Home > Off Topic > EV charging remotely halted |
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Farmerben Member Since: 16 Jan 2017 Location: Herefordshire Posts: 605 |
I've been to plenty of filling stations where there's been no fuel at all and you must have a very short memory if you can't remember the fuel shortages and panic buying last year. If there was an electric pickup/4x4 in the UK that I could use on the farm I'd have bought one by now. If I could charge up at the farm overnight and reduce the faff of going to a filling station every week (which is always out of my way) I would probably reclaim a whole day per year in wasted time. https://instagram.com/bentheoandrews |
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8th Sep 2023 10:03am |
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RDR Member Since: 27 Apr 2018 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 592 |
The whole time to fill up debate doesn't click with me, EV only works well for certain people who are able to charge at home and have an average journey well within the EVs range. If you can charge at your home then you need to treat it like a Mobile phone and plug it in when you get home or go to bed. With this mindset you totally forget about range or "filling up" it just works for you where every morning you're full up again. 110 MY23.5 X Dynamic HSE
RR MY23 HSE PHEV D5 MY19 HSE - Now Sold D4 MY16 HSE Luxury - Now Sold D4 MY12 HSE - Gone D3 MY06 S - Gone but not forgotten |
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8th Sep 2023 10:30am |
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jpboost Member Since: 13 Apr 2021 Location: Gatwick Posts: 377 |
I agree with the above,
For people who don't frequently drive long distances, and can charge them easily at home (which lets face it, is probably a large proportion of the population), I think lots of the practical limitations of EV don't really impact at all. My regular commute is under 20miles, and the furthest journey I frequently make is around a 120mile round trip. This is about once a month. If I was to simply plug in when I get home, and started each day fully charged, I think I'd only need 'public' charging a handful of times a year. I still greatly enjoy my Defender and have no immediate plans to change, but from a practicality point of view, I'm already at the point where an EV would work for me and probably make a lot of sense in the round. Of course they're expensive to buy so that is a consideration, but I (with my family usage) wouldn't be remotely concerned about the charging infrastructure not being sufficient for my family life. |
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8th Sep 2023 2:24pm |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17361 |
I think you will find that there is a significant proportion of the population which fits the "no long journey" classification which cannot charge at home since it doesn't have off-street parking.
Round my way (a reasonably nice, fairly modern, suburban neighbourhood, where every house has access to a driveway (usually shared) and a garage) the pavements on both sides of every road are lined with cars every night. For every car on a drive there are at least five which don't fit and which are on the street, and no-one (except me) has a vehicle in their garage. I am sure that this is partly do to the fact that most houses remain in multi-generational occupancy much longer than they used to since youngsters cannot afford houses, but whatever the reason it knocks the idea of charging EVs into a cocked hat. Perhaps the idea is that, like houses, EVs will be too expensive to own so there will be fewer of them. I am sure that there are solutions, but I see no sign whatsoever of any solutions being implemented round here. However admirable the intentions we seem to be being led at speed down an ill-conceived path to disaster. |
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8th Sep 2023 3:33pm |
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the_lincs_landies Member Since: 29 May 2023 Location: Boston, Lincs Posts: 230 |
They could have a charger on their drive and charge one car per night (should they replace all with an EV). Its not ideal, but if they met the "no long journey" criteria its a possibility. I am not looking for a debate, just stating that there are ways around it if needed.
A lot of it is a lack of installation/adoption by local authorities. There are solutions available such as a sort of pavement gulley (a bit like piece of conduit countersunk to the pavement with a hard rubber top top like trip matting), Charger Lampposts etc.
As much as my statements above may lead readers to believe I am defending EVs, I do agree with this statement. Its all well and good going down the EV path, but the issue we have, particularly in the UK, is that the cars are developing at the speed of light, whilst the grid is evolving at the speed of a clock with a dying battery. I mean, I had an EV so I can speak on both sides of the camp. If I didn't do regular long journeys I probably would not have jumped ship. I think part of the problem is that it assumes that one size fits all. It doesn't - if it did then we wouldn't have had a period of Leaded, Unleaded, and Diesel all being in existence at the pumps. Then there is the Super Unleaded and Super Diesel... because people want quality fuel in a performance car. |
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8th Sep 2023 4:00pm |
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jpboost Member Since: 13 Apr 2021 Location: Gatwick Posts: 377 |
I understand what you're saying, and i totally agree that there are lots of people for whom the practical issues are significant. But I also think that there are a lot of people who don't like the idea and are simply using examples that don't really apply to them or are exaggerated. Say the average town car does what 10000 miles a year? so roughly 200 miles a week. For most EV's that's possible on a single charge. Even if it's 2 charges, then a household with 1 driveway parking spot with 1 slow overnight charger could feasibly keep a 3 car (well 3.5) household fully charged. And that's with each car doing 200 miles a week. If some of the cars were home during the day, then there's even more capacity. I know that reality is more complicated, but you get my point. Of course inner cities, areas with no driveways, blocks of flats etc all pose much more significant problems, but for a lot of suburbia and rural areas it could be workable. I know several people who run electric cars and none of them have made any big deal out of the practicaliteis of it. Expensive to buy? yes, I've heard those grumbles, but for the normal day to day, they've just got on with it. Of course it a small sample, and hardly anything scientific, but I really expected to hear lots of tales of woe ( and I could have been annoyingly smug in my dinosaur of a defender) but they've just not materialised. This is a Defender forum, one of the most stolen vehicles around. I assume that most of us on here park our defenders in a garage, on a drive, or near our houses. I'd genuinely be interested to know how many of us on this forum could charge an EV at home or work without significant problem. I'd expect it's probably quite a high proportion. Happy to concede that we're not a representative sample for the wider population. I'm not a huge fan of EVs, but I think many are arguing cases on behalf of other populations. I personally think cost is probably one of the most significant barriers to a lot of people making the move. Certainly for a lot of the people I know who have changed car due to London's expanding ULEZ, many/most of them ruled out EV on cost alone. |
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8th Sep 2023 4:32pm |
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Quarmart Member Since: 15 Jan 2024 Location: USA Posts: 2 |
Hey, thanks for sharing your experience with the Hypervolt smart charger and solar setup! It's awesome to hear how you're maximizing renewable energy to power your electric vehicles. Reminds me of when I first got into EVs and was navigating the whole charging infrastructure scene.
I remember one time I was on a road trip with my EV and needed a quick charge. I found myself in an area with limited charging options, but luckily stumbled upon a commercial EV charging station that saved the day. It was efficient, reliable, and gave me peace of mind knowing I could juice up my car without worrying about running out of power. |
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16th Apr 2024 3:27pm |
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2096VC Member Since: 08 Apr 2024 Location: Cumbria Posts: 19 |
I have a Model Y daily as well as a TD5. I have had EVs since 2016 - always having one as a commuter. I love cars of all types, but anyone that hasn’t driven an EV should try one before making assumptions. Similar to others, I have solar and batteries etc. This last month has cost me nothing in electric - I sell electric through the day, including what we generate. So running the house and the Tesla costs nothing when the suns out - and very little when it isn’t.
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31st May 2024 9:45pm |
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Ianb Member Since: 25 Oct 2023 Location: Devon Posts: 387 |
But obv set up costs and initial outlay for the tesla must have come in quite hefty.
Solar cheaper than leaving money in the bank I assume, but still the long game. The Yeti - 110 Camper https://www.defender2.net/forum/topic90308.html Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@YetitheDefender Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/yetithedefender/ |
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31st May 2024 10:37pm |
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2096VC Member Since: 08 Apr 2024 Location: Cumbria Posts: 19 |
In this case it’s turned out pretty good, as it’s my Mrs company car
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31st May 2024 10:56pm |
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Ianb Member Since: 25 Oct 2023 Location: Devon Posts: 387 |
As is often the way. Electric cars seem nothing more than a good financial decision for company owners trying to: Firstly look green and caring and secondly save some pennies and reduce their taxes.
Sure if the by-product of an electric car investment for a company is an environmentally positive outcome then I guess that's a good thing, but I've yet to meet a conpany owner who has one because it's the green thing to do. The Yeti - 110 Camper https://www.defender2.net/forum/topic90308.html Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@YetitheDefender Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/yetithedefender/ |
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1st Jun 2024 4:41pm |
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