I presume all vehicle batteries are still Li-ion at present? If so, is fast charging to 80% or so in 20 minutes not going to cause battery problems sooner rather than later? How much does a replacement battery cost for an average EV? :|BeeEmm said:It is capable of charging from 10 to 80 percent in 18 minutes
The interior looks like a lovely place to be :?BeeEmm said:This Hyundai Ioniq 5 is taking the world by storm at the moment and has the same platform as the KIA EV6. It is capable of charging from 10 to 80 percent in 18 minutes (with the right charger).
Pondrew said:Everybody can. A massive majority of new cars are either leased or PCP (same thing in reality). You don't have to be rich to have expensive cars anymore. That's why every other car on the council estate is a Range Rover.
I have a £25k new car on the drive, costs me £115.00 plus VAT a month including road tax for three years, then just hand it back and get another one.
Electric car, though, no thanks.
buzyg said:.
Your Sincerely T-Rex![]()
BeeEmm said:It is capable of charging from 10 to 80 percent in 18 minutes (with the right charger).
Yes, the UK is once again much, much slower at preparing for 'tomorrow.' Other countries are not so slow, so the UK will catch up eventually.Flyingfifer said:Of which there are 14... in the whole of the UK. With 2 more being built currently... might struggle to storm the world once the energizer bunny runs out
BeeEmm said:Yes, the UK is once again much, much slower at preparing for 'tomorrow.' Other countries are not so slow, so the UK will catch up eventually.Flyingfifer said:Of which there are 14... in the whole of the UK. With 2 more being built currently... might struggle to storm the world once the energizer bunny runs out
You can of course use normal chargers or charge at home. Hydrogen sounds great, I have been following progress over the past 5 years. It has been very slow. Electric cars do need competition to push them to better things. As for throwing out all my music, I use Tidal, at home, in the car, in the street. I haven't had CDs or LPs for years, or mini discs (whatever those are). Where have you been?Flyingfifer said:There are only 600 stations in the USA... thats not that far ahead of us in terms of land mass.
As has been rightly pointed out Hydrogen is realistically the future here and throwing stacks of cash into the furnace to power these full EVs is like throwing out all your music and buying it on minidisk... remember those
BeeEmm said:You can of course use normal chargers or charge at home. Hydrogen sounds great, I have been following progress over the past 5 years. It has been very slow. Electric cars do need competition to push them to better things. As for throwing out all my music, I use Tidal, at home, in the car, in the street. I haven't had CDs or LPs for years, or mini discs (whatever those are). Where have you been?
firebobby said:So no brakes or suspension components to service then, amazing vehiclesWoodrow said:So I have an electric van. The savings I’ve made are immense. I bought it used so none of the new prices and tax. In town I’m not paying any congestion and often not paying parking as silly councils in their rush for green labels haven’t put parking charges on street chargers. Often charging from these are free as well. Comments about waiting hours or days to charge are just wrong. You charge and electric only to 80 percent which is always under 30 minutes. Mine takes 22 and after 80 percent it goes into trickle charge. 80 percent gives me around 140 miles. Over night at home I leave it on charge as my EV tariff only charges 5 pence per KW. I can fully charge over night for around 70 pence. There’s no servicing costs as there’s nothing to Service. I’ve had 24000 miles of quiet worry free motoring for less than a couple of tanks of regular fuel. Having said that I can’t compare against an electric car but when I turn off ECO button on my van and with my tools loaded I can wheel spin all the way to 30 mph![]()
![]()
pvr said:Thought the government was already stopping the subsidy of the EV so the prices will go up rather than down?
I was told that the new Porsche Taycan would be best as a company vehicle as the purchase price was 100% deducatable from business profit and no personal charge for it, but I see that they are already changing that now as well. Don't want to step into something that will bite me later with the usual retrospective charges they do.
greggy50 said:With regen you hardly ever use the brakes so they should last 3/4 times as long as on a ICE car.