 seater and not big enough would set us back up to £21K for a decent one or around 15K for an older one.
For an equivalent 7 seater I'd be looking at a Nissan e-NV200 @ £26k and it looks like a van.

2016 Nissan Leaf Tekna, 44,000miles £8,999


Also, i would be dubious of buying used in the first place. Batteries have a finite lifespan. Even the manufacurers are saying the new superchargers reduce battery life. Last year Top Gear bought a 10 year old Nissan Leaf. New it did 120miles, after 10 years it did 30. Insurabce companies classed it technically as a write off.

The Nissan Leaf wasn't released in the UK until March 2011 so there no way they could have bought a 10 year old car last year. Besides, Nissan has an 8 year battery guarantee.

Many families at the moment cant afford to buy EV's new. What if you live in a terrace? how do you charge? A cable out of a window down to where your car is causing a trip hazzard? EV technology is outpacing the infrastructure to support it.

Please see post no. 206

If they are to start phasing out pertol/diesel in 2035 then they need to up their game and also offer very good scrappage deals. My family needs two cars due to where we work and where the kids go to school. Public transport is not an option for me.
Change needs to happen but it's not going to be soon enough and average people are the ones who will suffer. Just my ranting opinion :rolleyes:

How will they suffer when price parity could be in 2022. ?
 
BIK is 0% for 20/21 then 1% 21/22 then 2% 22/23, could be raised back to "normal levels" after than, but no doubt this will push company car sales towards EV's, employee will save thousands over the 3 years comapred to petrol/diesel.
 
2016 Nissan Leaf Tekna, 44,000miles £8,999




The Nissan Leaf wasn't released in the UK until March 2011 so there no way they could have bought a 10 year old car last year. Besides, Nissan has an 8 year battery guarantee.



Please see post no. 206



How will they suffer when price parity could be in 2022. ?
Haven't seen the episode but I guess coukd be possible they got one ofnthe early Japan/US releases that came out in December 2010. Even so would still have only been a 9 year old car. But that's a severe degradation of battery life though.
 
Top