Bavarianbrit
Well-Known Member
In Sweden they plugged their ICE vehicles into the mains when they could to get the coolant up to temp before starting off, they told me it vastly improved the MPG mileage.
They also have an app that allows them to turn on the car heater remotely.In Sweden they plugged their ICE vehicles into the mains when they could to get the coolant up to temp before starting off, they told me it vastly improved the MPG mileage.
In Canada, where temperatures of -40C and below are not uncommon in winter, they plug their ICE vehicles into the mains to keep the oil warm enough to allow the engine to turn over.In Sweden they plugged their ICE vehicles into the mains when they could to get the coolant up to temp before starting off, they told me it vastly improved the MPG mileage.
Not sure about the competency of the civil service and public sector, but otherwise Norway has been EV friendly for decades.Evidently, one of two explanations must account for this. Either the same temperature magically affects EVs differently in different countries; or the Norwegians do significantly less driving than Americans and have better charging infrastructure, and therefore experience the problems less. Clue: the latter is true.
Norway is exemplary. It is also very wealthy, is not handicapped by a bloated welfare state, has a low population density and has a competent civil service and public sector. We should absolutely emulate them.
Mostly OK although range suffers.I was just thinking about how EV are doing in Norway given the snow fall over the last few days
No, no, no. You must be wrong..Someone in Scotland keeps telling us that EVs don't have these problems. Although, he'd obviously have to be very much richer than the average UK person to afford one.Not sure about the competency of the civil service and public sector, but otherwise Norway has been EV friendly for decades.
However the green politics have major failings when it comes to cost and effiency.
It has been an old fashioned winter here in Oslo. Temperatures of -10- -20C and several heavy snowfalls (the latest today around 50cm of snow)
The electric buses dont like the "extreme" cold and have less range, need charging more often.
Same with the health sector where the council has specified that all of their fleet shall be EV's. District nurses in the media complaining that they spend more time queing to charge/charging EV than time with patients.
Same deal with taxis, EV only in Oslo. And although there are plentiful charging points it doesnt help much if there is a queue to use them....
This is the secret.What @Fox and deer says is true - the secret to owning an EV is being able to charge it at home where the battery and the car can be heated from the mains before driving away on cold days
Home charging is also far cheaper than rapid charging at motorway service areas
Cheer
Bruce

You mean a death trap which slowly grinds to a halt at the first sign of bad weather?It is also great fun to drive, like a gokart, reminds me of my old mini.
I was thinking more of the handling and the fun I had driving it........You mean a death trap which slowly grinds to a halt at the first sign of bad weather?
I loved my old mini, but it's a sad thing when 2020 technology is comparable to 1960 technology but with one quarter of the range.
So I was right. You guys have a real car for winterThis is the secret.
I have a little VW EUP that I share with the missus.
She gets it summertime and I have it in winter.
She has several steepish hills to get to work so tdi Yeti 4WD makes more sense.
I love the EUP, in summer/autumn fully charged it will do 257km, winter 135. Seen as we both work less than 15mins from home it makes for cheap motoring.
It is also great fun to drive, like a gokart, reminds me of my old mini.
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And for longer journeys…..So I was right. You guys have a real car for winter![]()
bikes are not the answer either , we had a 3m wide bike path put in near me a few of years ago , in the last three years i have seen 3 cyclists on it , 3! and 2 cyclists using the road next to it because they are just ******s. yet the traffic is stationary day and night and desperatley needs another lane approaching that roundabout to ease congestionPersonally hate the things, everything around them is false economy, down to pollution due to battery production and recycling. All just a money making exercise including the ULEZ zones. Look at where 80% of global pollution stems from and start working on that, the rural and urban commuters are not the big issue, but they are the easy targets. Where is the government on enhancing public transport infrastructure and building dedicated bicycle paths on all main roads, incentives for employers AND employees by promoting bike to work schemes
Plus, when AI tries to eradicate the human race, EV’s will become an easy way to kill drivers, run into pedestrians etc., set themselves on fire whilst parked inside and so on.
Yes, I think people will turn away from EV’s, and we will go back to lead ammunition
On that note. Need to check my lottery ticket from last night..