10 members (Chris99, MATTMOG, KBMOG, Rovert, John Winn, DaveK, JohnHarris, Sloany, Laurens, howard),
312
guests, and
46
robots. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
Forums34
Topics48,341
Posts812,992
Members9,208
|
Most Online1,046 Aug 24th, 2023
|
|
|
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 28,416 Likes: 178
Salty Sea Dog Member of the Inner Circle
|
Salty Sea Dog Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 28,416 Likes: 178 |
Those people stuck for three hours on the M62 in heavy snow, on Friday in EV's would have been sweating I suspect. |More likely to have been freezing 
Graham (G4FUJ)
Sold L44FOR 4/4 Giallo Fly '09 Gen2 MINI Cooper ragtop '90 LR 90 SW
|
|
|
|
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 7,921 Likes: 217
Talk Morgan Guru
|
Talk Morgan Guru
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 7,921 Likes: 217 |
Self charging hybrids seem the best compromise but sad that only petrol versions available now given cleanliness of current diesels. It seems that BEV's can be economical after jumping through expensive hoops to get power walls or at least off peak charging. What happens when such creates it's own peak though as I doubt the present concessionary rates will continue or at best the price gap will narrow. Whilst on the subject when are BEV's going to pay VED? Toting around their heavy batteries is just chewing up our already poorly maintained road surfaces, not to mention tyre dust pollution. On a positive note though the concerns folk had about not hearing them coming seems to have been answered with the tyre noise they produce 
Richard
2018 Roadster 3.7 1966 Land Rover S2a 88 2024 Royal Enfield Guerrilla 450 1945 Guzzi Airone
|
|
|
|
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 11,220 Likes: 159
Smile, it confuses them Member of the Inner Circle
|
Smile, it confuses them Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 11,220 Likes: 159 |
Richard how do you figure self-charging hybrids as being a good compromise? I don't see the benefit of them and must be missing something ? Meant only to educate myself as I don't get it?
Everyone loves a Morgan. Even me, unless it's broken again.
|
|
|
|
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 4,491 Likes: 65
Part of the Furniture
|
Part of the Furniture
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 4,491 Likes: 65 |
Audi Q3 rental is finishing in the next twelve months so looking at replacement options - buying not rental this time. Feel I should go down the PHEV/EV route and liking the X1 - or iX1. 90% of journeys are less than the 30 or 40 PHEV range but is it hassle plugging and unplugging daily? On EV a single charge would last us a week probably. Averaging around 5000 miles pa. The extra cost over the petrol/diesel versions probably makes no financial sense but feel under pressure to try and cut emissions. 
2021 Lapis Blue Plus 6  You know it makes sense!  2016 Carmine Red 991.2 C4S
|
|
|
|
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 996 Likes: 23
Talk Morgan Regular
|
Talk Morgan Regular
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 996 Likes: 23 |
I've owned a plug-in hybrid and having a home charger I didn't find it in the slightest bit inconvenient. If you're mainly doing relatively short journeys I'd say it was the ideal vehicle. The only downside is on longer journeys when the charge runs out your consumption will be relatively high.
The real plus that I found was not having to go into filling stations more than once a month.
Having said all of that some of the latest self-charging hybrids are giving very good fuel mileage in all circumstances. The latest Honda Civic for example has a 2.0 litre engine and 55 mpg overall seems to be readily achievable. Gets very good reviews too.
|
|
|
|
Joined: May 2014
Posts: 5,108 Likes: 56
Black Rat Charter Member
|
Black Rat Charter Member
Joined: May 2014
Posts: 5,108 Likes: 56 |
Self charging hybrids seem the best compromise but sad that only petrol versions available now given cleanliness of current diesels. It seems that BEV's can be economical after jumping through expensive hoops to get power walls or at least off peak charging. What happens when such creates it's own peak though as I doubt the present concessionary rates will continue or at best the price gap will narrow. Whilst on the subject when are BEV's going to pay VED? Toting around their heavy batteries is just chewing up our already poorly maintained road surfaces, not to mention tyre dust pollution. On a positive note though the concerns folk had about not hearing them coming seems to have been answered with the tyre noise they produce  Richard it's a fallacy that VED is used for repairing roads, it never has been. It's a tax that goes straight to the exchequer.
Keith 2013 narrow bodied + 4 Ruby.
|
|
|
|
Joined: Oct 2019
Posts: 5,044 Likes: 312
Charter Member
|
Charter Member
Joined: Oct 2019
Posts: 5,044 Likes: 312 |
|
|
|
|
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 1,326 Likes: 11
Has a lot to Say!
|
Has a lot to Say!
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 1,326 Likes: 11 |
Self charging hybrids seem the best compromise but sad that only petrol versions available now given cleanliness of current diesels. : (wouldn't want one, but)... There's plenty of self-charging diesel hybrids around. Their hybrid ability is often hidden though - I guess innovation frightens the vast majority of horses. for example, have a look at LandRovers, and see if you can spot anything much in the way of info about their propulsion. "Dnnn MHEV" is the closest you'll see for a description of a diesel hybrid. Will
Formerly Aero S5 #80 Currently 911 (992) Targa in python green
|
|
|
|
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 11,861 Likes: 137
Scruffy Oik Member of the Inner Circle
|
Scruffy Oik Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 11,861 Likes: 137 |
The only issue as I see it with self-charging hybrids is that all the electric motive power still comes from burning the fossil fuel in the car. For folks who regularly need to do long distances the PHEV is a much better option in my view as you can still charge from your solar array if you have one and for local running around you'd be doing it nearly all on electric.
I did consider a Mini Countryman PHEV but didn't go for it as the electric-only range was too short for our needs (we often do trips in the 30 to 60 mile range) and we do long distances so rarely (apart from touring in the Morgan) that the pure EV made much more sense for us. The alternative choice was a BMW i3 but it was out of our price range.
Tim H. 1986 4/4 VVTi Sport, 2002 LR Defender, 2022 Mini Cooper SE
|
|
|
|
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 1,326 Likes: 11
Has a lot to Say!
|
Has a lot to Say!
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 1,326 Likes: 11 |
The only issue as I see it with self-charging hybrids is that all the electric motive power still comes from burning the fossil fuel in the car. For folks who regularly need to do long distances the PHEV is a much better option in my view as you can still charge from your solar array if you have one and for local running around you'd be doing it nearly all on electric. I take your point - and would add that experience in my short-range PHEV shows that they can recover useful charge while on the move. For example, a mostly motorway 120 mile commute would see the i8's notional 34 mile battery range would be making a contribution for the first 100 miles or so. I averaged about 49mpg for typical UK motorway driving - so that'll be a mix of 65mph in 3 or 4 busy lanes, stop start 0-5mph around Heathrow, and 70.0mph on the wide open plains for the M40. The reason I'd not try that journey in an EV - where I often did the return trip in a day, or with an overnight stay - is that I couldn't guarantee that the plentiful chargers in the company car park would work (about a 50% strike rate to find one that charged). Will
Formerly Aero S5 #80 Currently 911 (992) Targa in python green
|
|
|
|
|