The all things EV chat thread

PJ87

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Hyundai ran 4 of their SUV's as hydrogen powered cars over here a couple of years back, to see how they faired. TBH it has to be the way forward, and for the life of me I don't understand why more car companies aren't jumping on that ship

Because it's sitting on a potential bomb

They haven't stabilised it fully yet
 

USER1999

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Hyundai ran 4 of their SUV's as hydrogen powered cars over here a couple of years back, to see how they faired. TBH it has to be the way forward, and for the life of me I don't understand why more car companies aren't jumping on that ship

I would guess it is a lack of infrastructure. Everyone is going gung ho building electric charging points, Governments are promoting electric as the future. Even petrol stations are looking at recharging points. No one is putting in hydrogen. If a vehicle manufacturer goes all in on hydrogen, but there is nowhere to fill it, it will be a waste of time, money, etc.

HGV is probably going to have to go down the fuel cell route. It may be the haulage industry that has to invest in fefueling sites at their own depots.

I think long term, people will accept less ev range, in exchange for a lighter, cheaper vehicle, especially if it can have a fast recharge. Yes, some need 400 mile range, but in reality it's very few. Most journeys are 40 miles or less. Something with 100 mile range, that recharges in 10 minutes would do most people.

We used to have phones that stayed charged for a week. Now they scrape through a day, and we are all fine with it.
 

PJ87

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I would guess it is a lack of infrastructure. Everyone is going gung ho building electric charging points, Governments are promoting electric as the future. Even petrol stations are looking at recharging points. No one is putting in hydrogen. If a vehicle manufacturer goes all in on hydrogen, but there is nowhere to fill it, it will be a waste of time, money, etc.

HGV is probably going to have to go down the fuel cell route. It may be the haulage industry that has to invest in fefueling sites at their own depots.

I think long term, people will accept less ev range, in exchange for a lighter, cheaper vehicle, especially if it can have a fast recharge. Yes, some need 400 mile range, but in reality it's very few. Most journeys are 40 miles or less. Something with 100 mile range, that recharges in 10 minutes would do most people.

We used to have phones that stayed charged for a week. Now they scrape through a day, and we are all fine with it.

Some very good points there. Especially on the phones however some may argue what did we use our Nokia 3310 for? Phone calls and snake if that now it's a browser, a Walkman , podcast host .. for some much more than that aswell

Think your right about the range but then we the fuel cel their saying 300 mile range only bonus is filling up faster .. which is getting addressed I mean telsa have their 250kw super charge network in theory 15 mins on that could recharge their battieres

Shell were on the news about in the future every petrol station will have equal electric chargers and petrol pumps , much faster speeds coming aswell

I mean mine is limited to 100kw I believe which isn't bad but does cut the potential slightly

Bang on about range and average journey

I reckon I can do all my society days in it up to 75 miles with no worries .. and my commute is 25 each way
 

road2ruin

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I presently have an Audi S4 which is a shade under 500bhp, it's an Avant so the family wagon. It's a good laugh and I enjoy driving it. The wife has a Mini Cooper Convertible, woefully underpowered however it's just a run around for local journeys. That car is due for replacement next year and we will definitely explore full electric as her longest journey is down to the South Coast which is about 60 miles. For longer journeys with the family stuff we use mine.
 

PJ87

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I presently have an Audi S4 which is a shade under 500bhp, it's an Avant so the family wagon. It's a good laugh and I enjoy driving it. The wife has a Mini Cooper Convertible, woefully underpowered however it's just a run around for local journeys. That car is due for replacement next year and we will definitely explore full electric as her longest journey is down to the South Coast which is about 60 miles. For longer journeys with the family stuff we use mine.

That is prob where most people can make the switch

We have the Corsa e which I've been basically been doing majority of the driving in

Even dropping the kids to mum's for day care if it's just me and not me plus the wife I'll take the Corsa

The alhambra has gone from 1000 miles a month to 100 miles maybe

Post lockdown prob will end up 300 miles a month but still massive change
 

road2ruin

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That is prob where most people can make the switch

Realistically as long as the electric car was able to do 150 miles on a single charge (which most seem to be able to do easily) then it'd be fine for us a second car. Most of our journeys are local anyway so pottering around in it would be just fine. I'm not ready to go full electric with the 'big' car as I enjoy driving it too much however I race RC cards so know the power of a brushless motor and would not be adverse to changing at some point in the future.
 

PJ87

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Realistically as long as the electric car was able to do 150 miles on a single charge (which most seem to be able to do easily) then it'd be fine for us a second car. Most of our journeys are local anyway so pottering around in it would be just fine. I'm not ready to go full electric with the 'big' car as I enjoy driving it too much however I race RC cards so know the power of a brushless motor and would not be adverse to changing at some point in the future.

I find my 50kw a good blend ATM 202 quoted range but if I keep at 80% more than enough and if I know long drive top to 100
 

Lord Tyrion

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So, in effect, electric is currently great as a second car but we still need the breakthrough to be considered 1st car for most. Expensive 2nd car though, another breakthrough needed there as well.
 

PJ87

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So, in effect, electric is currently great as a second car but we still need the breakthrough to be considered 1st car for most. Expensive 2nd car though, another breakthrough needed there as well.

Depends

The 62kw ones and 80kw coming are 300 miles plus

350kw charging coming

5kw a minute

That's the 80kw one in 15 mins potentially

400 miles I reckon off that in 15 mins
 

USER1999

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Depends

The 62kw ones and 80kw coming are 300 miles plus

350kw charging coming

5kw a minute

That's the 80kw one in 15 mins potentially

400 miles I reckon off that in 15 mins

But most of this is a why? Bigger batteries etc will just drive the cost of buying even higher. Potentially smaller batteries, less range, but faster charging would suit most people fine.
It's also mostly short journeys that create the pollution.
 

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That would be the other thing that would stop me, at present, even second hand they're extremely expensive against the petrol equivalent.

Let's face it, if EVs were the same price as their equivalent ICE cars, the manufacturers wouldn't sell many ICE cars (which they are still churning out) so they have to keep the price of their EVs higher.
But when companies like Tesla (who don't have any ICE cars to shift) finally produce an escort sized car, which has 200 mile range, fast charging and is affordable, things will change rapidly.
 

PJ87

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But most of this is a why? Bigger batteries etc will just drive the cost of buying even higher. Potentially smaller batteries, less range, but faster charging would suit most people fine.
It's also mostly short journeys that create the pollution.

I can see 60 becoming the norm

Some companies are starting with 50 as standard the new gen ones

60 would bring 300 miles into play

Won't add that much cost because battery cost is so much lower now
Car companies are artificially keeping the costs high ATM

There's about 3k difference in real terms think I read .. and less moving parts
 

Lord Tyrion

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Depends

The 62kw ones and 80kw coming are 300 miles plus

350kw charging coming

5kw a minute

That's the 80kw one in 15 mins potentially

400 miles I reckon off that in 15 mins
Would you ditch your Alhambra tomorrow?

We need electric cars built to family size, giving a decent range (I'm not expecting diesel range), at an equivalent price to petrol / diesel. They are all coming, potential etc. When these things actually happen we will start to see a genuine shift.
 

PJ87

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Would you ditch your Alhambra tomorrow?

We need electric cars built to family size, giving a decent range (I'm not expecting diesel range), at an equivalent price to petrol / diesel. They are all coming, potential etc. When these things actually happen we will start to see a genuine shift.

No, because one thing, childseats

That's the entire reason I have it

There are 3 cars on the market that can fit 3 car seats accross the back

Alhambra, Sharon and C4

The s max is tighter

This has isofix accross all 3

The Skoda new SUV that's 62-82 kw battery with big boot if it could fit 3 car seats 100% I'd go to it
 

Lord Tyrion

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No, because one thing, childseats

That's the entire reason I have it

There are 3 cars on the market that can fit 3 car seats accross the back

Alhambra, Sharon and C4

The s max is tighter

This has isofix accross all 3

The Skoda new SUV that's 62-82 kw battery with big boot if it could fit 3 car seats 100% I'd go to it
I've just looked up the Skoda, Enyaq for those interested. That is exactly the type of model we need to see coming through. £34k is steep but at least it is a start.
 

PJ87

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I've just looked up the Skoda, Enyaq for those interested. That is exactly the type of model we need to see coming through. £34k is steep but at least it is a start.

My alhambra was 35k brand new I believe

It's was 3.5 years when I got it for 16k

So similar

Nice car the Skoda tho eh? Once eldest out of car seats we could change
 

Lord Tyrion

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My alhambra was 35k brand new I believe

It's was 3.5 years when I got it for 16k

So similar

Nice car the Skoda tho eh? Once eldest out of car seats we could change
It's very nice. I'm on my second Skoda, only have praise for them. The interiors now are very impressive and the one on this seems to be the staple across the board going forwards (it's already in the Octavia)
 

PJ87

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It's very nice. I'm on my second Skoda, only have praise for them. The interiors now are very impressive and the one on this seems to be the staple across the board going forwards (it's already in the Octavia)

Wife hates the alhambra..she loved her hrv (which I sold to the mother in law) we were going to keep that until it died then get a leaf or something to replace my civic

All that was second baby plans
19th march first scan all changes (twins) now the civic I gave to my aunt as their car broke and saved the hassle of selling it in lockdown .. bought the Alhambra then the PCP was ending on the hrv I said to the wife look why pay 13k for a car that gets me 45mpg to work for just me and golf .. where as if I lease an electric car for me bamn save us a fortune (£100 a month ATM)

Lease market is where they can take over
 

Blue in Munich

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So, in effect, electric is currently great as a second car but we still need the breakthrough to be considered 1st car for most. Expensive 2nd car though, another breakthrough needed there as well.

This. My car is a Seat Leon ST which we would use for longer journeys, Mrs. BiM bought a brand new Seat Ibiza, about £17,000 new. A quick look for something similar shows a Peugeot 208 electric at about £29,000. Why would we pay £12,000 more just to get a car with less range & convenience.
 
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