Me too!I'll be in Perthshire tomorrow shooting clays (badly !!!)
Me too!I'll be in Perthshire tomorrow shooting clays (badly !!!)
A couple of grown-ups, on the matters of a) ‘t ain’t possible, and more crucially b) there’s no need, at all:There isnt the worldwide capacity to mine lithium to even replace the UK car sales annually.
Its an expensive toy for those who can afford it, with taxpayer subsidy naturally, and they are good to drive but they arent the answer for the average person.
Certainly not the answer for rural folk (or anyone who needs on on road parking) and it just moves emissions to power stations.
We were driving through old villages in Wales recently packed with cars so the inhabitants can get to work. We said to ourselves, " how the hell are these folk gonna charge there cars when they are all electric. There will be cables everywhere..."There isnt the worldwide capacity to mine lithium to even replace the UK car sales annually.
Its an expensive toy for those who can afford it, with taxpayer subsidy naturally, and they are good to drive but they arent the answer for the average person.
Certainly not the answer for rural folk (or anyone who needs on on road parking) and it just moves emissions to power stations.
From what I can see at current fuel/energy prices the cost per mile to run an EV is still significantly less than an ICE. Even if electric costs increase I would imagine this would still be true but to a lesser degree, unless the cost of electric doubles and the price of diesel/petrol halves but that's unlikely.
Hence smart meters!You have forgotten the EV tax that will have to be applied to EVs at some point to replace the fuel duty taxation on petrol and diesel.
A little follow-on Sunday sermon from our Canadian Bidenthinklookalike:
Yes - EV owners live in dream land.You have forgotten the EV tax that will have to be applied to EVs at some point to replace the fuel duty taxation on petrol and diesel.
I’m not complaining as the Corsa was a dog to drive and had no equipment at all but the Corolla drives beautifully and has loads on onboard toys.It's pathetic really isn't it?
I would never recommend a vauxhall to anyone, especially my worst enemy, I'm just not that cruel!I’m not complaining as the Corsa was a dog to drive and had no equipment at all but the Corolla drives beautifully and has loads on onboard toys.
Ditto, doing 200 miles a day in a vehicle designed to go to Tesco’s and back twice a week is a special kind of hell.I would never recommend a vauxhall to anyone, especially my worst enemy, I'm just not that cruel!
Another issue which rarely gets a mention is resale value. I understand that the life of a battery pack is about 10 years after which the rage will have reduced considerably and the cost of a replacement will be north of £10K, and in some cases well over £20K. This effectively makes EVs scrap after the first owner. Not only that but there is some argument over who pays to dispose of the used battery pack and it won't be long before to gov decides that owners will be required to contribute to that not inconsiderable cost. Compare that with a 5 year old diesel with 60,000 miles on the clock. It will probably run for a further ten years or more with regular maintenance. If we all have to have EVs which have a short useable/saleable life then the number of vehicles manufactured each year will have to increased dramatically and trading one in will not provide a deposit for the new one because the old one is next to worthless. Ask yourself, would you buy a 5 year old EV at a similar price to a 5 year old ICE vehicle?The ‘Electric Vehicles Will Save The Planet’ Farce Is Unraveling Quickly
- by Steve MacDonald
- August 21, 2022
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An auto club in Germany that claims 21 million members ran some controlled charging test electric vehicles to see how efficient that process was. The results put another nail in the value coffin. Not only are they expensive to buy and own, but the average charge also wastes up to 13% of the electricity.
Put another way, the consumer is charged for all the electricity required to fully charge the battery, which is as much as 13% more than the battery can hold.
So, imagine pouring two gallons of gasoline on the ground every time you filled a 20-gallon tank. People would lose their collective minds. But that will be standard for every charge of every vehicle in the utopian electric fleet of the future.
ADAC’s Ecotest calculated the kWh needed to fully charge a range of electric vehicle batteries.
With electricity prices scheduled to double in New Hampshire (as an example) and with the cost of EVs still out of the range of most middle and lower-income families, throwing money out the window with every charge might just as well be another tax.
Line loss or transformer loss is baked into the infrastructure. There is no way to transmit electricity without waste (primarily) in the form of heat. Anywhere from 8-15% or more of the electricity generated by power stations is lost before it gets to you. A carbon footprint problem we’re supposed to ignore.
But not in the ADAC tests. The consumer pays immediately for the loss of every kWh that exceeded the actual electricity needed to charge the battery.
Shamelessly copied.
Nonsense.Your understanding about the life of the battery pack is wrong
EV manufacturers typically give a 7-8 year warranty on the battery pack which says that the pack will be replaced free of charge if it's capacity drops by more than 20% over the period of the warranty
The Tesla model S first went on sale in 2012 and the Nissan Leaf in 2011
There are still plenty of those vehicles around still running on their original batteries and still getting more than 80% of their original range.
Those vehicles still have plenty life left in them,and there is no reason to think they will not outlast ice powered vehicles - in fact there is every reason to think that they will outlast typical ice vehicles - if only because an ev is mechanically far less complex than an ice vehicle with far fewer parts to fail or need costly replacement
The average lifespan of an ice powered vehicle in the UK is 14 years, so those Teslas and Leafs will soon be better than average![]()
Cheers
Bruce