If you’re interested in rapid when out and about with the P400e when you get it, then Instavolt, Gridserve, BP Pulse, Shell Recharge and Osprey amongst others just allow you to use a contactless debit card now on a pay as you go basis.
For slower 7kW destination chargers in car parks/shopping centres etc, PodPoint and Pulse are two of the most common, and can be started with the respective Apps.
Chap at work bought a Prius that had been used as a taxi from new,bought it with 275k on the clock and no issues whatsever.
When and if I go hybrid Ill certainly be looking at what taxi drivers have been driving,no better group off people to prove the reliability of certain brands imo.
I used to be a nay-sayer about EV cars, but Mrs Yumma bought one and now I absolutely love it and am a humble pie eating convert. The instant torque and refinement is fantastic but best of all are the running costs. I checked our Charger App and due to our overnight discounted energy rate, our overall running cost for the whole of February was £6.09!!! The car is used most days and mainly local trips, but that is less money than a Gallon of petrol; incredible. January was under a fiver!
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Been told by Jaguar that the F Pace that was not due until September/October will now be delivered early April. Anyone else had similar news on new cars?
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
Im waiting for a petrol hybrid Evoque which i ordered last year, the dealership rang me with an update this week and he said more cars were coming through now. I’m waiting until October because thats when my lease runs out but he was quoting 4-6 months where last year it was 12 months +
From what I’m reading on the Enyaq forums, it’s going the opposite way with Skoda. They do have plants in Russia though or they get parts from Russia, something like that and now with the war, those places aren’t accessible.
Does anyone have the Volvo XC40 Full EV that they can advise on (good or bad)?
Test drove a top spec (£49k) PHEV version last week and really liked it. Got the chance of ordering the entry level full EV and I’m just weighing up whether it’s a good move.
It’s a company car and I’ve worked out it would be costing me about £274 a month, that’s car, insurance, BIK tax, maintenance etc
My brother has one in order for his wife to replace her diesel XC40. He has just taken delivery of a model Y (he also has a model X) which is using until hers is ready.
He’s hoping that she falls in love with it and he can cancel the order for the XC. His plan is to sell the X at that time and either buy the XC or buy himself a model 3.
I thought the Skoda plant was in Ukraine rather than Russia from what friend said as work colleague Enyaq got put back to September at earliest. Quick google says bit of both:
https://www.rte.ie/news/business/202...3fd53d65f759a1
"Skoda said its supply chain consisted of a number of suppliers in western Ukraine.
The Czech carmaker said production was still running at its two plants in Russia, which has been hit by Western sanctions for its invasion of Ukraine."
Has an interesting revelation about our ID.3- cruising at 75 - 80 kills the range. At 65, we saw a genuine 270+ miles.
My EV6 was delivered on Thursday. The wife has a Nissan Leaf so we are used to EV driving but the power and acceleration on this machine is something else.
So quite a few Tesla owners on here but does anybody have a Jag I-Pace, if so would you recommend? Looking to convert to the EV fold.
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Just been looking at the Cupra Born 58kw with the etron 230 motor, it’s basically an ID 3 with a bit better looks. I did spend a weekend in an Ionic 5 and loved it but don’t really fancy shelling out for one if these and the Born looks like a decent bit of kit.
Anyone else been looking at these or got any info?
As you say, it’s an ID.3 in a party frock, batteries and drivetrain are the same as it’s based on the VAG MEB platform although you can specify the ‘e-boost’ option to get up to 228bhp when required, over the standard 204bhp.
It’s got a slightly firmer ride from what I’ve read, but after that it’s cosmetics/styling, and whilst I think the exterior might be a bit overdone, the interior looks nice.
https://apple.news/Acy0ZESP1TfCy_vAKeHeiWQ
Doesn’t make very happy reading for the midlands car industry
About time our government took a bit more interest in this and the viability of the uk specialty steels business, currently hobbled by crippling energy costs and allowing Turkish steel makers with on-site COAL (!) fired power stations to undercut them in the market
There are quite a few manufactures investing in hydrogen, JLR and Toyota being 2 of them.
Indeed they are though largely because there is significant government funding to support it.
As I say it’s likely to have a part to play in the total transport portfolio, but with 15,000 hydrogen fuel cell vehicles sold worldwide in 2021 (vs nearly 5 million EVs) I don’t think it’s a big part.
Our new milk float looking pretty in the sunshine this morning
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This is true, but there just seems very little in the motoring or wider press/websites about forthcoming hydrogen models or infrastructure, so all the signs are that hydrogen passenger cars at scale just isn’t going to happen.
All the major manufacturers are planning and producing battery electric vehicles, including even Toyota, so I think the direction is set.
No, it doesn’t, but about 95% of the worlds hydrogen is made from fossil fuels, which sounds like the very thing we’re trying to wean ourselves off.
Electrolysis via renewable electricity sounds the best way from a resources and environment way, but still begs the question why don’t we just use the electricity to power passenger vehicles directly instead?
I actually don’t care much whether we all end up driving Electric or Hydrogen Electric passenger cars, just as long as we move away from what we’re doing now.
At the end of the day, I’m a realist, oil and for that matter Hydrogen are too valuable to burn ferrying people about in small personal vehicles, and we need something less impactful and sustainable.
Last edited by Tooks; 27th May 2022 at 18:59.
Whilst I’ve made my views on the future of hydrogen abundantly clear previously, you’re statement above is incorrect.
Hydrogen is the most abundant and reactive element in the universe and is never lost (splitting the atom aside), it just releases energy when it reacts with other elements or compounds (in this case oxygen to produce electricity and water).
The same hydrogen can be re-extracted to be used again an infinite number of times. It’s the energy used to extract the pure hydrogen that is given up in the FCEV. The hydrogen itself can be considered as a battery as it’s really just a way to store the energy required to power the car.
The challenges of producing sustainable hydrogen at scale are as huge, if not more so, than producing enough genuinely green electricity for a fleet of BEVs.
I’m sure hydrogen has a future in large road transport/ships etc, but it seems unnecessarily complex as a passenger car road fuel.
As I say, if we end up driving ‘green’ hydrogen cars instead of BEVs, then so be it. I’m not as ideologically opposed to it as some seem to be regards BEVs.
Back this evening from a 485 mile one way trip from Scotland to Lincs, two 30 minute charge stops and no hassles at all, the future is already happening here.
The point I was trying to make, probably badly as usual, was that we need oil and hydrogen for all sorts of critical industrial processes, and the former is too valuable to burn, and the latter is costly and complicated to refine and seems unnecessary when we have a viable alternative already.