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The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Xileno

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Edited by Xileno on 20/01/2024 at 17:19

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

More news that the car rental and taxi business has decided to take a u turn on EVs with news that Sixt, the largest car hire firm in Europe will be phasing out Tesla s and Addison Lee London s premier taxi business have decided that the 1000 ID4 s are not suitable for their business. They have also spent £30;million on VW Multivans .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

More news that the car rental and taxi business has decided to take a u turn on EVs with news that Sixt, the largest car hire firm in Europe will be phasing out Tesla s and Addison Lee London s premier taxi business have decided that the 1000 ID4 s are not suitable for their business. They have also spent £30;million on VW Multivans .

Saw a report in the DT about (ordinary business) fleet buyers starting to back off getting EVs - and I suspect the same will soon apply to those leasing as well, when the much larger (than ICE) depreciation filters through into much more expensive new lease contracts that take the loss in value into account.

It surely won't matter that PID will be less if the monthly cost is a lot higher that more than offsets the former's gain.

The only way to avoid that is manufacturers significantly dropping their prices, and I can't see that happening without them going under. If they could afford it, they would have already done so. The boss of Toyota has also been emboldened to make the claim that electric cars will never fully replace ICE.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - SLO76
The bus and coach firm I currently work for bought three electric buses as an initial trial and step into switching to electric. The two Sigma 8’s we bought are off the road more than they’re on it due to rear axle problems, they’re horribly fragile. We had to alter and shorten some duties to allow them to complete a days running 8-6, but quickly found that they can’t run past 3/4pm during the winter and we need to keep diesel buses to swap them over with.

The smaller Merc based electric minibus we also bought was advertised as being able to do 200 miles, but it never made it past 150 and this range is dropping quickly. It’s now relegated to doing a short school run in the morning and a return trip in the evening, great usage of over £150,000.

Plans are being made to get rid of the three of them as they’re simply unfit for purpose. The large national bus company I was a depot trainer for has a fleet of ADL E200 electric buses which are causing mayhem with their reducing range and almost non-existent heating.

The tax payer has been forced to pour billions into bus companies to buy hugely expensive electric buses, which are failing to do the job, and are seeing rapid battery degradation. I suspect that the reason is that they are effectively being fast charged daily and the battery packs are deteriorating. Said firm has 6 2016 electric Optares with hardly any miles up that are all dead due to complete battery pack failure. They were in service for 3/4yrs. Hardly saving the environment this.

As a cost comparison an ADL E100 electric costs £360,000, while a larger diesel E200 MMC is around £180,000. The diesel will typically run in service for 10-12yrs before passing to smaller operators, the electric buses are dying within 3/4yrs. Newer examples will improve on this but by how much?

This is a scandal that tax payers would be outraged by if they knew.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr

I thought bus operators are private companies.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - SLO76

I thought bus operators are private companies.

The switch to electric buses is being funded via huge tax payer funded grants. Hundreds of millions of pounds have been given to UK bus companies over the last few years to pay for them, as on their own they’re not economically viable. The view of the two firms I’ve worked for is that they’re simply unfit for purpose. Battery power alone isn’t a viable solution for large heavily used vehicles. They’re far too expensive, the range is nowhere near what is promised and the lifespan is a fraction of an equivalent diesel powered vehicle. It’s causing mayhem at depots who rely heavily on electric, with several areas hit recently by power outages thanks to the recent bad weather.

Edited by SLO76 on 23/01/2024 at 22:12

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr

I thought bus operators are private companies.

The switch to electric buses is being funded via huge tax payer funded grants. Hundreds of millions of pounds have been given to UK bus companies over the last few years to pay for them, as on their own they’re not economically viable. The view of the two firms I’ve worked for is that they’re simply unfit for purpose. Battery power alone isn’t a viable solution for large heavily used vehicles. They’re far too expensive, the range is nowhere near what is promised and the lifespan is a fraction of an equivalent diesel powered vehicle. It’s causing mayhem at depots who rely heavily on electric, with several areas hit recently by power outages thanks to the recent bad weather.

I see. All part of the rush to net zero. The government always looks at this stuff backwards. If they spent money on decent transport infrastructure (trams, trolley buses and cycle lanes) they wouldn't have to mess around trying to put batteries in buses that don't have any space in them.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

<< If they spent money on decent transport infrastructure (trams, trolley buses and cycle lanes) they wouldn't have to mess around trying to put batteries in buses that don't have any space in them. >>

I can't see that ever being more than a partial solution. Loads of commuters will never cycle to work, and many others live in places or work in trading estates which aren't on public transport routes.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - alan1302

<< If they spent money on decent transport infrastructure (trams, trolley buses and cycle lanes) they wouldn't have to mess around trying to put batteries in buses that don't have any space in them. >>

and many others live in places or work in trading estates which aren't on public transport routes.

If there was proper investment in public transport then they would be on the routes

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

Mass car ownership has created a society where routinely travelling several miles for work, social, shopping and family is the norm. Development of retail parks, large hospitals and schools, and zoning has reinforced the change.

Go back 80 years (pre WW2) and most interaction - work, social etc was local. Walk, bike, bus were the norm. That which has now evolved over the last 60 years cannot be reversed quickly.

I personally doubt that even a massive investment in public transport would transform an ailing patchy service into something which would be regarded as remotely effective, noting the views of large city dwellers may be different to small town and rural communities.

IMHO there are two key things which need to happen:

  • autonomous pods on demand - far more responsive and flexible than public transport and a benefit to non-drivers, elderly, disabled etc
  • tax and legislative regime which encourages "local" - health facilities, smaller schools, mixed urban development, remove stamp duty, subsidise local high streets, penalise malls and retail parks etc.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Bromptonaut

Go back 80 years (pre WW2) and most interaction - work, social etc was local. Walk, bike, bus were the norm. That which has now evolved over the last 60 years cannot be reversed quickly.

Up until well into the sixties several of my Primary School teachers one on the same Sammy Ledgard bus home as their pupils and the younger ones parents - all Mums.

IMHO there are two key things which need to happen:

  • tax and legislative regime which encourages "local" - health facilities, smaller schools, mixed urban development, remove stamp duty, subsidise local high streets, penalise malls and retail parks etc.

Ohh careful. That sounds like one of those 15 minute cities the guys at the World Economic Forum are out to imprison us in. (/irony)

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

<< If there was proper investment in public transport then they would be on the routes >>

Sorry, that is wishful thinking in an age when most people are accustomed to using their personal transport, which is so much more comfortable and convenient than public transport. Commuting (which may be less than it was, with WFH) has peak times, with all that implies for providers, and today's shopping habits don't lend themselves to using public transport either.

Maybe the only thing which might affect the balance is when parking one's vehicle becomes impossible, not just difficult.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

Up until well into the sixties several of my Primary School teachers one on the same Sammy Ledgard bus home as their pupils and the younger ones parents - all Mums.

At my primary school in the early 60's I cannot remember any teacher (including the head) coming to work in a car. Like all the pupils they walked.

At the junior school (which was across the road) a few of the teachers did come in cars but as at the primary school all the pupils walked. The teachers that came in cars parked in the playground.

And even in the winter of 1963 they never closed a single day.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

I thought bus operators are private companies.

The switch to electric buses is being funded via huge tax payer funded grants. Hundreds of millions of pounds have been given to UK bus companies over the last few years to pay for them, as on their own they’re not economically viable. The view of the two firms I’ve worked for is that they’re simply unfit for purpose. Battery power alone isn’t a viable solution for large heavily used vehicles. They’re far too expensive, the range is nowhere near what is promised and the lifespan is a fraction of an equivalent diesel powered vehicle. It’s causing mayhem at depots who rely heavily on electric, with several areas hit recently by power outages thanks to the recent bad weather.

Another week, another London EV bus fire (it was essentially destroyed). Same company (GoAhead) as the one where a double decker electric bus caught fire from a few weeks ago. They're now checking their entire fleet (380 buses) as a result.

Lucky the depot it was parked in wasn't gutted either, presumably thanks to the staff and fire brigade's work.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
As ever, speculation is pointless until it’s established whether these are high voltage battery fires or 12/24 volt conflagrations caused by something shorting somewhere.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T
As ever, speculation is pointless until it’s established whether these are high voltage battery fires or 12/24 volt conflagrations caused by something shorting somewhere.

Yes, we know which side you are on, MCB :-) It doesn't matter a great deal where the fire starts if it reaches the BIG battery, which is hopefully well away from any possible sources of ignition.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - SLO76
Any opinions on the Nissan Ariya mcb? Close to taking one on a very appealing NHS fleet deal through SEMBO’s work. Yet to sit in one
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
Sorry, no. I’ve not driven one.
I popped along to my local dealer’s grand unveil evening and was a bit surprised by the size of it (larger than I was expecting), but that’s my involvement in its entirety.
It seems to do well in reviews, but I’m more familiar with its platform sharing Renault cousin (Megane E-Tech) and ‘should be arriving the week after next’ Scenic.
It does move Nissan in line with the rest of the market by having CCS for DC charging.
As ever, the ordering/handover experience will be determined by whether it’s a PLC or a more customer satisfaction oriented dealership - Nissan has plenty of the former, fewer of the latter….

Edited by mcb100 on 26/01/2024 at 17:57

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - SLO76
Looks like the plan is dead anyway. NHS fleet were offering black and grey 64kw cars at a very good rate, all registered and ready for delivery, but would be on the current plate. I hesitated, dithered and then decided to go for one, and they’re all gone. Too slow.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
There’ll be other offers.
And the thing is, as long as a car does what you need it to do in terms of size, versatility, aesthetics, EV’s pretty much all offer the same levels of efficiency, interior noise levels, power delivery.
The downside being that we can’t now differentiate between engines and gearboxes. They’re massively efficient point and press machines.
Charging hardware is universal, way fewer moving parts mean increased reliability (so no brand reputation fears), the chances are that it’ll be a car that just works.
Sure the magazines have favourites because they put them on a test track and check handling at its extremities, but, in reality, how relevant is that to someone with a five mile commute to and from work?
Right size, right shape, infotainment you understand and can work, and you can be pretty sure the rest of it will be fine.
To quote the conspiracy theorists, it’s the great (motoring) reset.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - barney100

When I was young there were electric buses in Bradford that never ran out of power. You've guessed it, trolley buses. A bloke was often seen with a long pole reattaching the connectors to the power lines.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

When I was young there were electric buses in Bradford that never ran out of power. You've guessed it, trolley buses. A bloke was often seen with a long pole reattaching the connectors to the power lines.

Yes, been there, done that. A sudden shimmy on my pushbike occasionally surprised the T-B driver and made his poles come off the wires. I also remember Cardiff's trams, which cost a penny anywhere IIRC, and disappeared about 1951.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - John F

When I was young there were electric buses in Bradford that never ran out of power. You've guessed it, trolley buses. A bloke was often seen with a long pole reattaching the connectors to the power lines.

I travelled on them regularly as a child (and hardly ever saw their connectors being re-attached). They weren't just in the city - the longest route was from Bradford Moor through Bingley to Crossflatts - ten miles. They were much better than diesels, good for a million miles. Great acceleration and zoomed silently and smokelessly up the steep hills out of the city.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘Yes, we know which side you are on, MCB :-) It doesn't matter a great deal where the fire starts if it reaches the BIG battery, which is hopefully well away from any possible sources of ignition.’

I’m on the side of accuracy and data and facts, rather than conjecture and guesswork :).
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

Just for comparison, there are 100,000 petrol car fires a year in the UK. That's 300 a day.

www.fireservice.co.uk/safety/vehicle-fires/

But hey let's concentrate on the few very few indeed and ignore the herd of elephants in the room.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

DP while editing, somehow. See below

Edited by edlithgow on 27/01/2024 at 00:48

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

Just for comparison, there are 100,000 petrol car fires a year in the UK. That's 300 a day.

www.fireservice.co.uk/safety/vehicle-fires/

But hey let's concentrate on the few very few indeed and ignore the herd of elephants in the room.

Any data on fatalities?

Since the cops got my car I've been bussing fairly regularly, and the Tainan City fleet has just gone all electric (at least on my route).

I've seen a few video clips of buses going up and they went up very quickly.

Buses here are usually packed,(at least on my routes) with lots of shopping trolleys and limited mobility oldsters.

Maybe not very survivable.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - pd

Just a note on reliability: Whilst I agree long term they should be more reliable I'm not sure we are there yet.

It is difficult to quantify but I hear increasing tales of EVs having faults which are either very expensive or very time consuming to fix (often both). Battery faults (just ask iPace owners), inverters, traction packs, charging modules (these seem to be failing on many MG4s) and various other things cropping up are a reminder that this is still pretty new tech.

The added problem of course is that the skills base to fix them hasn't yet developed. So, they might not go wrong very often....but, just at the moment anyway, when they do go wrong they are an expensive pain in the proverbial.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr

I'm not sure whether that is EV-specific or manufacturer-specific.

Jaguar, of course, is part of a group famed for unreliable vehicles, whilst MG specialise in 'too good to be true' offers. These are manufacturers at the margins and I wonder whether the more mature EV products, like the Nissan Leaf or Renault Zoe suffer from more issues or fewer than their ICE stablemates.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - pd

I'm not sure whether that is EV-specific or manufacturer-specific.

Jaguar, of course, is part of a group famed for unreliable vehicles, whilst MG specialise in 'too good to be true' offers. These are manufacturers at the margins and I wonder whether the more mature EV products, like the Nissan Leaf or Renault Zoe suffer from more issues or fewer than their ICE stablemates.

On the iPace it is actual battery modules which are failing which results in the car only be able to be charged to about 70%. The batteries are made by LG, not Jaguar, so it is a supplier fault issue. The wait list to get them fixed seems quite extensive.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

I'm not sure whether that is EV-specific or manufacturer-specific.

Jaguar, of course, is part of a group famed for unreliable vehicles, whilst MG specialise in 'too good to be true' offers. These are manufacturers at the margins and I wonder whether the more mature EV products, like the Nissan Leaf or Renault Zoe suffer from more issues or fewer than their ICE stablemates.

That might be (on both sides) more luck than judgement, in my view. When it applies to manufacturers famed for their reliability rather than the opposite, then I'll agree.

I suspect that manufacturers are still learning how to properly design and make EVs, given how many have only 'got into the game' in the last 3-5 years. They may be very knowledgeable at everything else, but large electric motors and charging tech they are not. Yet.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - madf

Anyone look at a car ECU? Very reliable, sealed in a lump of plastic to avoid vibration,heat and oil damage, High quality electrical connections.

I looked at buying a used BMW i3.. in production from 2013 to 2022.

Faults in the Electric motor control module have ben common. PCBs fail..Repairable but £2k + replacement ( on ebay sh for less)

All you need is a repair guy who knows what he is doing... So full up..

BMW don't do repairs or good electronics.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

Clevely Electric cars may be able to help as the repair down to module level but they are up against a dealer network that make it difficult to reprogram a used part.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

News today that Renault have decided to pull their EV listing “ Ampere “ from the stock market after falling demand .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

One thing that isn't mentioned much these days is how seemingly the longevity of modern electronics is on the wane compared to those designed/made 20+ years ago.

This may possibly be due the manufacturers and/or their clients who build things like TVs, mobile phones, computers and now EVs don't mind and possibly want shorter planned obsolescence in order to bring in more profits to offset lower margins on the original product.

Cars may now physically survive longer due to better rust protection, but many components may need more replacements over at (say) 10-15 year period and may often lead to the car being unduly sc***ped despite it being in reasonable mechanical and structural condition.

This may be precisely because replacement electronics cannot be sourced, whether at all, at a reasonable price (possibly due to low stock levels) or that are of a high enough quality to be fitted on a cost effective basis, assuming there's anyone available qualified to fit it properly without voiding any warranty the new part may come with.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

I suspect that car electronic systems and ECUs are becoming more robust as manufacture has progressed from advanced technology to (relatively) unremarkable manufacturing.

The major change is the number of ECUs now fitted in the average new car. This may vary from 30 (basic car) to over 100 (premium motors).

They deliver not just engine management (largely the case 20 years ago), but control auto gearboxes, power steering, security, auto lights and wipers, AC, ICE, collision avoidance systems, lane departure systems, ABS, windows, internet/data, sat nav etc etc etc.

Assuming (say) 60 ECUs in a mid range car vs 5 twenty years ago - there are 12 times the number of ECUs. Even if the failure rate is 25% of the previous level, the chances of a vehicle failure would be 3 times a high!!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - alan1302

One thing that isn't mentioned much these days is how seemingly the longevity of modern electronics is on the wane compared to those designed/made 20+ years ago.

What are you basing that on?

Other than a duff Samsung phone screen I don't think I've had any electronics failures and between me and my wife we do get through a lot of the stuff.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

One thing that isn't mentioned much these days is how seemingly the longevity of modern electronics is on the wane compared to those designed/made 20+ years ago.

What are you basing that on?

Other than a duff Samsung phone screen I don't think I've had any electronics failures and between me and my wife we do get through a lot of the stuff.

Already answered (at least by imp[ication) immediately above.

I'd guess the electronics you "get through" (If they don't break I suppose you must be replacing them for novelty/innovation) arent as complex as a modern car, and maybe have a shorter lifespan, so dont have the time to fail in your service.

A common failure mode one hears about is some piece of superfluous electronic frippery such as a proximity sensor or reversing camera, goes down and takes the CANBUS with it, and everything stops.

This isn't really an electric car issue though. Its a "new cars suck" issue, though I daresay new electric cars suck too.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

Just for comparison, there are 100,000 petrol car fires a year in the UK. That's 300 a day.

www.fireservice.co.uk/safety/vehicle-fires/

But hey let's concentrate on the few very few indeed and ignore the herd of elephants in the room.

Any data on fatalities?

Since the cops got my car I've been bussing fairly regularly, and the Tainan City fleet has just gone all electric (at least on my route).

I've seen a few video clips of buses going up and they went up very quickly.

Buses here are usually packed,(at least on my routes) with lots of shopping trolleys and limited mobility oldsters.

Maybe not very survivable.

www.gigabyte.com/Article/gigabyte-pilot-the-autono...s

Perhaps they can program it to drive into the ornamental lake when it catches fire.

It would have to be quite quick though.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

Just for comparison, there are 100,000 petrol car fires a year in the UK. That's 300 a day.

www.fireservice.co.uk/safety/vehicle-fires/

But hey let's concentrate on the few very few indeed and ignore the herd of elephants in the room.

Any data on fatalities?

Since the cops got my car I've been bussing fairly regularly, and the Tainan City fleet has just gone all electric (at least on my route).

I've seen a few video clips of buses going up and they went up very quickly.

Buses here are usually packed,(at least on my routes) with lots of shopping trolleys and limited mobility oldsters.

Maybe not very survivable.

www.gigabyte.com/Article/gigabyte-pilot-the-autono...s

Perhaps they can program it to drive into the ornamental lake when it catches fire.

It would have to be quite quick though.

I havnt seen anything on fatalities so far. Three went up in London recently, with no one hurt.

Heres Uncle Tony on exploding buses. He goes on a bit, as is his style, so maybe just watch the two bus boom clips

www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXFPxv7LOlg

For a really badly written, almost illiterate (and actually illiterate technically} discussion of the topic, you need to consult a lawyer. Presumably if they could have mentioned deaths, they would have.

ehlinelaw.com/blog/electric-bus-spontaneously-catc...e

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

After the demise of Matrix , which Renault were planning to launch as a separate division specialising in EVs , Volvo have decided to pull the plug on Polestar which is part owned by Geely .

Do things appear to be moving towards a Chinese domination of the EV industry ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

Do things appear to be moving towards a Chinese domination of the EV industry ?

And would any of us be really surprised ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

Chinese manufacturers currently account for 60% of global EV sales.

The 2 largest global EV manufacturers are BYD and Tesla (with plants in China). VW are lagging in 3rd place.

China also manufacture 60-70% of all EV batteries.

It would take a huge amount of investment to displace China as the long term source of most EVs given their current market leadership, low manufacturing costs (compared to Europe and US) and access to raw materials.

Risks/possibilities - fundamentally new battery technology allowing new market entrants, tariff barriers erected by the West to avoid reliance on strategically important technology.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - madf

Polestar is not dead. (Yet).

Refinanced with $400M.

But low car sales and bleeding cash.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - badbusdriver

Polestar is not dead. (Yet).

Refinanced with $400M.

But low car sales and bleeding cash.

Really?, I see heaps of them on the road

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
23,000 cars in the UK.

It’s been a one model brand since 2019, but Polestar 3 & 4 arrive second half of this year.

They keep me busy.

Edited by mcb100 on 02/02/2024 at 11:45

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

Volvo have decided to pull the plug on Polestar which is part owned by Geely

Volvo are 82% owned by Geely.

Polestar is 50% owned by Volvo and 50% by Geely.

So when it comes down to it all 3 companies are p155ing in the same pot.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

Polestar is not dead. (Yet).

Refinanced with $400M.

But low car sales and bleeding cash.

Really?, I see heaps of them on the road

Smoking heaps?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

Polestar is not dead. (Yet).

Refinanced with $400M.

But low car sales and bleeding cash.

I read a report on that in the DT today - it was weird - Volvo are selling their 48% stake in Polestar to Geely, who boss owns most of the rest of the firm. But then Geely owns Volvo anyway. What's the point if they're both owned effectively by the same firm one way or the other? Volvo are (according to the report) way off their next (mandated?) target for EV sales by 2025.

The report also said that Renault have pulled their spin-off EV unit, Ampere, and that sales of EVs will decline for the first time in Germany in 2024, after the UK market essentially flatlined in 2023.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
A brief, potted, history.

Polestar were a racing team, running Volvos in various touring car championships.
Volvo bought them, they became Volvo’s ‘skunk works’ - you could buy a Polestar modified Volvo.
Geely bought a majority shareholding of Volvo.
Polestar spun off as a stand alone brand, part owned by Volvo, part by Geely.
Geely now ‘buying’ Volvo’s shares in Polestar.
Presumably gives cash injection to Volvo to develop EV range and brings Polestar under full control of Geely.
Volvo, so far as I’m aware, continues to provide aftersales provision to Polestar owners (Polestar 2 and Volvo XC40 share a lot of architecture).
End of story.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan
Geely bought a majority shareholding of Volvo.

At one point Geely owned 100% of Volvo but now (as far as I am aware) its 82%.

Don't forget that Geely also own LTI (London Taxis) which are Volvo's under the skin.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
They do own London Electric Vehicle Company (the taxis), as well as Lotus, Proton and smart.
Those are the brands we’re aware of, there are several others in China.

zgh.com/our-business/?lang=en

Edited by mcb100 on 02/02/2024 at 13:56

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

Not cars but...

Electric aeroplanes are getting some traction. Of course not talking of Boeing/Airbus level but for small 2 seater electric planes are surprisingly economical for training. Typically they have £20/hour operating cost.

Also, electric boats, especially those with hydrofoils are getting some lift.

Being hydrofoiled, then can achieve very high speed on water and that leads to some good benefits case where road transport takes too long and water transport is faster (may work for London, San Fransisco type cases).

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
For those interested in EV fires, here’s a useful resource with lots of data.

www.evfiresafe.com/

The YouTube video on the home page is a decent listen, breaking down the range of ‘EV fires’, the vast majority of which are scooters and e-bikes, and traction battery fires in cars. Even further breaking them down to those caused by the traction battery and those in which the traction battery went up as the result of external sources.

Also how fire services are dealing with EV conflagrations.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

There may be some genuinely concerned about combustion but my guess is they've already chosen not to get an EV and are simply looking for some excuse to support that decision. Hence the endless procession of critical factors. Weight, range, fires, lack of noise, children mining, fictitious legal compulsion, depreciation, weight yet again and so forth. Oh and cost, which is indeed a legitimate concern unless there's a lease involved. Though it's difficult to ignore people repeating ad nauseum half truths, FUD etc

My suggestion these days is if someone asks I'll let them know just how good it is. Otherwise their loss.

Edited by Ethan Edwards on 03/02/2024 at 23:50

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

There may be some genuinely concerned about combustion but my guess is they've already chosen not to get an EV and are simply looking for some excuse to support that decision. Hence the endless procession of critical factors. Weight, range, fires, lack of noise, children mining, fictitious legal compulsion, depreciation, weight yet again and so forth. Oh and cost, which is indeed a legitimate concern unless there's a lease involved. Though it's difficult to ignore people repeating ad nauseum half truths, FUD etc

My suggestion these days is if someone asks I'll let them know just how good it is. Otherwise their loss.

I suspect that leasing and PCP prices will be hiked substantially for EVs very soon, given how residual values have been plummeting. No way can those providing such services afford to pick up those depreciation losses and survive, or at least continue to offer those services for EVs.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow
For those interested in EV fires, here’s a useful resource with lots of data. www.evfiresafe.com/ The YouTube video on the home page is a decent listen, breaking down the range of ‘EV fires’, the vast majority of which are scooters and e-bikes, and traction battery fires in cars. Even further breaking them down to those caused by the traction battery and those in which the traction battery went up as the result of external sources. Also how fire services are dealing with EV conflagrations.

Looked at the bus bit.

No fatalities known to them at the time of writing, though it would be hard to argue that doesn't involve a liberal dose of good luck.

Incidentally, the "pantographic charging station" illustrated comes pretty close to inventing the trolley bus. Problem solved.

That appears to be an Australian Fire Services site. They seem to like the fact (surprising to me) that buses mostly have their batteries on the roof, giving better access and a bit more evac time, though I was reminded of Colnel Kurtz and his "We train young men to drop fire on people" line

Heres another Australian site.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Z_ZDexjiPI

He notes long term health risks from the toxic fumes, which wont impress Taiwanese, who are basically oblivious to the already grim levels of "winter" air pollution

Covered charging stations - davecooper

I cannot recall any ev chargers having a canopy over them so basically you get soaked connecting up in bad weather. I would have thought that canopies with solar panels on the top would be a good idea both from a comfort and a renewable point of view.

All fuel filling stations have canopies for weather protection, I just wondered why ev charging stations were not following suit.

Covered charging stations - Engineer Andy

I cannot recall any ev chargers having a canopy over them so basically you get soaked connecting up in bad weather. I would have thought that canopies with solar panels on the top would be a good idea both from a comfort and a renewable point of view.

All fuel filling stations have canopies for weather protection, I just wondered why ev charging stations were not following suit.

Let's hope that EV charger systems have a very high IP rating for water ingress. There's a good reason why we tell young children not to go near sockets at home with wet hands. I doubt if there's a problem, given building sites have had outside power connections for decades now.

Covered charging stations - Terry W

Had recharging EVs in rain been a hazard, there would have been countless deaths by now - they are obviously design as other site equipment to be operated in adverse conditions.

PVs in a canopy measuring (say) 3 x 6m would produce about 2500kw pa. On a fast 100kw charger this would last about 25 hours - spread over (perhaps) 3 days as chargers aren't in use at full power 24 hours a day. Nice idea but not a game changer!!

Covered charging stations - pd

I cannot recall any ev chargers having a canopy over them so basically you get soaked connecting up in bad weather. I would have thought that canopies with solar panels on the top would be a good idea both from a comfort and a renewable point of view.

All fuel filling stations have canopies for weather protection, I just wondered why ev charging stations were not following suit.

Let's hope that EV charger systems have a very high IP rating for water ingress. There's a good reason why we tell young children not to go near sockets at home with wet hands. I doubt if there's a problem, given building sites have had outside power connections for decades now.

To be fair squirting highly flammable liquid pumped at high pressure out of an open nozzle into effectively an open container isn't a great idea either on the face of it, but it works, and we are just used to it. There is no way it would be allowed to be like that were it being "invented" today though.

Edited by pd on 05/02/2024 at 08:38

Covered charging stations - Adampr

You don't need to stand next to an EV while charging it (thank goodness). You either go indoors or just sit in the car out of the weather.

Having said that, I know of at least one EV charging station (in Portishead) that does indeed have a PV canopy. It's largely pointless as the PVs don't generate nearly enough power, but I suppose it all contributes.

Covered charging stations - davecooper

I was really thinking about this from a purely comfort point of view and nothing to do with safety or a location for PV's. I watched someone getting absolutely drenched as he tried to figure out what to do at a charger in a motorway services and I wondered how difficult could erecting a simple cover be.

The chargers were a few feet from the building and It seems they missed a trick by not having a combined canopy and covered walkway to the main door which wasn't far away.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘ Let's hope that EV charger systems have a very high IP rating for water ingress. There's a good reason why we tell young children not to go near sockets at home with wet hands. I doubt if there's a problem, given building sites have had outside power connections for decades now.’

All the time you’re handling the cable and connector, there’s nothing flowing. Which is how cables get sawn off without electrocuting the perpetrator.
Plug in, activate the charge either via an app or contactless card, car and charger then perform an ‘electronic handshake’, the cable locks on to the car, and charging commences a few seconds later. By which time you’ve either wandered off to do something else or got in the car.
Reverse the process to leave.
The one thing that occasionally catches people out is when the weight of the cable pulls a CCS plug slightly out of alignment with the port on the car, meaning it can’t lock on and therefore start charging.
Instavolt seem particularly prone to this. Just a case of keeping a bit of pressure on the plug until you hear it lock.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

Is this the beginning of the end ?

Opinion: investors are getting cold feet over electric cars, and here's why (msn.com)

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

Nope it's not. The genie is out of the bottle now. New Fossil fuel cars are being phased out. EVs are easy to use and cheap to run. People power will dictate take up. Carrot being better than stick.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - RT

Nope it's not. The genie is out of the bottle now. New Fossil fuel cars are being phased out. EVs are easy to use and cheap to run. People power will dictate take up. Carrot being better than stick.

"cheap to run" is very dependent on the usage pattern - cheap charging at home but can be more expensive than petrol/diesel if you need to recharge away from home - insurance certainly isn't cheap for eVs.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

The bottom line is simple. The human race cannot carry on polluting the planet as we have been since the industrial revolution and expect to survive. EV's are obviously only part of the solution but e have to start somewhere.

Unfortunately not all countries are willing to join in. Take the USA, if The Donald gets back in we are all doomed since he is totally in favour of coal and other antiquated dirty fuels.

But I don't suppose the inevitable will worry many on here despite climate change being obvious to anyone with only 1/2 a brain cell.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

The bottom line is simple. The human race cannot carry on polluting the planet as we have been since the industrial revolution and expect to survive. EV's are obviously only part of the solution but e have to start somewhere.

Unfortunately not all countries are willing to join in. Take the USA, if The Donald gets back in we are all doomed since he is totally in favour of coal and other antiquated dirty fuels.

But I don't suppose the inevitable will worry many on here despite climate change being obvious to anyone with only 1/2 a brain cell.

Pollution from microplastics and other containments is far worse of a problem, because it's getting into the food chain for all species on the planet and globally. Very little is being done about it, or for that matter highlighted by the green lobby, because they can't make huge profits and gain (more) power out of it.

Don't forget, no politics (hint, hint, mods).

Funny also how those who can afford to go electric always like to push those who can't to give lots of their income to support their purchases, presuming that the Plebs will be grateful in their penury as they wait for the bus.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - alan1302

The bottom line is simple. The human race cannot carry on polluting the planet as we have been since the industrial revolution and expect to survive. EV's are obviously only part of the solution but e have to start somewhere.

Unfortunately not all countries are willing to join in. Take the USA, if The Donald gets back in we are all doomed since he is totally in favour of coal and other antiquated dirty fuels.

But I don't suppose the inevitable will worry many on here despite climate change being obvious to anyone with only 1/2 a brain cell.

Pollution from microplastics and other containments is far worse of a problem, because it's getting into the food chain for all species on the planet and globally. Very little is being done about it, or for that matter highlighted by the green lobby, because they can't make huge profits and gain (more) power out of it.

Don't forget, no politics (hint, hint, mods).

Funny also how those who can afford to go electric always like to push those who can't to give lots of their income to support their purchases, presuming that the Plebs will be grateful in their penury as they wait for the bus.

An interesting read about Microplastics:

skeptoid.com/episodes/4806

Not sure they are not talked about though - have seen plenty about them and Microbeads have been banned in a lot products which are all related.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

The bottom line is simple. The human race cannot carry on polluting the planet as we have been since the industrial revolution and expect to survive. EV's are obviously only part of the solution but e have to start somewhere.

Unfortunately not all countries are willing to join in. Take the USA, if The Donald gets back in we are all doomed since he is totally in favour of coal and other antiquated dirty fuels.

But I don't suppose the inevitable will worry many on here despite climate change being obvious to anyone with only 1/2 a brain cell.

Pollution from microplastics and other containments is far worse of a problem, because it's getting into the food chain for all species on the planet and globally. Very little is being done about it, or for that matter highlighted by the green lobby, because they can't make huge profits and gain (more) power out of it.

Don't forget, no politics (hint, hint, mods).

Funny also how those who can afford to go electric always like to push those who can't to give lots of their income to support their purchases, presuming that the Plebs will be grateful in their penury as they wait for the bus.

An interesting read about Microplastics:

skeptoid.com/episodes/4806

Not sure they are not talked about though - have seen plenty about them and Microbeads have been banned in a lot products which are all related.

They are far more of an environmental issue than 'global warming' (or is it now 'global boiling', because TPTB haven't lied to, ahem, I mean scared us enough into penury), and the amount of coverage has been minimal, as has been that concerning most other non-warming / ozone-depleting pollutants, especially those in the mining and making of EV and other 'green' products.

Microbeads were just one element - there are so many microplastics that are floating around that were plastic bags / wrappings, bits of products, clothing (including man-made fibres). Plus how much is now 'throw away' made from plastics (oil) and not from natural materials that used to be repairable and non-toxic because they are harmless to start with?

EVs may be the answer to some of our problems, but in my view they are deliberately being foisted on the Plebs decades early when actual reporting on the environment was exaggerated and full of lies;

e.g. excluding the vast majority of studies that said there was no evidence one way or the other as to the cause of any warming or that it wasn't part of some natural cycle, especially as the 'evidence' of what the climate was before was got using very basic tech, or that current temperature readings are amazingly taken from the business end of runways or in heavily built-up areas where they would be far hotter than elsewhere.

There is also an argument that governments and their WEF handlers are deliberately pushing EVs in order to bankrupt most volume car manufacturers via getting so heavily invested in EV design and production, so that when the bubble really bursts, they cannot afford to or are allowed to switch (at least partially) back to ICE/hybrid cars.

This leaving us Plebs with only mostly useless 'public' transport and far less social mobility, which is what the elites wanted (hence the carbon taxes and restrictions on flying unless you can pay). Then they can tool around without any Plebs bothering them, just bowing and sc***ing as was the case 100+ years ago.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

EVs are easy to use and cheap to run. People power will dictate take up. .

But expensive to buy, repair and manufacture ! And we are blissfully unexposed to the environments where most of the damage is done. Out of sight, out of mind.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘ The chargers were a few feet from the building and It seems they missed a trick by not having a combined canopy and covered walkway to the main door which wasn't far away.’

The other thing that charge point operators need to consider is that there tend to be rubber buffers affixed to the ground just short of the charger, to stop drivers reversing/driving into a cabinet full of high power equipment. Not good for those with mobility issues to get from car to charger. Wheelchair certainly can’t get over them.
There is a BSI standard, but I don’t think it’s mandatory.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘ Unfortunately not all countries are willing to join in. Take the USA, if The Donald gets back in we are all doomed since he is totally in favour of coal and other antiquated dirty fuels.’

I’m not too worried about Trump and coal (although I find him repulsive) as he made promises in 2016 to revitalise the US coal industry during his term, but by 2020 coal production was at a 43 year low. Lots of renewables have come online in the meantime.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - martin.mc

Would I be able to run an EV charging at home using a 13amp socket? Retired now and rarely cover more than 40 miles in a day. There would be a round trip of 100 miles maybe once a month.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - RichardW

Most EVs are between 3 - 4 miles / kWh. So if you are charging at 3kW then you will get about 9-12 miles range for each hour of charging. For your use this would probably work out, but you need to keep an eye on the plug / socket to ensure it doesn't overheat.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
It’s quite ‘lossy’ charging from a 3 pin socket - up to 30%.
For every 10kW out the socket, the battery may only see 7kW.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T
It’s quite ‘lossy’ charging from a 3 pin socket - up to 30%. For every 10kW out the socket, the battery may only see 7kW.

So where does the other 3kW go - heating the cable ? That's enough to boil a kettle in a few minutes. So the cabling on more robust chargers must be a lot heavier-duty. And those cables which need a cooling system must be wasting quite a bit of energy. Just like the radiator on an ICE car !

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
Also converting AC out of the socket to DC for the battery, as well as maintaining battery temperature for optimal charging.
30% is definitely at the upper end of losses.

Edited by mcb100 on 05/02/2024 at 17:45

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

Would I be able to run an EV charging at home using a 13amp socket? Retired now and rarely cover more than 40 miles in a day. There would be a round trip of 100 miles maybe once a month.

Most EVs are between 3 - 4 miles / kWh. So if you are charging at 3kW then you will get about 9-12 miles range for each hour of charging. For your use this would probably work out, but you need to keep an eye on the plug / socket to ensure it doesn't overheat.

Not a full EV but we have a PHEV and charge it from a "granny cable" using a 13A socket. been doing this for 3 1/2 years now.

Providing you do not use an extension and your electrics are in fine fettle you should not have an issue. The factory fitted plug on the cable has temperature monitoring fitted and will throttle back or stop charging should it get too hot. You must not use an extension since this is potentially dangerous.

A dedicated 30 amp socket strait off the distribution board is preferred by many but not strictly necessary.

Our Superb PHEV charges at about 10 amps (2.5 kW) and in summer we get a 36 mile range in summer from a full charge (have seen 39 miles in especially good weather) which takes about 5 5. hours (in very cold winter weather that same charge gives about 26 miles). At the Octopus Go rate it costs just over £1.00.

But I would not want to charge a full EV like that. It seems pretty pointless having a car that could do 250 on a full charge yet take as long as 2 days to complete it (based on how long the Superb takes). What would happen if you had a family emergency, waiting 2 days for the car to charge up would not be desirable would it?

If you are going full EV get a charge point fitted.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

Absolutely agree. FWIW a three pin charger charges my EV at 4 miles range per hour. With my window of cheap power that's a maximum of 20 miles a night.

If thats sufficient for your needs then fine.

Otherwise a 7kw EVSE will give you 26miles range per hour. Or 130 m per night.

A 90kw public charger gives 296 m range per hour.

It's all down to how much time you want to spend plugged in.

Edited by Ethan Edwards on 05/02/2024 at 20:33

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘ Absolutely agree. FWIW a three pin charger charges my EV at 4 miles range per hour. With my window of cheap power that's a maximum of 20 miles a night.’

Same as I get with a Polestar 2. They quote up to 40 hours to fully charge on a granny cable.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

On-board solar panel

electrek.co/2023/02/05/electric-mini-truck-solar-c.../

Havn't done sums but I'm surprised that makes much difference, even for the very light duty described, and in Florida.

That panel doesn't look much bigger than those used to keep a conventional car battery topped up.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

On-board solar panel

electrek.co/2023/02/05/electric-mini-truck-solar-c.../

Havn't done sums but I'm surprised that makes much difference, even for the very light duty described, and in Florida.

That panel doesn't look much bigger than those used to keep a conventional car battery topped up.

It has a 6000wh battery. Most EWVs have batteries measured in kwh - this one at 6kwh would give a range of ~20 miles.

The 300wh of charging per day would provide power to cover 1760 yards - better known as 1 mile to most of us.

Great for driving round the garden - utterly pointless for those who need to go further than they could anyway walk.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

<< You must not use an extension since this is potentially dangerous. >>

Especially if any of it is kept coiled !

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

I have family in Bristol, Oxford and Manchester. Having a car that can only do 40 miles and will need 2 days charging means ( according to your comment ) I would have to take the train in an emergency, or have some sort of esp to know when the poo hits the fan.

You have just demonstrated why electric cars are no good for a lot of people, who go beyond their own back yard.

If I was forced to get any electric car it would have to be self charging, not that I could afford them.

B~146 miles

O~109 miles

M~266 miles

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - alan1302
I’m not too worried about Trump and coal (although I find him repulsive) as he made promises in 2016 to revitalise the US coal industry during his term, but by 2020 coal production was at a 43 year low. Lots of renewables have come online in the meantime.

He says a lot but never really did much last time round so if he does win again I'd expect more of the same.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

Confused about your objections. American cars run on domestic coal? Then he is talking about power generation with coal. Since nuclear and existing hydro / wind/ solar /gas isn't going away then if it results in cheaper electricity isn't that a win? Evs using said cheapo electric. What's your objections to America getting cheaper electricity?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

He is going back to the first car that was powered by steam. lol the coal goes in the back to produce it

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

.

Edited by Ethan Edwards on 05/02/2024 at 23:19

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

Confused about your objections. American cars run on domestic coal?

What a totally stupid comment.

Don't think I need to say any more.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

You mentioned cars running on domestic coal !

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Xileno

There are too many irrelevancies creeping into this Volume, it's not what these threads are supposed to be about.

Can we keep these to EV Q&A please and no sniping.

Thanks

Mod

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - SLO76
That’s two of the three electric buses my firm has off the road. The Sigma’s are eating rear axles and the Merc minibus’s battery pack is suffering serious degradation after less than two years. It’s unable to complete any service route we have now.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow
That’s two of the three electric buses my firm has off the road. The Sigma’s are eating rear axles and the Merc minibus’s battery pack is suffering serious degradation after less than two years. It’s unable to complete any service route we have now.

Offhand eating rear axles doesn't sound like a specifically EV issue. Just sounds like bad mechanical design or execution, or am I missing something?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - badbusdriver
That’s two of the three electric buses my firm has off the road. The Sigma’s are eating rear axles and the Merc minibus’s battery pack is suffering serious degradation after less than two years. It’s unable to complete any service route we have now.

Offhand eating rear axles doesn't sound like a specifically EV issue. Just sounds like bad mechanical design or execution, or am I missing something?

Bit of both maybe?.

EV produces maximum torque at 0 revs and a bus does lots of stopping and starting. so perhaps too much torque for the axle to deal with?

However the bus (obviously) should be fitted with a rear axle able to deal with the torque produced by the electric motor.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

News from Toyota that they have revised their EV sales forecast down wards as their hybrid sales have surged , and even in China, the home of many of the EV producers .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

News from Toyota that they have revised their EV sales forecast down wards as their hybrid sales have surged , and even in China, the home of many of the EV producers .

I recall a recent DT report of fields and fields of unwanted new EVs from their (Chinese) home manufacturers. It was like all those US old fighter jets kept in the desert 'just in case' but on a far larger scale.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

EVs not selling well - let's blame Mr Bean for that

www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/02/06/rowan-atkinson.../

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

There's well over one million EVs on UK roads right now. That's even with a steep purchase price and 20% VAT on public chargers.

Things change.

If our leaders want more EV take up then they'll need to create the right climate. Otherwise the second million might take a couple of years.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘If our leaders want more EV take up then they'll need to create the right climate. Otherwise the second million might take a couple of years.’

It’s taken over twenty years to hit one million registrations, so a couple of years to double that would be extraordinary. But that’s the aim.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - SLO76
This explains it better, this being the very axle and motor design they use. Think we’ve went through 5 of them so far on 2 buses. Obviously a deeply flawed design.

I did mention to our engineers recently that the vehicles don’t seem to have traction control - unlike most modern buses and all electric versions I’ve previously driven. The Sigma’s will spin their rear wheels on damp roads without much effort. I don’t think this will be doing said axle much good. But so far that’s one out of three still on the road and the firm has now gone bust and taken the warranty with them. They’re largely very expensive depot ornaments these days. Which is a shame as they’ve quite pleasant to drive, very relaxing.


www.wardsauto.com/engines/dana-s-e-axle-enters-pro...a

Edited by SLO76 on 06/02/2024 at 23:27

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

The government strategy to increase take up of EVs seems to have changed from:

  • "subsidise electric" (company cars, no duty on electricity, zero VED etc) to
  • "penalise ICE" with potential £15k penalty per vehicle which does not meet the target of 22% EV sales in 2024

This has the potential to totally disrupt the market:

  • those who prefer ICE will hold on to existing vehicles as new will carry a premium, possibly increasing s/h values
  • it will make new EV seem relatively cheaper than the ICE alternative
  • it will massively favour companies which can meet the 22% quota. Others may go out of business.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

So effectively carrot changed to stick.

The penalty will also make motoring unaffordable to many since it is effectively pushing up prices of new ICE by £15k and thus used car prices will also go up.

Others may go out of business

Or pull out of UK market as all car makers are global and most of them have good market in other parts of the world where it is not yet so hostile against ICEs.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

So effectively carrot changed to stick.

The penalty will also make motoring unaffordable to many since it is effectively pushing up prices of new ICE by £15k and thus used car prices will also go up.

Others may go out of business

Or pull out of UK market as all car makers are global and most of them have good market in other parts of the world where it is not yet so hostile against ICEs.

I have never read such nonsense. Suppose it must be on some obscure website or a daily tabloid.

You would be better off by far considering the real effects of climate change which is happening instead of worrying about some nonsense that will never happen.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

The House of Lords Committee are blaming Rowan Atkinson’s article in the Guardian some time ago for the poor uptake of EVs .

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - madf

I can see a fairly strong movement arising in the future as current green initiatives add on costs significantly and in some cases for far inferior results.

As it stands, the UK is at risk - if all green measures succeed 100% , the National Grid /Electricity generating capacity will be stretched by 2027. Hinckley Point has been delayed to start by then but as it is only 10 years late - much due to planning - another couple of years delay could be on the cards,

But then I don't expect Green Initiatives will be a success as they are largely unaffordable by the potential users and the rollouts are bedevilled by Government incompetence. Labour will face some hard choices.in power.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

I hope that labour get it but have no faith in the public to vote the right way, but let us not get into that.

I do not see labour changing anything about the green ideology in cars any time soon, they say they will but history tells us otherwise.

This is not a political platform, but to name only 2 ..

1 . They came into power promising to ret rid of the poll tax and go back to getting this money off income tax, so those on benefits would pay nothing until they got back in work. ALL they did was rename it the "community charge" but same bill, from the same council to pay for the same thing, and same consequences/penalties if you do not pay. A rose by any other name is still a rose,

2 . Bates and the post office scandal, it happened on labour watch as well but they only continued the cover up, and did nothing to stop there own gov ministers or bring justice to the postmasters,

As I said this is not a political platform but the gov labour or cons, will not improve the infrastructure, will not stop spending twice as much money on electric vehicles ( some electric buses cost twice as much as there counterpart ), will never admit they real cost of going green, a cost we are all paying as councils claim bankruptcy, I cant help thinking that had they not spent so much on being green they might have done a better job of fulfilling their other obligations.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - alan1302

I do not see labour changing anything about the green ideology in cars any time soon, they say they will but history tells us otherwise.

This is not a political platform, but to name only 2 ..

1 . They came into power promising to ret rid of the poll tax and go back to getting this money off income tax, so those on benefits would pay nothing until they got back in work. ALL they did was rename it the "community charge" but same bill, from the same council to pay for the same thing, and same consequences/penalties if you do not pay. A rose by any other name is still a rose,

2 . Bates and the post office scandal, it happened on labour watch as well but they only continued the cover up, and did nothing to stop there own gov ministers or bring justice to the postmasters,

The Tories brought in Poll Tax and got rid of it...and replaced it with the Community Charge...then a bit later it became Council Tax as it is now - nothing whatsoever to do with Labour.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

Not true .. as I said they did not change it, the poll tax came in 1990, since then

Labour have been in power at no.10 1997-2009, and changed nothing about the poll tax. But as I said poll tax and community charge are one and the same. You can call it the nhs benevolent fund or whatever, but if it looks like a rose, it smells like a rose and behaves like a rose then it is a rose.

Anyway this is not a political platform.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr

The House of Lords Committee are blaming Rowan Atkinson’s article in the Guardian some time ago for the poor uptake of EVs .

That's a very polite way of blaming people for being stupid. If your entire view of something is formed by the opinion of an actor you're in trouble.

Isn't the main reason for the slowing of EVs that everyone is currently skint and electricity has multiplied in price over the last couple of years?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

The House of Lords Committee are blaming Rowan Atkinson’s article in the Guardian some time ago for the poor uptake of EVs .

That's a very polite way of blaming people for being stupid. If your entire view of something is formed by the opinion of an actor you're in trouble.

Isn't the main reason for the slowing of EVs that everyone is currently skint and electricity has multiplied in price over the last couple of years?

To be fair to Rowan Atkinson, he does hold a degree in Electrical Engineering, so he's no dunce in such matters.

Those behind these 'complaints' are just trying to excuse their own failings and of those others pushing EVs way too early and with little consideration for many issues we've highlighted.

In other words, typical Establishment uselessness and corruption.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

So effectively carrot changed to stick.

The penalty will also make motoring unaffordable to many since it is effectively pushing up prices of new ICE by £15k and thus used car prices will also go up.

Others may go out of business

Or pull out of UK market as all car makers are global and most of them have good market in other parts of the world where it is not yet so hostile against ICEs.

It will make new ICE more expensive but I doubt by £15k - small ICE would then cost much more than their EV equivalents. It will reduce sales - that's the intention!

You are right some manufacturers will go out of business, but those with substantially or all EV fleets (eg: Tesla. BYD. MG etc) will prosper. That's how competitive markets work!

These changes may make motoring unaffordable for some - it will be gradual over the next decade, not an immediate consequence. The alternative - continued use of fossil fuels - limited in supply, creates pollution and (IMHO) climate change - is untenable.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

Those who are virtue signaling on EVs on environmental aspect, should recall that once diesel cars were promoted by government for being better for environment due to lower CO2 emission.

While climate change is real, whether it is a problem or EVs will solve it is open to debate.

One issue with EV is that technology is not matured yet. Newer EVs will have better batteries so better to wait for few years and then buy EVs when improvements will be marginal.

There was a time when every new mobile was substantially better than previous models but now it is no longer the case. A new mobile today is only having an extra camera or little bit more bling compared to a model 2-3 years back. EVs are still in early adopters phase and mainstream public is not ready for it.

If something is good enough, people will buy of their own, without carrot or stick.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘Those who are virtue signaling on EVs on environmental aspect, should recall that once diesel cars were promoted by government for being better for environment due to lower CO2 emission.’

At the time, they were. Like for like, a diesel produced a lower level of co2 than an equivalent petrol.
The downside being that they’re worse for local, particulate, emissions.

Is ‘virtue signaling’ intended as an insult, or a slight?

Edited by mcb100 on 07/02/2024 at 12:58

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy
‘Those who are virtue signaling on EVs on environmental aspect, should recall that once diesel cars were promoted by government for being better for environment due to lower CO2 emission.’ At the time, they were. Like for like, a diesel produced a lower level of co2 than an equivalent petrol. The downside being that they’re worse for local, particulate, emissions. Is ‘virtue signaling’ intended as an insult, or a slight?

The problem was that those same diesels were often far, far worse on particulate emissions - which itself and the severe effects on lung health were known by the EU and governments because their own experts told them as much, and yet they still went ahead and later denied being told.

And, of course, it gave rise to Dieselgate.

The politicians are mainly to blame, but where were the experts when they should've been resigning in protest and/or in front of TV cameras telling everyone about this charade?

More concerned about £££ and their career prospects than principles if you ask me. Now where have I recently heard that about 'experts' who are supposed to be 100% trustworthy? Politicians are 95% born liars, so we know they'll do it, but scientists and engineers?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - edlithgow

Thanks. I suppose I hadn't fully considered the effect of the electric motors greater initial torque, though I would have thought an axle designer like Dana, who I believe do a lot of specialist offroad stuff, ought to have done.

Re being more pleasant to drive, apart from the slim possibility of incineration, the local electric buses here are more pleasant to be a passenger in than the (admittedly often knackered seeming) diesels they replaced. Braking is a lot smoother, perhaps because regeneration smooths out driver input.

The lower pollution is obviously a good thing, though it'll be a bit of a drop removed from the appalling local air quality ocean. About 30% of the muck blows in from China, which probably inhibits local action.

Gogoro electric scooters with battery swap infrastructure are probably a bigger actual and potential improver, since there are more motorcycles per head than anywhere else in the world, and they are mostly small (150cc) engines without cats/

Edited by edlithgow on 08/02/2024 at 01:59

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

Depending on the size of the bus electric buses cost twice as much as the diesel counterpart, Also,

1 . with ad blue they ( newer diesel ) put out a lot less then most petrol cars.

2 . If councils have to spend twice there budget on public transport then fares will go up, as well as the council tax, especially with the budget cuts. The recycle bin wagons cost an extra 30k each over traditional diesel ones. Multiply the cost of 1 by the 100's councils across the country have and I would suggest that might be 1 large reason why councils are declaring bankruptcy.

3 . As already stated you should ask yourself how eco friendly it really is when the factories that produce the parts push out more damage then any diesel engine, and they still cannot reuse the batteries once they are gone.

4 . Cars damage the atmosphere much less then say trains, Aircraft etc

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

I was frustrated when 6 mths or so ago I tried to get a quote to change the batteries in an electric car, and have to admit I failed, there is little or no information and believe me when I tell you it is hard work, even for the most common makes. The Vauxhall Corsa for example.

Vauhall corsa E : new around £34'000, new battery pack £8'870 plus tax, labour etc

So what joy when I finally got the information the dealers do not want you to know, it is something you have to factor in if you want to keep the car for more then say 8 years, if I spent that much money on a NEW car than I would most certainly want it to last more than 8 years, about twice as long.

Degradation means that after 8 years the battery would have lost around 30% of its range, this is on top of the 20% it will lose on it's "advertised" range in real life conditions. (tested in doors on a flat service ) The manufacturer in this case advertises that the battery will outlive the life of the car battery warranty which is 8 years or there abouts, to me that is nothing to shout about.

So, if you get a 2nd hand electric car than that is the first question you have to ask and get proof of before parting with your money, because people will sell their car before forking out £9'000 for a new battery (even supposing they have that sort of money ), especially if the range is only about 100 miles as a result of the battery degradation. The other thing you will need to check with the manufacturer (not the person selling the car ) is if the warranty is still valid with a new owner, because if they can find some loophole to charge you for putting in a new battery, trust me they will.

Edited by HGV ~ P Valentine on 07/02/2024 at 15:35

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

Is there any statistics how many EVs are "owned" vs "hired" aka lease, PCP etc.?

In USA it is circa 80%.

When people are renting the cars, the longevity of battery is not a consideration.

Of course lease companies need to factor this as they tend to sell the cars later eg at end of PCP, if customers returning the vehicles.

Some rental companies already declared they are moving away from EVs.

On a lighter note, picture says thousand words

www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/news/2024/02/06/TE...2

Edited by movilogo on 07/02/2024 at 16:05

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

Ah, that electric bus manufacturer who spent £1Bn+ on producing...nothing and now has gone bust. Will we get the equivalent of the DotCom bubble results for electric vehicle manufacturers.

That includes mainstream car makers, given how some must've spent $Bns on R&D only to find the market ain't big enough to support it, and some of the products aren't exactly great either.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

Ah, that electric bus manufacturer who spent £1Bn+ on producing...nothing and now has gone bust. Will we get the equivalent of the DotCom bubble results for electric vehicle manufacturers.

That includes mainstream car makers, given how some must've spent $Bns on R&D only to find the market ain't big enough to support it, and some of the products aren't exactly great either.

There are two groups who will go to the wall:

  • lease/PCP companies will record large losses on EVs. Assumed end of term sales value was much higher than currently depressed prices in the s/h market.
  • ICE manufacturers who have failed to develop a credible range of EVs.

I do not see a bursting EV bubble. Both Labour and Tory seem committed to EVs - a complete U-turn must rate as improbable.

More plausible is some easing of the regulatory framework (timing etc) and additional EV infrastructure subsidies.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

Vauhall corsa E : new around £34'000, new battery pack £8'870 plus tax, labour etc

Degradation means that after 8 years the battery would have lost around 30% of its range, this is on top of the 20% it will lose on it's "advertised" range in real life conditions. (tested in doors on a flat service )

Battery degradation depends partly upon usage. Some reports estimate ~2% pa. A which report puts the total drop over 10 years at ~10%.

So 30% over 8 years seems a gross exaggeration.

I do agree that spending £34k on a Corsa seems high. However a 2023 s/h Corsa-e with less than 10k on the clock can be had for ~£15k upwards. Could make a lot of sense for many!!

Edited by Terry W on 07/02/2024 at 16:17

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr

Vauhall corsa E : new around £34'000, new battery pack £8'870 plus tax, labour etc

Degradation means that after 8 years the battery would have lost around 30% of its range, this is on top of the 20% it will lose on it's "advertised" range in real life conditions. (tested in doors on a flat service )

Battery degradation depends partly upon usage. Some reports estimate ~2% pa. A which report puts the total drop over 10 years at ~10%.

So 30% over 8 years seems a gross exaggeration.

I do agree that spending £34k on a Corsa seems high. However a 2023 s/h Corsa-e with less than 10k on the clock can be had for ~£15k upwards. Could make a lot of sense for many!!

You could get a brand new one for a little over £20k if you don't mind buying stock.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

And now this from the advertising watchdog

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/cars/news/electric-cars-are-not-zero-emission-says-advertising-watchdog/ar-BB1hVePQ?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=e3e4fc24ebfc45dda2ce66efe0999da7&ei=26

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy
I do agree that spending £34k on a Corsa seems high. However a 2023 s/h Corsa-e with less than 10k on the clock can be had for ~£15k upwards. Could make a lot of sense for many!!

What I don't understand is why would anyone buy them new if they depreciated by 55% in the first year alone? Vauxhall (well Stellantis) would surely not be able endure losses that big in 'buying' sales via subsidising dealers one way or the other, not that that degree anyway.

TBH even the 'standard' Corsa is way overpriced, but then most (remaining) small cars are these days. The difference is that there are better cars than the Corsa out there.

Note that my 18yo ICE car still has the same range it had on day 1. Jus' sayin'.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr
I do agree that spending £34k on a Corsa seems high. However a 2023 s/h Corsa-e with less than 10k on the clock can be had for ~£15k upwards. Could make a lot of sense for many!!

What I don't understand is why would anyone buy them new if they depreciated by 55% in the first year alone? Vauxhall (well Stellantis) would surely not be able endure losses that big in 'buying' sales via subsidising dealers one way or the other, not that that degree anyway.

TBH even the 'standard' Corsa is way overpriced, but then most (remaining) small cars are these days. The difference is that there are better cars than the Corsa out there.

Note that my 18yo ICE car still has the same range it had on day 1. Jus' sayin'.

I don't think anyone does buy them new apart from fleets, who depreciate them and write the tax off, and PCP buyers, who couldn't care less.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Ethan Edwards

Can I just point out that vauxhall batteries are readily available on the used market for around 3.5k not 9k.

Secondly the pack is designed to last between 1500 to 2000 cycles. Let's say 1750 if I charge it twice a week that's good for over 16years. Now seeing as it was only launched in 2020 why do you think it needs replacing at only 3.5years? I suggest you look at Tesla where batteries are lasting for 300k miles. Let's just say the battery and power trains will undoubtedly outlast the rest of the car. Any stories you hear are usually just that. Incidentallythe Leaf remains the only Air cooled battery EV. Every other one has a liquid cooled battery, and only this week I discovered that just like a Tesla it too has an Electric coolant heater. Things a petrol car doesn't have. That's one reason why the initial generation is upfront more expensive than its petrol equivalent. Long term its much cheaper to run. MG4 is pretty much on parity with equivalent price wise with ice cars. So that's another FUD demolished.

My Vauxhall battery is now into year three and doing fine thanks

Edited by Ethan Edwards on 07/02/2024 at 21:58

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

An ICE car doing (say) 40mpg and 10k pa will use 250 gallons of fuel. With fuel at £7 per gallon will cost £1750 pa to fuel.

An EV doing 4miles per kw at 28p per kwh (domestic price cap) will use 2500 kwh pa with a cost of £700pa.

The cost per kwh can vary between zero (with PVs on the roof) through night time rates at ~15p to m/way services at 70-80p.

A reasonable assumption is that an EV may save say ~£1000 pa on fuel costs. Obsessing over the price of a new EV, which are anyway reducing, is rather superficial!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - HGV ~ P Valentine

Hi,

Sorry I will never get electric but continue my investigation as to the pros and cons, eventually all the batteries will have to be replaced, but most engines will last 500k miles, and yes they do lose performance after use like anything, diesel engines last longer and can do more mileage which is why all of industry uses them. So I like it when someone quotes the pros, for 2 reasons.

1 . It is a debate and as such all opinions are valid.

2 . Information is always useful.

The price I quoted for the batteries was for new and from a main dealer, 2nd hand batteries will never be as good as new or last as long. I do 300k miles in 2-4 years so I would need to look at changing the batteries after 3.5 years, and I am not the only 1.

A normal car does not need an electric liquid cooled battery, that is why they do not have it. the coolant in the car keeps the engine at the right temperature by absorbing the heat build up, and stopping the water in the engine from freezing.

How to check your engine coolant and top it up | The AA

Ps I did see a few reports about how Tesla are in trouble but not checked it as yet.

Edited by HGV ~ P Valentine on 08/02/2024 at 12:33

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

<< I don't think anyone does buy them new apart from fleets, who depreciate them and write the tax off. >>

... and pay very much less than list price for them !!

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - badbusdriver

Is ‘virtue signaling’ intended as an insult, or a slight?

Perhaps a better question would be whether or not, in this context anyway, they actually exist.

Has there been studies or questionnaires in which new EV owners have openly admitted that they bought one just to appear that they care for the environment?. Not saying it definitely haven't happened, but it seems unlikely to me.

That (unless you have the ability to read minds) leaves the other option which is that the term was either invented or has started being used in this context by the anti-EV brigade as a derogatory term. Because they can't see past their own opinion they can't see why anyone would choose one. So they have decided that anyone who chooses to have an EV is only doing so because they want others to think they care for the environment. That the term exists in this context and the people who use it, clearly thinking it a valid comment, is really quite tragic.

You could get a brand new one for a little over £20k if you don't mind buying stock.

On Autotrader right now there is a brand new Corsa-e for £19,795. Seems something of a bargain?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

Not to forget, there are some tax benefits for EVs

  • No congestion charge
  • No road tax
  • Free parking in many places
  • Capital allowance when purchased thru company
  • BIK is nil or very low compared to ICE/HEV cars

For many people it makes sense to buy EVs even if they are not concerned with environmental aspect.

Some of the above started to taper over time so it will be interesting to see how many will buy EV when all incentives are removed.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Steveieb

According to the FT one EV manufacturer lost more than a quarter of its value in January alone. That’s the equivalent of the whole of Coca Cola.

So lower growth seems to be spooking the financial markets !

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

Over the last year Tesla shares have gone from a low of $154 in May 2023, to a high of $293 in July 2023, and are currently back down at $189.

Whether other EV manufacturers have experienced similar is unclear.

These wild fluctuations seem a product of rumour, uncertainty and speculation, rather than thoughtful analysis spooking the market.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - skidpan

Over the last year Tesla shares have gone from a low of $154 in May 2023, to a high of $293 in July 2023, and are currently back down at $189.

Whether other EV manufacturers have experienced similar is unclear.

These wild fluctuations seem a product of rumour, uncertainty and speculation, rather than thoughtful analysis spooking the market.

And possibly because the CEO is a total lunatic. He says things that would scare me if I was a shareholder. Personally regardless of how good a Tesla may be I would struggle to justify buying one simply because of the CEO.

Remember Ratners?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Terry W

And possibly because the CEO is a total lunatic. He says things that would scare me if I was a shareholder. Personally regardless of how good a Tesla may be I would struggle to justify buying one simply because of the CEO.

Tesla has grown sales from $400m in 2012 to $81bn in 2022.

He is a maverick mould breaker - much that he says can be uncomfortable.

Huge business success (Twitter aside!) may have given a massive ego delusions of business omnipotence - that you may not like it does not make it wrong.

I warm to Mr Musk no more than you.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

<< I warm to Mr Musk no more than you. >>

We can hope that he is the first to try out his prototype spaceship ?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Andrew-T

Is ‘virtue signaling’ intended as an insult, or a slight?

Has there been studies or questionnaires in which new EV owners have openly admitted that they bought one just to appear that they care for the environment?. Not saying it definitely haven't happened, but it seems unlikely to me.

It may be simpler than that. There have always been those who want new products (for whatever reason they claim) and others (like me) who are happier to wait and see how things develop, and the new designs prove themselves. I think that is where we are now.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Adampr

Is ‘virtue signaling’ intended as an insult, or a slight?

Has there been studies or questionnaires in which new EV owners have openly admitted that they bought one just to appear that they care for the environment?. Not saying it definitely haven't happened, but it seems unlikely to me.

It may be simpler than that. There have always been those who want new products (for whatever reason they claim) and others (like me) who are happier to wait and see how things develop, and the new designs prove themselves. I think that is where we are now.

It almost certainly is indeed simpler than that. The term 'virtue signalling' is one of the weapons of the 'culture wars' that our beloved politicians and press have stirred up.

The notion that people only do things to look like they care, rather than that they do ( regardless of whether they should care, and whether their actions actually help or not) is bizarre. What would be the point?

As I have said before, I've had an EV. I leased it because it was, for me, a cheap way into a new car and I fancied a new toy. Its environmental friendliness was not a key consideration. I loved it because it was cheap to run, full of toys, was very fast off the line and never.needed filling up. If I could get another at the same cost, I would, but the removal of incentives and price of electricity has made it a less attractive proposition.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - mcb100
‘ eventually all the batteries will have to be replaced ‘

Who says all the batteries will have to be replaced, when the data from EV’s on the road suggests the opposite, that the batteries will outlast the rest of the car.
The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

An EV has far fewer parts compared to ICE/HEV. So it should last million miles with wear & tear items replaced during servicing. Only the battery will deteriorate over time.

If we get EVs with removable batteries, then probably it will probably outlast its owner. Of course, it can be made undesirable in same way newer phones are better than older phones via software tricks.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - Engineer Andy

An EV has far fewer parts compared to ICE/HEV. So it should last million miles with wear & tear items replaced during servicing. Only the battery will deteriorate over time.

If we get EVs with removable batteries, then probably it will probably outlast its owner. Of course, it can be made undesirable in same way newer phones are better than older phones via software tricks.

I'd say that, for example, the tablet-style screens in new cars, especially EVs, will go wrong well before that, as likely will a LOT of the electronics, because (as I've said before), much of it is 'never-mind-the-quality-feel-the-width' in terms of engineering quality.

My tablet started to come up with errors after 6-7 years. After 9 years, it's now dead and uneconomic to repair by a significant margin. What does an EV owner do then? Like the batteries, I doubt if replacing a wonderwall screen and one that is not common to most cars, especially those in production now, will be cheap.

I don't recall ICE cars dashboard indicators going wrong all the time.

In addition, the poor quality software that carmakers appear to use (often years behind PC and phone/tablet makers because of the R&D lag time) and seemingly poor integration with hardware, a-la government computer systems, makes them quite susceptible to hacking, whether by criminals intent on stealing the car or parts thereof, and/or 'foreign agents' with even more nefarious intent.

If most cannot get Android Auto etc to work properly after several years, that IMHO doesn't bode well.

Besides, if EVs were to last that long, where will car manufacturers and especially dealerships make their money from:

a) by significantly upping the new price;

b) vastly overcharging (pardon the pun) for 'maintenance' and replacement parts (and making them non-standard or use software to drive out generic competition, a-la inkjet cartridges), even the 'mechanical' and structural ones like suspension bits, and/or;

c) reducing the engineering quality of components by designing shorter lifespans in order to get 'regular business' for parts replacements.

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

Bit long but informative video - covers how much battery degrades over time and other aspects of EVs in general

www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZysvgm2_Aw

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - alan1302

If most cannot get Android Auto etc to work properly after several years, that IMHO doesn't bode well.

Generally it does work. Why do you think it does not?

The Electric Vehicle (EV) thread Vol 5 - movilogo

If most cannot get Android Auto etc to work properly

Android Auto requires USB data cable - not just USB charging cable. Most people don't realize this and there is no marking on on USB cables to indicate whether it is data or charging only.

I had hit & miss with AA but after using data cable it works fine.

The electric van maker "Arrival" has departed. - focussed

Amazing that a company can spring up overnight be valued at $13billion and then disappear overnight owing lots and have produced absolutely nothing. They failed to sell even one vehicle.

Not helped no doubt by when demonstrating a proptotype in the factory yard to UPS who wanted to buy a fleet of vans - it caught fire - yes that would put your customer off!

archive.is/nmlKs#selection-1535.0-1535.51

and

archive.is/n6vZb

The electric van maker "Arrival" has departed. - Adampr

Amazing that a company can spring up overnight be valued at $13billion and then disappear overnight owing lots and have produced absolutely nothing. They failed to sell even one vehicle.

Not helped no doubt by when demonstrating a proptotype in the factory yard to UPS who wanted to buy a fleet of vans - it caught fire - yes that would put your customer off!

archive.is/nmlKs#selection-1535.0-1535.51

and

archive.is/n6vZb

You need to speak to people that work in internet stuff if this surprises you. Billions being spent on companies that investors hope will be the next Amazon or Google but just vanish I to nothing.

As for Arrival, I suppose why would anyone buy vans that aren't being produced when Ford will sell you an electric Transit today?

The electric van maker "Arrival" has departed. - madf

“Government EV strategy needs a rapid recharge” "

www.autoexpress.co.uk/opinion/362205/government-ev...e

"The transition to EVs is a complex challenge which requires a sustained and coordinated approach led by Government across a number of industries and sectors such as the car manufacturing industry, Local Authorities, the EV charging sector and the National Grid. In some areas the Government has made good progress towards this target, including setting mandatory targets for manufacturers to sell an increasing proportion of EVs each year. But there are many areas where the target is off track, and consumers in particular are being let down by a combination of poor information, insufficient charging infrastructure and barriers to affordability. "

22% of new car sales should be EVs in 2024...Not a hope based on current performance

and so on..No surprises but worth reading

Edited by madf on 09/02/2024 at 10:49

The electric van maker "Arrival" has departed. - Adampr

"Barriers to affordability" is my new go-to phrase for "too f-ing expensive"

The electric van maker "Arrival" has departed. - Xileno

This thread is now closed, please CLICK HERE to go to Volume 6 *****

Edited by Xileno on 09/02/2024 at 13:41