mmm-five said:
SonnyA85 said:
A plug in hybrid could replace that. The more up front cost you get back with the savings on diesel.
You can get hybrid diesel vehicles also but my experience is only with lexus which had been a fantastic car. I'm thinking of getting another lexus in future when I go all electric now they have all electric versions
What model do you have, and what’s it’s “real world” economy on a 200-300 mile non-stop journey?
My 320D returns no lower than 45mpg no matter how I drive (including hooning through Wales, Scotland, Germany)…and the OBC is currently showing 47.5mpg which includes a recent 1400 mile trip to do the NC500. Official WLTP figures for it are 59-64mpg…so I have a leaden right foot
I’d like to replicate this in an EV or hybrid…and I know I’m probably an edge-case here as most other buyers would do a 20-40 mile commute on purely electric power and charge each night.
A few guys in work have the 330E plug in and moan about how uneconomical they are. Basically a 2.0 4 pot turbo with ability to run on electric only for around 30 miles IIRC. So decent if your doing local trips but anything further than 15 Miles out and your running on petrol if you don’t stop to charge up again.
Makes a mockery of the road tax & company car tax too as if you do any decent mileage nowhere near as clean as they claim. Cars like the Mitsubishi PLEV fall into this category too, claim something like 123mpg which is laughable.
My company car is a 2019 Prius, I view it as a tool and nothing more, it’s not that difficult to achieve real world mpg of 65MPG, measured by checking miles driven against litres used. I suspect it’s actually cleaner than the 330E but as it has very limited ‘electric only’ range the CO2 figures can’t compete for ‘testing’ purposes.
I would not recommend the Prius for any kind of driver involvement, that’s what my Z4 is for.