The way electricity prices are heading,, they’re becoming increasingly difficult to justify IMHO.
Owning an electric car for the last 2 months, it has been an eye opener and has required a rethink on many levels. Not a challenge, but it definitely requires a change in ways of thinking and planning. Sounds onerous, but it is not - once you change your mindset.
Our idea was also to have a car to use for long distance day trips (visiting family etc.). Around town it is usually a walk or cycle.
The Model 3 has proven to be a great vehicle and the best part of it is, where it plans the charging points for you. I, for one, appreciate that it has taken that one additional step of planning for chargers off the cards.
To be on the safer side, I have installed about 9 charging apps for the UK and subscribed etc, so that in case in a fix at any time, I know that I have backup options.
So far, it has been good. Done some very long distances and the car does make driving easy.
I have still not installed a home charger and rely on local chargers but considering one - which is a minefield in itself.
Our parking is in a detached area behind our row house so had to first put about 50 meters of underground ducting to get electricity to the parking location. This is now done.
I was convinced that a zappi charger is the best before someone on a forum mentioned that it looks like a urinal! And ever since I've been looking for an alternate one. Need solar as well as alternate battery storage charging to make it future proof.
agree. Though the way I am thinking about it - the "software system" with the Tesla especially is something that is not available on petrol cars as yet. I am more sold on the driving and navigation features than on just the electric part of the car. As a full-package including driving, comfort, support systems and ease of use, IMHO, it is justifiable. In the process, you are possibly taking a small step towards a greener planet (I know, I know, that discussion is a minefield in itself).The way electricity prices are heading,, they’re becoming increasingly difficult to justify IMHO.
Really depends how you are going to use it. Charging away from home routinely will eat into savings against ICE, most rapid chargers seem to be around £0.50 / kWh. But if you charge mostly at home and use a decent ev tariff then savings are substantial.The way electricity prices are heading,, they’re becoming increasingly difficult to justify IMHO.
I can't get that out of my head ... and as of now thinking that I will go for a Zappi and then look to change the front plate doing some DIY to the shape (which I know I will not, and cringe everytime I look at it then ). Also looking at an Andersen - as they have a £200 discount going on right now.At the moment we use a 3 pin plug to charge but have a charger being installed in the next few weeks - it is a Zappi, hadn’t linked it to a urinal before but now you mention it I can see the resemblance.
We have at least gone for the black/grey one rather than the white….The Zappi is pushed on the solar integration so that may be a factor.I can't get that out of my head ... and as of now thinking that I will go for a Zappi and then look to change the front plate doing some DIY to the shape (which I know I will not, and cringe everytime I look at it then ). Also looking at an Andersen - as they have a £200 discount going on right now.
Nail on the head, we'll prob drive ours over the UK next summer, network for Tesla and Ionity is incredible and as for a daily, I use the ebike and then the car but appreciate the feel good feeling on even those short trips to the shops. Nice to read a post from the open minded part of this forum too.Easy for me to say as we have an EV but it’s not all about cost comparisons.
Our electric car is the best car we’ve owned by a country mile. It’s not just me, my wife loves driving it.
It’s quiet, super quiet and I don’t feel guilty driving it, it’s a really calming experience.
Electric cars or at least ours are so simple to drive; mostly one pedal driving, no handbrake, no worries about rolling back on hills, simple.
I’ve now turned into one of those people who are happy to do a quick super market run as I don’t mind driving at all, in fact I enjoy it.
It can pre cool the interior when it’s super hot and heat it when it’s cold.
Best thing is that every morning we have a full tank ready to go and don’t miss the trips to the patrol station.
We’ve not had one issue charging and I don’t worry before long journeys. Though to be fair if we’re going Cornwall / Devon I will do a pre check but not had any issues on these trips.
We do now use our Cali less and less, sad to say any ICE vehicle for me now feels a little antiquated, keep forgetting to pull the handbrake up!
So as I said, it’s not all cost & spreadsheets for us, I fully understand most of us here are in a privileged position already owning or looking for a California and that cost of living is going up like crazy.
However if you are considering an EV and all you’re looking at is cost comparisons maybe go test drive an EV and see what you think for yourself.
If you rely only on public charging then I agree.
Though overnight tariffs are still great value.
A full charge (around 275 miles) costs us around £5.50
We have an Audi Q4 Etron Sportback getting delivered tomorrow. Commute is only 50miles per day but a free charging point at work and low BIK rate made it the best option for us.
generate electricity from the sun so the logical step is solar, and the more investment in solar and on / offshore wind will see cheaper and cheaper prices, it’s greedy operators in the UK, even at the worst of the peak in Stockholm we only hit 1kr per KWh during the day, at night I’m paying 7-30 öre (the tax is 45 öre), the UK public must love being fisted, by anything.Sounds like you’re on a vey low tarif. Could be very different when that expires or for any new entrants. How do the numbers look at 75p per kwh?
Main difference is that you can generate your own electricityThat’s the way the govt is going about adoption, tax bribes. These will end once a critical mass is achieved (sound familiar, the switch from petrol to diesel 20 years ago?). With eye watering purchase or lease costs and skyrocketing electricity rates, it’s going to be long, slow road.
Sounds like you’re on a vey low tarif. Could be very different when that expires or for any new entrants. How do the numbers look at 75p per kwh?
If electric went to 75p per kWh I’d have solar installed.
What would you do if diesel went up 10 fold?
The part that they do not advertise (or maybe it is in the small print below) - the free chargers are the same as a 3 pin plug at home and may give you up to 3 miles in an hour. My weekly shop is usually 30 mins, so that does not help there.
I wasn’t aware that VW were in any way responsible for the chargers at Tesco, which are free to use by any ev not just VW - which is indicated in the advert. Thought VW were aligned with ionity not pod point. The ones round us charge at 7kwh so 2-3 times 3 pin plug, equivalent to a single phase home charger.
A typical weekly shop can put about 10miles in our Q4. So, as you say - better than a 3pin plug and better than nothing but certainly not worth getting excited about.I wasn’t aware that VW were in any way responsible for the chargers at Tesco, which are free to use by any ev not just VW - which is indicated in the advert. Thought VW were aligned with ionity not pod point. The ones round us charge at 7kwh so 2-3 times 3 pin plug, equivalent to a single phase home charger.
The VW California Club is the worlds largest resource for all owners and enthusiasts of VW California campervans.