The electric car *c...
 

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The electric car *charging* thread

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I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect to be able to charge a car up once a month, and not keep needing to hunt for available charging stations if going away from the local chargers, like somewhere away from urban areas.

You've said that you don't drive an EV and aren't interested in doing so, so you can be forgiven for having this point of view. But for anyone with a driveway, you just don't use it like an ICE. No-one would want to run their battery down over the course of a month and then charge it up. That's just not how it works, which is why no-one's pursuing this option. And you don't have to 'hunt' for chargers, they are all over the place. From personal experience - it's not the issue you think it is.

The major issue is charging if you don't have a driveway. But the solution to that is most emphatically not making cars with massive expensive 700 mile batteries - it's on-street charging.

Finally - what is unreasonable is driving around spewing toxic fumes everywhere you go and thinking it's fine and normal. I used to think this because that's what we've always done, but it's pretty terrible if you think about it. I still do it, for now, but I'm not buying another ICE car.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 8:48 am
andy4d and andy4d reacted
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@ molgrips....my comments above were in response to 5labs asking for 450kw charging.

@countzero you sound like all the other people I know who are negative about EVs having never driven/used one/lived with one. Vast majority of drivers really really don't need 500m range. 250-300 is ample as proven by multiple trips around Europe where the ultra fast chargers (~200kw) coincided with needed toilet stops and sometimes I had to abandon the sandwich search to my family to rush back and move the now ready to go car from the charger. Being a rep doing 1500 miles a week would not be a good match but there aren't a huge number of those around these days with online home-based working.

@boomerlives has it....for 95% plus of the vast majority of peoples experience (people without drives I except are not a good match). The public charging isn't perfect by any stretch (faults/too many apps, expense) yet, but I would hazard a guess neither was the petrol filling experience for the first 10-20 yrs of its evolution.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 8:48 am
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The solution to poor charging infrastructure is most emphatically not ICEs. It's better charging infrastructure.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 8:54 am
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The more I look into the whole EV ownership thing the more I think that, if you want a relatively hassle free experience and travel away from home, just get a bloody Tesla.

More chargers, more reliable, no apps or cards (just plug it in and walk away). They are even cheaper than many of the alternatives.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 8:56 am
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The more I look into the whole EV ownership thing the more I think that, if you want a relatively hassle free experience and travel away from home, just get a bloody Tesla

That's the answer to most EV related questions.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 9:28 am
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if you want a relatively hassle free experience and travel away from home, just get a bloody Tesla

I don't think this is true.

You can only plug in and walk away at a Tesla charger, and there aren't always Tesla chargers. If you drive past loads of non Tesla chargers just to avoid having to beep your debit card, you'll end up either out of your way or queueing.

Outside Scotland, all I do is stop when the car tells me to stop, plug in, *beep my debit card* and then walk away. In remote Scotland, I need another card, sure, but in most cases you'll need that with Tesla too because it's not like there are super chargers in every remote village.

Don't get me wrong, they're good cars, but like Apple the early innovation advantage they had has mostly disappeared. No matter how many times I tell people that Hyundai will plan your route with live charger information and tell you where to stop, some still seem to think this is only a Tesla feature.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 9:53 am
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 If you drive past loads of non Tesla chargers just to avoid having to beep your debit card, you’ll end up either out of your way or queueing.

Why on earth would I do that? I don't have a problem using contactless (or more likely Octopus Electroverse) if there isn't a handy Supercharger but due to the extensive Supercharger network that's rarely the case. Believe me the chances of having to queue at the Supercharger are way less than with any other charging network. Also, for me as a Tesla owner, the superchcarger network is getting on for half the price of the others.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 10:31 am
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I understand that Tesla have opened up the supercharger network to non-Teslas but am I right in thinking that you can only use it if you pay a monthly subscription and you can’t just turn up in your non-Tesla and get some electrons?


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 10:58 am
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I understand that Tesla have opened up the supercharger network to non-Teslas but am I right in thinking that you can only use it if you pay a monthly subscription and you can’t just turn up in your non-Tesla and get some electrons?

They have only opened up something like 42 Superchargers in the UK for public use. Lots more on the continent have been opened to the public. You just need the Tesla app to use them. If you want you can pay a monthly subscription (you can take it out for just one month to cover a road trip for example) to access the same price as Tesla drivers but even if you don't take out a subscription it will still be significantly cheaper than the other networks.

The only problem you'll have is if the vehicle's charge port is on the RHS of the car like VW. On older Superchargers the cables are only long enough to connect to cars with the chargeport on the rear LHS corner like Teslas so it means you would need to park in a bay and use the stall on the RHS which means you will take two bays out of action. Expect some hard stares from Tesla drivers if you try that at a busy Supercharger.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 11:11 am
roverpig and roverpig reacted
 5lab
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Personally I’m more than happy as long as the future has plentiful rapid chargers at 150+, that work, that aren’t stupidly expensive

right, which is why you (and most other people on this thread) have an EV - this thread is a bit of an echo chamber in that sense. EV uptake is growing, steadily, but is still pitifully low (under 17% of new cars), especially when you consider
1. the buy-up for new EVs has shrunk to near-zero (it is zero on the new frontera, for example)
2. EVs are way cheaper on a company car scheme
3. most people buying brand new cars are likely to have off-street parking, so home charging is less of an issue

17% is tiny, especially when you consider that most manufacturers will be charged £15,000 for every non-EV they sell if it accounts for more than 76% of their overall sales this year.

the vast majority (83% it seems) of new car buyers aren't convinced that EVs are for them. Excluding enthusiast cars that make up maybe 2% of the market, it seems highly likely the a large number of potential owners are put off by the public charging approaches being poor (as stated, day-to-day home charging is fine).


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 11:23 am
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Thanks @uponthedowns So you need to pay for a subscription to use the chargers, it just might be cheaper to do so if you use them a lot. Sounds fair enough.

Two things you often hear are: “we need lots more rapid chargers” and “we need cars with 500 mile range”. But these statements are in conflict. If you were a business would you really invest millions of pounds installing lots of rapid chargers if you thought people were going to be driving cars with a 500 mile range that they charge almost exclusively at home?


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 11:34 am
andy4d and andy4d reacted
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The solution to poor charging infrastructure is most emphatically not ICEs. It’s better charging infrastructure.

How are you going to solve that for folk like me?  I live in a flat.  there is very limited on street parking - room for maybe a dozen cars for around 60 flats in the block.  Parking in general in the area is very limited ( and charged for / residents permit only)and the local chargers ( 6 of) are limited to 4 hours use only?

In many parts of the country owning your own electric car simply is not practical and its very hard to see how it could be

the car club model could and does work.  But personal ownership?  Nope


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 11:43 am
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So you need to pay for a subscription to use the chargers, it just might be cheaper to do so if you use them a lot. Sounds fair enough.

No you don't need a subscription to use the Superchargers. You just need the Tesla app. Set up a payment method on it then hit the pizza box menu and pick "Charge your other EV" and it will show you all the public Superchargers available to non-Teslas. You only need a subscription if you want the same price as Tesla drivers get. Also Superchargers have variable tarrifs based on how busy the Supercharger is and what time of day it is. In the last year my Supercharging sessions have ranged from 33p per kWh to 55p per kWh. Busy Superchargers also charge overstay fees if you stay connected past 100% charge which IMHO every network should implement.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 12:40 pm
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How are you going to solve that for folk like me?

Can you fill up with fuel at your flat ? Nope, so you stop somewhere to do that when you need to.  Same thing with electric cars but maybe the chargers are at a place where you're going to spend 20-30 mins, maybe they're en route.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 12:41 pm
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How practical do you think that would be?  EVs can work if you can charge at home.  When you cannot then its impractical


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 12:45 pm
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How are you going to solve that for folk like me?

It's actually fairly simple but requires government level commitment to making this work.

As a starting point - clearly when you're not driving your car, it is by default parked somewhere. And that somewhere is unlikely to be somewhere that could not have a charging post installed.
What's needed then is an expansion of publicly accessible relatively low power (7kW max) chargers to cover a significant percentage of places that people park cars - public carparks, workplaces, kerbside (couple of sockets per lamp-post where they exist, addition of smaller charging posts where not) - it's all just off the standard 240V supply so the electrical infrastructure is largely there.
Note that not EVERY parking space needs these, as you don't need to charge all the time*.

These then need to be charged at a suitably affordable rate - i.e. means the govt need to be involved in this rather than leaving it to the open market.

* Assume 12,000 miles per year. Assume 3.5 mile/kW.Hr. Assume 7kW charge rate.
That's 33 miles per day, so 9.4 kW.hr per day, i.e. you need to charge for less than 1.5 hours a day on average.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 12:55 pm
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Sorry @uponthedowns I meant to type “so you don’t need to pay for a subscription” but the don’t got lost somewhere ? Thanks for clarifying though.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 12:59 pm
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Point missed

If you have no dedicated parking then you have to find a random spot.  If its an EV then you have to find a random unoccupied EV charging point.  The number of EV charging points needed would be huge.  Far better for locations like mine is the car club model


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 1:02 pm
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Rubbish.

Do you ever go shopping? Do it then.

Buy a coffee? Sit in and charge it.

Fast food? Pick one with a charger. Go on a trip? Fill on the way there or back.

If you don't want one, that's perfectly fine but to say it just won't work is patently cobblers.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 1:09 pm
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Far better for locations like mine is the car club model

That's true for many urban situations regardless of whether the car is an EV or ICE.

Although if I was part of an EV car club I'd want there to be "sufficient" charge in the car when I picked it up, so that'd probably end up with most people needing to charge it when they used it. But, as above, they can probably do that when they're stopped somewhere for another reason.  (Same expectation of an ICE too, so someone would to stop somewhere to fill it up rather than have the refuelling happen while they're doing something else)


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 1:21 pm
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a large number of potential owners are put off by the public charging approaches being poor

At the risk of being an echo chamber - how are these large numbers of potential owners put off? It's not by actual personal experience as they're not owners. It's by the disproportionately large voice (press and ICE enthusiasts of a certain age) that the anti or non-owning brigade have.

I think the lack of sales is more to do with early adopters have all bought, remaining people don't understand how it can work and are put off by all the above noise rather than the reality most owners experience most of the time.

I'm not a fanbois for the sake of it and quite happy to concede that EVs are not a convenient panacea for all (see TJs situation above). But for me and almost every one of my friends who have them, they seem to work really well and should be a large part of the transport mix for this and all countries. Nice to drive, quite non polluting. Don't require the v energy hungry and polluting (at extraction and use) fossil fuels.

Make the range of public chargers (7-150/200 kw) work in the right locations and numbers via simple contactless or one unified app. Simples....or maybe this thread shows it's not!


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 2:05 pm
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How are you going to solve that for folk like me?

Every on-street parking spot has to have a charge point that pops up out of the ground - or you can plug into a lamppost. There's a lot of development around this, but not a lot of funding for it.

Rubbish.

Do you ever go shopping? Do it then.

Buy a coffee? Sit in and charge it.

Fast food? Pick one with a charger.

I'm pro EV, as you know, but I don't think any of those would work. None of those activities take long enough to provide a meaningful amount of charge unless you are rapid charging, and it's not really practical to install that many rapids. What we need is on-street slow chargers as above. Of course, ideally we'd have better public transport and far fewer cars - just to pre-empt TJ - but that's not what the thread is about.

In fact, TJ you should be in favour of outright banning of ICEs because it would force people who live in city centres to take public transport - isn't that what you want? 🙂


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 2:21 pm
 5lab
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Do you ever go shopping? Do it then.

you'd need a very large bank rapid chargers (so they can do a weeks worth of charging in 30 mins) in urban supermarkets. It could be done, but its a long way from the "4 slow chargers at my local tesco hypermarket" we have today


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 2:30 pm
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I assumme you have thought about the funding for this molgrips?tens of millions of chargers

For me ev or ice makes very little difference in cities.  Both create pollution and congestion and make life unpleasant for the majority


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 2:40 pm
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Point missed

If you have no dedicated parking then you have to find a random spot. If its an EV then you have to find a random unoccupied EV charging point. The number of EV charging points needed would be huge. Far better for locations like mine is the car club model

No. Point not missed at all. In fact I think you've missed my point in pursuit of your "have less car ownership" model. Which is an interesting debate, but not the one that we're having. It belongs in a "less car ownership" thread rather than this one.

Re your "have to find a random spot" point - the point is that - yes - random spots would have chargers too. They would need to be installed just about EVERYEWHERE.

The whole point of "install lots of chargers" is that - yes - there are a very large number of chargers installed. They therefore need to be small, simple, cheap and realistically mass produced. The argument of "but you'll need to install so much infrastructure" was probably made when electricity or mains water systems were first introduced.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 3:19 pm
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Ok - a charger at every kerbside potential parking spot plus all public car parks?  tens of millions of them.  How is that to be funded?  Would need massive amounts of new cabling etc etc

How would you deal with those who installed their own home chargers complaining about how unfair it is they have to pay

Its not insurmountable technically but its ruddy difficult practically and politically


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 3:26 pm
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Its not insurmountable technically but its ruddy difficult practically and politically

Yes - that is exactly my point.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 3:32 pm
 5lab
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How would you deal with those who installed their own home chargers complaining about how unfair it is they have to pay

I'd imagine the easy way is that the flood of public chargers are charged out at a rate which includes some overhead to cover the cost of install in the long run.

normal car drivers are all subsidising EV owners today via the various tax breaks EVs get (company car tax, low\no VED, no fuel tax, no congestion charging, cheaper parking, etc), so I don't think thats any different


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 3:38 pm
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Fair enough.  I find the dismissal of the huge practical issues irritating.  Far too much pie in the sky.  I think EVs of the type we have now are going to be a dead end and a short lived one.

I think the car club model is a far better solution


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 3:39 pm
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I think I'll sign up for a Tesla subscription for a month. I reckon I'll be able to recoup my £9 subscription fee if I use 100kw from their chargers. I'll to use nearer 200kw anyway.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:24 pm
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I think EVs of the type we have now are going to be a dead end and a short lived one.

Really? You're expecting some sort of amazing new technology is going to be easier than putting plugs on lampposts?

Would need massive amounts of new cabling etc etc

Most streets already have electric cables in them that supply the houses and the lamp posts.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:24 pm
retrorick and retrorick reacted
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I find the dismissal of the solutions to the practical issues irritating.

There is a pretty common theme amongst the anti-EV community. A strong dismissal of the solutions to the problems, combined with a ready acceptance of alternative technologies (Hydrogen or continued use of fossil fuels being the most common ones) which actually have much more fundamental and harder to solve problems.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:25 pm
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It's not either/or tj.  I agree that for city dwellers without off street parking, owning a vehicle of any description is an expensive hassle.  I would like to buy my daughter a car if it was remotely practical, but it isn't.  But for us, it works.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:27 pm
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Really? You’re expecting some sort of amazing new technology is going to be easier than putting plugs on lampposts?

No - I am expecting private cars to become less and less common.  ( hoping? 🙂 )

Most streets already have electric cables in them that supply the houses and the lamp posts.

Which will need upgrading significantly for the extra current required.

I find the dismissal of the solutions to the practical issues irritating.

When the solutions are pie in the sky?  🙂


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:29 pm
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Two of my colleagues have taken delivery of EV's and do not charge at home. Neither can be bothered to get a point fitted. Both do 20,000+miles and manage with a little bit of change of their routine. Not a revolution, just a tweak. It's not that hard.

I think the car club model is a far better solution

That would be a bigger change for a lot of people, but you would embrace that? Shows you can bend when you want to.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:31 pm
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I agree that for city dwellers without off street parking, owning a vehicle of any description is an expensive hassle.

EVs more so

Its one of my issues with this - suburbanites forgetting the difficulties in cities

In cities IMO the car club model is a better one than individual ownership


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:32 pm
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I am not anti EV in toto.  However I do understand they do not solve the problems with private motoring in cities

I have been a car club member but it does not work for me.  I do not own a car and never have.  I hire one when needed  I have friends who are car club members and it works for them ( I tend to use a car for long out of town trips - not for round town)

Edit - my local car club now has EVs  thats a fine idea


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:35 pm
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suburbanites forgetting the difficulties in cities

Cities have rapid chargers, out of town retail places have rapid chargers, it's not that hard.

I do not own a car and never have. 

Maybe formulating car infrastructure to suit you is a wasted endevour?

The lampost thing above is the easy way. My car has plug and charge - plug it in and walk away and it works automagically and the cost goes on my card. It's not the most difficult thing to sort out.

Opening peoples minds is harder. Much harder.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 4:45 pm
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Which will need upgrading significantly for the extra current required.

You might be surprised.

There are problems, with solutions that need to be found; but don't forget that ICEs spewing fumes everywhere is one of those problems, not a solution.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 5:10 pm
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How practical do you think that would be? EVs can work if you can charge at home. When you cannot then its impractical

What a massively sweeping statement that unsurprisingly is wrong.

I've driven over 30k miles in the last 18 months and cannot charge at home. There's no denying I've had to change my habits, but they're just different, not worse.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 5:25 pm
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TJ - why do you find it so hard to visualise change on a large scale? This is all far from pie in the sky - it's technologically straightforward and politically is actually happening.

According to zap-map there are 68,273 electric vehicle charging points across the UK, across 35,230 charging locations. This represents a year-on-year increase of 41% in the number of public devices, with 19,823 installed since August 2023. There are several providers not covered by zap-map too such as connected kerb etc so the actual number will be higher.

Re future quantity rise needed to enable on-street parking - just look at the recent / ongoing changes to street lighting for evidence we can make high volume change - there are circa 6-7 million lamp posts in the UK, and 55% are already converted from older tech to LED. That's a similar order of magnitude to the number of chargers needed, and a similar level / cost of change to add a simple AC charge outlet to swapping the whole light head over. Very rough figures from some quick googling but from an order of magnitude perspective that's good enough.

Re peak power capacity - Lamp Posts I believe are usually powered via the DNO cable - i.e. the 3 phase cable in the street that is capable of supplying power to every house in that particular street / zone etc. So no issues with peak power capacity if the wiring from lamp post to DNO is upgraded. A commercial supplier ( https://ubitricity.com/en/charging-solutions/ac-lamppost/) is quoting 5.5kW max - I assume that's using the existing cabling so maybe not even any need to do that.

Re overall power capacity - bear in mind the earlier calc that for 12K miles a year you would need to charge for <1.5 hrs a day at 7kW, so actually the street furniture chargers don't need to be 7kW - half that would easily do. And most cars would not need to plug in every day - once a week overnight would be plenty for the majority it people.

Re power GRID capacity - the UK grid has plentiful capacity at off-peak times - either at night when baseload generation outstrips demand or during the day when solar etc is generating. EV charging is typically targeted for those times, so there would be little additional peak demand on the grid.

Not much pie in the sky going on here.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 5:56 pm
slowol, benjamins11, mrchrispy and 3 people reacted
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TJ – why do you find it so hard to visualise change on a large scale?

I think he just likes to point out problems - which isn't a bad thing in itself. On one thread it's 'cars are bad', on another it's 'EVs are rubbish because people in cities can't use them'. Surely if people can't use cars then that's a good thing by your own logic? Or he's assuming that anyone in favour of a particular thing is touting it as the solution to everything. He's very black and white that chap 🙂


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 6:22 pm
andy4d and andy4d reacted
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Re the charging solutions, what @whatgoesup says is promising, but this really does need some government action to push it all through or at least unblock it.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 6:24 pm
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this really does need some government action to push it all through

Yes - it really does. Left to the private sector this will just “rip off” those who can’t install their own chargers - see connected kerb right now. 50p/kw.hr for a 7kW charger really isn’t an economical way to charge. These kerbside chargers need to be much closer to the prices you can get on domestic tarrifs to not be pretty unfair to those without their own chargers


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 6:33 pm
 DrP
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Also, I think a massive untapped source of chargers is those people who DO have a drive and a charger...

I think with a bit of planning and a financial incentive, using private chargers could work.

I see no reason why someone couldn't use my charger 3 nights a week, or in the day, if the system was set up so

a - i receive payment

and

b - people don't leave their car on my drive for a week..

A good feedback system would help with that i.e if you're a "bad user of my charger" I can ban you from the whole network etc etc..

DrP


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 7:02 pm
andy4d and andy4d reacted
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@drp - that already exists. There are a few services allowing this that you can sign up to as a provider or user.


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 7:22 pm
 DrP
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that'll learn me for thinking of a new idea eh!!!

DrP


 
Posted : 11/09/2024 8:18 pm
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At the risk of being an echo chamber – how are these large numbers of potential owners put off?

I've been meaning to respond to this for a while. Strap in, it could be a long one 🙂  I've been doing a bit of EV research recently. Basically questioning everything, as is my wont and I've come to a few conclusions.

First, it is quite hard for any normal person to get an accurate picture of EVs. Basically everyone seems to have an agenda and the algorithms on places like YouTube favour those who shout the loudest. There are some thoughtful discussions of the issues, but they tend to get buried in all the noise.

I think ICE cars may end up being a bit like smoking. Bear with me here. When I was growing up in the 80s, in a family of five, by the time we all reached 16 it was only me and the dog that didn't smoke and I wasn't too sure about the dog. To be honest, the only reason I didn't smoke was because I'd been asthmatic as a kid and my lungs objected every time I tried to look cool. Basically almost everyone smoked, just like almost everyone drives an ICE car. There is/was a well funded oil/tobacco lobby trying to keep things that way. there are/were a few environmental or heath nuts bucking the trend, but they are/were a small minority and easy to ignore. But they are/were growing and government agencies have good reason to encourage that growth.  At some point a tipping point is reached.  I expect that in the end the minority of ICE drivers will also be portrayed as selfish people polluting the air of others. I'm just not sure when that will be.

But back to now and what is putting off potential buyers. It's important to recognise that there are various different types of car buyer and not all are put off.

Those getting company cars or buying through a salary sacrifice are being given some big tax incentives to buy an EV, which is basically what is keeping the prices of new EVs up and funding the transition.

Those who lease cars for a couple of years may be happy enough to give one a go as they know they will hand it back soon.

The tougher nut to crack is those who tend to buy cars outright (new or second hand) and keep them until they need replacing. Some of those will be convinced by the environmental arguments and will be happy to buy and just accept the costs, but most want to know what the true "costs" (in the broadest sense) will be and that's where it can be hard to get an accurate picture with all the noise.

Some common concerns that stop these people going electric are:

Long journeys will be a pain: This is becoming less of an issue all the time as range creeps up and more chargers are installed. But it's still the case that a long journey will probably take longer overall in an EV and may involve more hassle at busy times. There is also the fear that a car bought now will look pretty outdated in a few years when a 500 mile range may be normal. Personally I'm not sure that will be the case and I expect that we're more likely to see cheaper 300 mile range cars than 500 mile ones, but it's a common fear that puts people off buying an EV.

The car will be scrap in five years: Almost certainly rubbish, but a common claim. A car with, say, a 60 kwh battery is still going to have a battery around 50 kwh in probably ten let alone five years. Battery prices will come down but that's still going to have value. Electric motors also last ages. So, I expect that a ten year old EV will actually be worth more than a ten year old ICE car in 2034.

They are more expensive: True for brand new cars but we've almost reached price parity (like for like) on 1-2 year old cars of the same type.

Very expensive to insure. That can be an issue if you are not careful. A Model 3 long range (for example) is insurance group 50. With insurance prices increasing the way they are, you could easily see the extra insurance costs wiping out any savings you make in fuel costs if you don't do big miles. But a Model 3 LR is a two-ton car that does 0-62 in 4.4s. Of course it is going to be expensive to insure. The problem is that it's easy to give an EV more power and power sells, particularly to the type of people who are buying new EVs (company car drivers). Even a middle of the road EV has hot-hatch acceleration these days and that is going to make insurance more expensive.


 
Posted : 13/09/2024 5:29 pm
bassmandan, stingmered, bassmandan and 1 people reacted
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Random thought, given the torque/acceleration on EV's... why can they not simply electronically limit it, so instead of having a car that does  0-60 in 4 seconds, set it to ten seconds or whatever?

Surely that has to be better for the battery charge and battery lifespan, better for tyre wear, better for insurance, etc, etc, ?


 
Posted : 13/09/2024 5:44 pm
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Because it shows they are 'better' than ICE.

Teslas are a crap example of EV. They are difficult to repair because Tesla won't release parts to non-franchise repairers. Used for catapult launches by show offs. And driven fast when the handling is awful, which can get you into trouble if not ready for it.

The market is being exposed to lots of ex company EV's and prices are being driven down as supply exceeds demand. It'll level off at some point.


 
Posted : 13/09/2024 5:53 pm
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The tougher nut to crack is those who tend to buy cars outright (new or second hand) and keep them until they need replacing.

That's me. 3 years ago I bought a VW eUp!, as our 'local' car. My wife and I tend to go to places independently so we have two cars, the other is ICE (Focus), for longer trips or to carry loads. My calculation at the time was that the car cost £6-7k more than the ICE version and the reduction in running cost would mean break even in about 6 years. Electricity prices have risen since then so it will take longer, but probably half our charging is from PV which would otherwise go back to the grid and not earn much, so I still think it will be worthwhile. So far, I've seen no drop in battery capacity. If it does need expensive work later in it's life, it's probably a smaller risk than the Focus (on its 3rd clutch and with the Ecoboost wet belt and cooling issues).


 
Posted : 13/09/2024 5:59 pm
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The tougher nut to crack is those who tend to buy cars outright (new or second hand) and keep them until they need replacing.

Why? EVs are likely to last much longer and with far less maintenance than ICEs. The cars that are available now have such good battery management that they will last a really long time. The limiting factor will be interior parts like the seats, infotainment and the tech that is fitted. The electronics under the bonnet will have a far easier time as it's heat and vibration that kill electronics; which aren't present anywhere near as much in an EV. You may get a duff cell or two but they are replaceable, you don't need an entire pack.

They are more expensive: True for brand new cars

I think that even now that's artificial. They are charging more because the demand is there fuelled by company car tax breaks. The next lot of cheap EVs released in the next couple of years will be cheaper than equivalent ICEs, and it really won't be long before they are cheaper across the board.

A car with, say, a 60 kwh battery is still going to have a battery around 50 kwh in probably ten

Not even that. The car with a 60kWh battery pack will only let you use 55kWh from new. In ten years it might be at 54kWh, so basically the same as new. And after the first few years the degradation stabilises anyway. I've got nearly 80k on mine, the range is the same as new. I might've lost a few miles since the tyres I have might be better than the OEM ones, I don't know.

But it’s still the case that a long journey will probably take longer overall in an EV

I disagree. The shortest possible journey time will be in an ICE i.e. if you don't stop at all; but most people (which covers the 'probably' clause) stop to eat, piss, by coffee etc. As I've said, in my short range slow car on the way to Scotland I only spent about half an hour actually waiting for it to charge. All the other stops I was looking after myself and I would probably have made them anyway. If I were in a modern car, I would certainly have spent more time stationary than was needed for charging.

Very expensive to insure

I'll give you that; but it's going to have to change due to market forces. Repairers will have to get better rather than just avoid EVs like many do now.

Random thought, given the torque/acceleration on EV’s… why can they not simply electronically limit it

There isn't really any need. The battery engineers, being skilled and experienced know what their batteries can do. As for tyre wear - drive like a ****er, wear your tyres out - this has always been the case.

300bhp is about 220kW. That means it's very roughly 3C discharge rate i.e. triple the 1hr rating of a 70-80kWh battery, or enough to drain it in 20 minutes. That's nothing for a lithium ion battery, especially one that's carefully managed. And by definition you're only using that power for a very short time unless you're on a track.

Someone from Volvo was asked why they made the EX-30 so fast (3s 0-60) and they said that they already had these motors being supplied for their fancy cars and they just stuck two in the small one rather than design something new - and that's how fast it goes. So rather than artificially limit it for no reason, they left it like that. I wouldn't use it often but it might be handy overtaking.

The market is being exposed to lots of ex company EV’s and prices are being driven down as supply exceeds demand. It’ll level off at some point.

The price of used Ioniqs is plummeting - they're cheaper than the exact same cars in petrol/diesel hybrid now. But whilst on paper their stats aren't good they are still fantastic cars. However I've been keeping an eye on Ioniq 5 prices and they dropped but have now stabilised for the last 6-9 months or so.


 
Posted : 13/09/2024 7:56 pm
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My Ioniq is charging at 31kw/h at a Tesla fast charger! Luckily we aren't in a rush.

Took a while for the app to start up as well. I think that had more to do with my network producer than Tesla though.


 
Posted : 14/09/2024 9:36 am
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Charging has sped up to 47kw/h. All is forgiven.

Cheap with the subscription. So that's a bonus.


 
Posted : 14/09/2024 9:43 am
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I just topped up in Aberystwyth on Tesla at 205kw! I think that's all the car can take.

Smelt a bit, well, BBQ - but much miles in 20 mins


 
Posted : 14/09/2024 4:43 pm
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@retrorick what percentage did you start at?

Rapid charging up to I think 60% is up to about 48kW, depending on the battery temperature - and it doesn't heat it up whilst chariging as far as I know. So you're limited to the heat you get from your driving and the charging process itself. I've seen as you describe in cooler weather, but when on a motorway trip in warmer weather I generally get 45+ within 30s or so of plugging in.


 
Posted : 14/09/2024 7:12 pm
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4 stops in total to get to Inverness. 375miles, 84kw from Tesla chargers. Had a reasonable battery level at the start of charging sessions. Car performed well. Camping on a site with astroturf pitches. IMG_20240914_181955


 
Posted : 14/09/2024 7:40 pm
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Nice!


 
Posted : 14/09/2024 8:56 pm
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Quick question about home charger installation ... our fuse box is in the middle of the house so we'll have to have Ohme's non-standard installation which is fine, but what are the internal cables like? it'll need to go a short distance around some of the dining room before making its way down the inside of the garage before popping out the wall into the back of the charger.

Are we talking cabling the size of your finger like we put in out to the shed or the stuff that the cooker's wired up to? they also mention trunking which I presume is going to be the box stuff?


 
Posted : 18/09/2024 3:47 pm
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Someone should have paid for a service diversion when that extension was built.

What's the construction method of the floor in there? But yes, if you want to pass a lot of current it will be a bigger cable.

7kW charger will pull around 32A. That will be a 6mm² conductor which makes for a cable about 12mm (½") in diameter


 
Posted : 18/09/2024 4:21 pm
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The extension was already done when we got here, judging by everything else we've done after the last 8 years it was done on the cheap (the floor's 10mm higher than the kitchen FFS!), I'd have done it differently if it were me, but unfortunately it wasn't - floor itself is a poured concrete slab with wooden flooring over the top.

There's an old style fuse box in the garage but it's not on it's own spur so no self-respecting sparky's going to touch that to wire in an EV point, hence it'll be going back to the new consumer unit (well about 6 years old). In an ideal world you'd go under the floor but it's only 2m around a corner of the dining room that no-one will notice and that'll be a far cheaper option. Could I whip the skirting off and get them to run it behind that?

If they're talking trunking is that just beautification for inside the house? or are they going to want to run it all the way through the garage etc too?

At least the house is already on a 100amp fuse.


 
Posted : 18/09/2024 5:28 pm
 Rio
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You normally connect the EV charger to the incoming power at the meter box, not through the consumer unit. Mine has its own mini weatherproof consumer unit sitting next to the meter box because the installer couldn't fit all the gubbins in the box, ymmv, the cable to the EV charger goes outside the house.


 
Posted : 18/09/2024 7:15 pm
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I have been charging slowly but successfully along the nc500 using CPS chargers and podpoint at Tesco.

Used the CPS RFID card to initiate all the charges. Successful on the 2nd attempt if not the first. I think the fast DC chargers prefer the car to be switched off and locked to start the charging?IMG_20240918_130606


 
Posted : 18/09/2024 8:24 pm
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@Rio unfortunately the meter's next to our consumer unit, in the under-stairs cupboard which is accessed via the kitchen. It used to be on the outside wall until the extension went up sometime in the 90's but the cable route is the same whether it goes straight into the meter or via the consumer unit.

I've an idea on the route they'll take but we'll see what happens when the installation quote comes through (just waiting on the link to kick all that off).


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 9:26 am
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>You normally connect the EV charger to the incoming power at the meter box, not through the consumer unit.

Totally wrong I'm afraid , that's just lazy installers not wanting to go into the main consumer unit, or finding it full.

In fact it breaks DNO and government rules to fit none supply equipment in the meter box, the official line is:

"If a DNO or MOP attends the premises to carry out work on their equipment and insufficient space is available within the meter enclosure, work will not be able to proceed. The customer will need to organise (at their expense) the removal of unrelated equipment to create the space needed for the work to be carried out.

NICEIC strongly recommends that electrical contractors do not install any other equipment within meter enclosures."


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 9:39 am
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So now I have an EV – what do I need to know about charging on the go (sorry if has been covered, but there are lots of posts to wade through). I am travelling to the Peak District from Yorkshire on Monday and I want to charge at the destination as I will then be spending a few days in the Peaks and won't have lots of time to recharge.

My question is – if I go to a Sainsbury's (or similar) can I just drive up, swipe my bank card and charge? Or should I be prepared with an account with someone like Shell Recharge or whatever? Can I recharge at Tesla stations (it isn't a Tesla) – I have read before that *some* Tesla points will charge non-Teslas but other don't! I remain very confused about the options on offer.

Edit: And can anyone recommend a good Apple app with charging locations?


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 9:46 am
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>You normally connect the EV charger to the incoming power at the meter box, not through the consumer unit.

Totally wrong I’m afraid , that’s just lazy installers not wanting to go into the main consumer unit, or finding it full.

In fact it breaks DNO and government rules to fit none supply equipment in the meter box, the official line is:

“If a DNO or MOP attends the premises to carry out work on their equipment and insufficient space is available within the meter enclosure, work will not be able to proceed. The customer will need to organise (at their expense) the removal of unrelated equipment to create the space needed for the work to be carried out.

NICEIC strongly recommends that electrical contractors do not install any other equipment within meter enclosures.”

Glad to hear that!

Connection directly at the meter would make my install a bit more awkward.  I'm taking the EV plunge with collection tomorrow, and Octopus should be fitting a new smart meter in a few weeks time.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 10:13 am
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ZapMap has come up a lot in my investigations. Seems to also tell you the cost, payment methods of the charger and also if it's available or not. Haven't used it in anger yet but have been 'using' it on the odd journey to get familiar with it for when we get the EV.

GridServe seem to be the provider for a lot of service stations, so that's probably a good one to have.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 10:15 am
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Ahh thank you – that looks a very useful app.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 10:53 am
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I'm not a charging on the go expert, only ever done it a couple of times, but if you are an Octopus customer at home it's probably worth getting an Electroverse card as you get a discount on lots of chargers.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 11:14 am
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I know some people have questioned how the national grid would cope with a mass uptake of EVs so I was interested to read a RTE article that data centres pose a much bigger draw on power here in Ireland.

“Irish data centres now store the data for a large portion of the population of Europe, many times greater than that of Ireland. Over 20% of the electricity in Ireland is now consumed by data centres and this is increasing. Some will argue that these are a necessary part of the tech economy, but others view these as electricity-and-water gobbling Frankensteins. The high demand raises the overall price of electricity for all consumers, not just electric car drivers.

Let’s do some quick calculations on the impacts of electric cars versus data centres. There are currently about 125,000 EVs on the road in Ireland. Assuming that the typical EV drives 15,000 kilometres per year and consumes 0.2 kWh (kilowatt-hours) of electricity per kilometre, how much electricity do EVs consume annually compared to data centres?

125,000 EVs doing 15,000 km a year results in 1,875 million km gross annually requiring 375 million kWh of charging electricity. That 375 million kWh for EVs in 2024 is about only 3 weeks (or 6%) worth of the electricity consumed by data centres in the past 52 weeks, which was about 6,500 million kWh.

If every one of the 2.5 millions cars in Ireland went electric, this would require about 7,500 million kWh of charging electricity, marginally greater than the electricity consumption of about 6,500 million kWh by data centres last year. Even if every car sold from tomorrow onwards was electric, it’s going to take decades for EVs to consume more electricity than data centres. Indeed, such an outcome might never happen unless there is a major crisis or a major technology shift. Our embrace of AI will further increase the energy requirements for data centres, with co-located nuclear power stations being discussed internationally as a solution to powering data centres.”


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 11:17 am
goldfish24, big_scot_nanny, goldfish24 and 1 people reacted
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In England you can generally just drive up, plug in, wave something contactless, and you're charging. There can be better deals through special cards and apps, but if you're a very occasional charger in random locations, probably not worth the bother. On our rare uses we've mainly used motorway service stations because that's where we've been driving and it's handy for a piss break. Zapmap for locations.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 11:50 am
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>You normally connect the EV charger to the incoming power at the meter box, not through the consumer unit.

Totally wrong I’m afraid , that’s just lazy installers not wanting to go into the main consumer unit, or finding it full.

That's not the case in the real world.

I had to get the DNO out to replace the backboard in the meter cupboard before smart meters could be installed.  I was talking with the Sparky and told him I was going to be getting a charger and when he wired it all back up, he put in bigger connector blocks that the charger geezer put the new tails into. These went directly to a new CU just for the charger that lives under the stairs. From there the armoured cable runs out to the box on the wall.

He also put in a 100A main fuse to save more bother down the line.

Also, the CT clamp lives in the same area, how's that work without some cabling into the box?


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 4:15 pm
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My question is – if I go to a Sainsbury’s (or similar) can I just drive up, swipe my bank card and charge?

For rapid chargers, yes - in England, Wales and the busier parts of Scotland. Rapids tend to be run by big companies like Osprey, Ionity.

Charging at your destination is a bit more tricky because there are many small providers who require an app. But generally this isn't very useful in my experience because if you're spending a couple of hours at a place that's not enough, but if you are staying overnight then blocking one of the charge points for 14 hours feels a bit off when someone else might need it. Plus if it's a hotel etc there might be 3 charge points but way more EVs than that, so who gets the charge point?

I just don't bother and rapid charge on the way there and the way back. Its far easier. And I just wave my debit card.

As for apps to find chargers - Zap Map is ok, but the live feed isn't the most accurate. In my car (Hyundai) the satnav is by far the best option. Just put your destination in and it will route you to the best chargers that are free. The only caveat is that if you cannot charge at your destination you need to put home -> destination -> home in!

Re the grid - in the UK at least, we have been steadily using less electricity since about 2008 or so. The amount we've saved is more than enough to cater for every car in the country to be an EV.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 4:22 pm
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Time for another picture with my car successfully charging at a CPS charger. This time Ullapool...IMG_20240919_150124


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 4:46 pm
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Had 100 miles of range on arrival. 45 minutes later, 180 miles. Bought a bottle of beer whilst I was waiting...IMG_20240919_163539


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 4:50 pm
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@andy4d - re datacentres.
The other thing with datacentres is that they consume power 24/7, and will rise when the general population is busy online doing stuff, i.e. during the day / peak times, so add to the peak load demand on the grid.
The majority of EVs tend to charge at off-peak times, i.e. overnight when demand is low, plus that demand is shiftable by incentivising users with variable rate tarrifs etc.

So the effect of EVs on the grid isn't a 1:1 relationship with datacentres, it's quite a bit easier for the grid to manage.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 4:57 pm
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We (the Mrs) have a Peugeot e2008, bought outright, 2nd hand, this May. we have just moved to Intelligent Octopus Go - 28 August. I have been trying to shift any load that I can - Washing Machine, Dishwasher, Tumble Dryer - to off-peak rate of 7p kwh.

IOG gives access to the cheap rate from 23.30 to 05.30 every day, as well as whenever the car is charging as long as you cede direct control to Octopus via Ohme.

Today my wife had a lift to work, so I drove her EV to work. She is out tonight and needs to do about a 100 mile round-trip, so when I returned home from work I stuck her car on to charge, telling the charger I needed another 25% of battery charged by 5.30pm. The charger does it's calcs and starts charging.

My understanding is that all the electricity consumption of the house is at 7p kwh while this is happening. I managed to wash a machine load of biking gear on the right setting, plus run the softshells through in TXDirect after they had been washed.

We are getting pretty good at off-peak usage. It is easy with the Washing Machine and Dryer, but I need to make a wee button-bot activated lever to switch on the dishwasher at 11.30pm.


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 6:02 pm
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Just about to phone Octopus to sort out some home charging..... And looking at their electroverse plan for on-the-go charging. Will need to work out how to charge company for charging electrons as am doing it as a company car thing. Wasn't sure for a while, but a mate, who has no off street charging in Hove - relying on lampposts, has made it work for the last 4 years, and sometimes manages to drive up to Glasgow and back without major ballache. Most of our driving being local ish means we should be 95% home charged. Appreciate I'm lucky to have a drive for charging, but public charging infrastructure moving so quick seems like it's the way forward. Kia reckon they will be EV only by 2030


 
Posted : 19/09/2024 6:19 pm
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Johndoh: download the Tesla app, register and you'll see the charge points you can use. Enter the detail of a bank card when you want to use one, Tesla only debit the leccy you use.

If Tesla charge points cover your needs forget the rest. If you have to use any other network arm yourself with patience and make sure you've got enough kms left to get to another charge point if /when it doesn't work. Tesla = reasonably priced, reliable and enough of them to avoid queues except on holiday departure days.


 
Posted : 20/09/2024 6:47 am
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