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I have a Citroen C5 SUV 1.6 diesel car I fill it up with JET super fuel every time yesterday checked the cost per mile filling up of 547 miles on the trip meter I change every time I fill up 12.6p per mile doing motor way and trunk roads etc and in towns. At the height of fuel prices it was just over 18p that's using premium price fuel only basically the same pump. Add blue engine so clean, not carrying heavy battery dead weight, only done 4k in it since new January and very pleased with it especially on long journeys which I do as much as short ones. I reckon about 10p per mile if only using standard diesel so the up front cost of a similar car top of the range electric would allow the purchase of a lot of diesel and does away with fuel anxiety on long journeys especially in winter when I do the longest journeys going to football games.
Well I've finally got my EV (couple of weeks ago) and absolutely love it. Honestly can't see me ever going back to an ICE.
Quote from: Superspy on July 07, 2023, 06:14:30 pmWell I've finally got my EV (couple of weeks ago) and absolutely love it. Honestly can't see me ever going back to an ICE.I'm still tempted to have one of each. But that will depend on how the world lies when I replace these two in 3 years.With the new full electric we have it's surprisingly quick to charge on the rapid charger and on a recent trip my other half had no issues getting a near full charge in whilst stopping for a quick 30 minute break. We're not taking it to Scotland on a trip there soon though, there isn't a great infrastructure in the area we're heading hence still liking having both options.
My concern is, once fully electric is the only option, how much will the cost of running them be? I recall when Tony Blair told us all to drive diesel vehicles to save the environment the price of diesel went up astronomically. Bearing in mind that we still had an alternative fuel option then, and presuming we will have no other option when conventional petrol and diesel vehicles are banned in 2030, I reckon there's a fair chance we're gonna be unprecedently ripped off.
Report out yesterday by insurance companies on electric cars. Relatively minor accidents in electric only and dual fuel cars are causing concern that will be reflected in much higher insurance premiums than for ice cars. Minor accidents that effect the batteries are resulting in the car being scrapped because of the cost of replacement, in the case of Tesla £28k + and lower priced cars £15k+ add other costs such as specialist labour a high percentage are being scrapped even nearly new cars are deemed to be not as valuable as the repair because of the big valuation drop in second hand electric cars. Another problem is the time scale of parts supply especially batteries being supplied to do the repairs and the specialist labour needed to do the repairs, you can't just go to the local repair shop. Expect insurance premiums to rocket way above combustion and diesel cars.
ncRover,Those who do not charge at home will go to a charging station, in just the same way as an ICE driver goes to a filling station.No-one would expect an ICE driver to have a petrol station at his/her house, would they?These facilities will grow in proportion to demand, and there are already more charge points in the UK than petrol pumps.Purchase prices will reduce as volume enters the market, and Chinese imports are pushing that reduction.The cost will decline on the technology model, like computers did in the past.Once purchase prices for similar spec models reach parity, the market will tip rapidly.Manufacturers know this, hence the stampede to refurbish their production facilities to make EV rather than ICE.Very difficult to say if used car prices will move in 2030, and which way. What assumption do you make about availability of supplies, and the geopolitical situation?
Hound,Battery development is leading to higher energy density. This means that you can have greater range from a given weight of battery, or reduce the battery weight for an equal performance.The sweet spot is likely to be reducing overall weight while extending range to some extent.Range is not really an issue any more for a modern EV.The best way of increasing performance is by lightweighting the overall vehicle, but battery technology is moving fast;https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/catl-touts-breakthrough-cold-weather-ev-charging-2023-07-06/Some of the silly myths posted on here are debunked here;https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/common-misconceptions-about-electric-vehicles/common-misconceptions-about-electric-vehicles