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Subject Topic: Electric towcars
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via mobile 10/1/2023 at 10:05pm
 Location: Northamptonshire
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Quote: Originally posted by macquatic on 10/1/2023

Yep, I was virtually guaranteed a reply from a die hard electric fan!
Anyway, the article isn't "Click Bait" in my view. Public rapids are all over and if you want to get somewhere (in reasonable time), they would need to be used.
The article is about charging whilst doing longer journeys, not charging your EV at home!






Define “longer journey”. 1 hour of driving? 2 hours? 4 hours? 6 hours? More? Mine will do between 4 and 5 hours driving 200 to
250 miles(if I am careful) between charges. Many EVs will do over 300 (6 hours) between charges. For “regular” purposes, 200 miles covers 90% of my travel. The other 10% is at _worst case_ the same cost as diesel or petrol.

But even if all my journeys were 400 miles (8 hours), I would still only pay an average of close to half the figures the paper quotes, because half of my charging would be from home at low cost.

The article is playing on the worst case scenario and making a noise about it.

I wouldn’t describe myself as a die hard electric fan. I acknowledge there are cases where they don’t make sense or work yet. If you can’t charge at home and drive 300 miles a day, or tow long distances every day, or tow 90% of the time - the charging network is not up to the job.

But I will also challenge poor journalism that picks on tough cases as the norm, and challenge them with my own experience and evidence. If you want to examine the worst case, then fine. It costs what the article says. But if you examine something closer to real life, it’s just doesn’t stack up.


11/1/2023 at 9:07am
 Location: Inverness
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Quote: Originally posted by tdrees on 10/1/2023
Define “longer journey”. 1 hour of driving? 2 hours? 4 hours? 6 hours? More? Mine will do between 4 and 5 hours driving 200 to
250 miles(if I am careful) between charges. Many EVs will do over 300 (6 hours) between charges. For “regular” purposes, 200 miles covers 90% of my travel. The other 10% is at _worst case_ the same cost as diesel or petrol. But even if all my journeys were 400 miles (8 hours), I would still only pay an average of close to half the figures the paper quotes, because half of my charging would be from home at low cost. The article is playing on the worst case scenario and making a noise about it.I wouldn’t describe myself as a die hard electric fan. I acknowledge there are cases where they don’t make sense or work yet. If you can’t charge at home and drive 300 miles a day, or tow long distances every day, or tow 90% of the time - the charging network is not up to the job. But I will also challenge poor journalism that picks on tough cases as the norm, and challenge them with my own experience and evidence. If you want to examine the worst case, then fine. It costs what the article says. But if you examine something closer to real life, it’s just doesn’t stack up.



Yep, electric all the way!

-------------
I came into this world with nothing and I've still got most of it left.


11/1/2023 at 11:44am
 Location: Northamptonshire
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So, in your opinion what is a "long" and what is a "short" journey? If my understanding is so way off base as to be laughable, help me out with what the "rest of the world" thinks is a long, short or average journey? Or do you want to pretend that the "truth" painted by the Telegraph is the only real view of the world (because I can assure you it does not match my world at all).


11/1/2023 at 12:38pm
 Location: Inverness
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Quote: Originally posted by tdrees on 11/1/2023
So, in your opinion what is a "long" and what is a "short" journey? If my understanding is so way off base as to be laughable, help me out with what the "rest of the world" thinks is a long, short or average journey? Or do you want to pretend that the "truth" painted by the Telegraph is the only real view of the world (because I can assure you it does not match my world at all).



Length of the journey is in the article.
Short - whatever you say it is.
No idea what the "rest of the world" thinks, don't really care either. It's a newspaper article! People will make of it what they will.
Be happy in whatever world matches you.

-------------
I came into this world with nothing and I've still got most of it left.


11/1/2023 at 4:37pm
 Location: East Herts
 Outfit: 1992 Elddis Wisp 450CT + X Trail
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As someone who never reads newspapers and hasn't done for years I have no idea what the Telegraph said, but for me a short journey is anything form a couple of miles through to about 20 miles. Over 20 miles but under 150 miles is average and much over 150 miles these days is a long journey, but this is simply due to age. There was a time when I would have quite happily driven a coach from Norfolk to Edinburgh and back in a day and did so several times, but not anymore. I rarely do more than 150 miles in a day now, so an EV would be fine for me but a suitable one is still way beyond affordable, and I doubt they ever will be so while I am still driving. Stick with what I've got and make it last as long as possible is my principle.



-------------
Best Regards,
Colin


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12/1/2023 at 1:06pm
 Location: Inverness
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Another article about EV costings. Verified by the RAC and WLTP testing, so wouldn't imagine being scaremongering or "click bait".
Average cost of rapid charging and infrastructure data

-------------
I came into this world with nothing and I've still got most of it left.


12/1/2023 at 2:14pm
 Location: Northamptonshire
 Outfit: Bailey Unicorn S3 Vigo + Polestar 2
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The title is more or less accurate. I would phrase it as "Public rapid charging is roughly the same cost as filling up with petrol or diesel".
As the article makes clear, costs vary depending on which network you use, just as they do depending on which fuel station you use.

Is the article click bait? I consider it to be so - yes. Why? Because the headline sensationalises the cost of rapid charging, and suggests that as the main cost of running an EV. But it isn't as the article its self points out. If you scroll about 15 "pages" down you get to the section "locations of charging" and specifically "base". Here - hidden near the bottom of the article is the revelation that this is where the majority of charging happens, and it's usually the cheapest way. If fails to go as far as saying it costs as little as 1/10th of the rapid cost, and can even be free if you have solar panels.

But the headline "On average, EVs are still far cheaper to "fuel" than petrol or diesel cars, even with the rising cost of electricty" is not sensational enough.

Post last edited on 12/01/2023 15:04:49


12/1/2023 at 2:34pm
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If I could afford an electric car I would buy one tomorrow.
I could charge at home and at the most, for the distances I drive, I would only need to use public chargers once possibly twice per year when I drive to France on holiday.
saxo1


via mobile 12/1/2023 at 7:07pm
 Location: Lancashire
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Seems to me that someone just doesn’t like electric cars

Bessie


12/1/2023 at 7:29pm
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The articles linked to don't represent the average motorist, they just emphasise the cost comparison for long trips which are not the norm for most car owners.
saxo1


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12/1/2023 at 7:58pm
 Location: East Herts
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Quote: Originally posted by saxo1 on 12/1/2023
If I could afford an electric car I would buy one tomorrow.
I could charge at home and at the most, for the distances I drive, I would only need to use public chargers once possibly twice per year when I drive to France on holiday.
saxo1



I'm the same, it's the initial cost that stops me buying one. I'm ideally placed to charge one at home and I doubt I'd use a public charger except when on holiday, although my holidays are always in Britain these days.

However, the cheapest EV that is suitable for me is many thousands more £ than I could ever afford. Probably 4 or 5 times what I paid for my X Trail, and even that took me over my limit really.


-------------
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Colin


via mobile 12/1/2023 at 8:47pm
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My new boss lives in Rotterdam and covers the whole of Europe, I was talking to him last week when he was en route from Hersberg in Germany (near the polish border)home on Friday afternoon I asked him if he regretted having a Tesla now there is job entailed him travelling from country to country.
he said it was perfectly fine, prior to my call he was driving at 200 km an hour effortlessly down the German autobahn he was planning to stop just before the Dutch border to refuel which he said takes 20 minutes, he had to fuel twice in his whole Journey due to the traffic being so bad.
He said he wouldn’t swap it for a diesel car at all and said that electric was just about re-educating how people think about the journey.
If I get offered one, I’d jump at it & not think twice about doing any journey, just have to plan ahead

Bessie


18/1/2023 at 3:18pm
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Closure of battery company and hence non-building of Northumbria factory "could harm plans for 2030 petrol and diesel ban".
Basically saying that the UK needs "several" battery factories when it has one, in Sunderland.



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