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Old Apr 18th, 2024, 23:40   #10
Murph7355
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Last Online: Yesterday 17:18
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Wethersfield
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Damoh89 View Post
I don’t have a hybrid or electric but is t there different connections for different cars on them anyways and some at least here Iv seen have multiple connections?but now I notice special Tesla ones?

But I do know neighbour has plug in and he only realy charges if on motorway stop for food and stroll or out shopping as said it’s not really worth the wait for little gain,just as handy on night rate at home

Just to note aswell is 70cent kw here too no idea if that’s good or bad and how many kw one needs to full?
Bad

Based on an XC90 (which I know the post isn't about), they have a roughly 15kWh (usable - 19kWh ish nominal) battery.

They will apparently do 40 miles on that on a good day.

So around £10 gets you 40 miles using a public charger at 70p per kWh. (I'm being favourable in my rounding and also in charge costs - public chargers in the UK are around 79p at the moment, with some a good bit more. Also assuming we'd be happy spending 5hrs at Grantham services ).

At 30mpg (no idea if that's realistic - our D5 gets that easily), that same 40 miles will cost you about £9.

Public charge companies are screwing the pooch in terms of the economics of electric....especially when you consider that at the very worst a home tariff will cost you 30p per kWh, and at that the electricity companies are still making a profit.

So the rule is, with any form of electric powered vehicle (PHEV or BEV), avoid charging up at public networks.

Charging that same PHEV overnight at home will cost you just over £1. So do that, and only use electric power (most of us do an average of 30 miles per day or so) and all of a sudden you're on a winner

When looking at our next family wagon we ran through the sort of mileage and trips we do throughout a typical year...the economics of a PHEV and BEV were very similar (ICE was a good chunk behind, including purchase price). A higher percentage of short journeys that don't require public charging and the BEV starts to win.

That assumes fuel and public charging (plus home tariffs) remain the same relative to each other over the next 6yrs or so. Which is a bit of a gamble....but ultimately my OH preferred the familiarity and quality of the XC90 over an EV9. But it was close
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