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Boxbrownie Member Since: 17 Mar 2019 Location: Looe Posts: 2053 |
The same old same old stuff….. Our i3 is almost (in one month) seven years old, the range we get now is within literally a few miles of what we got when it was brand new, in fact sometimes it is even more due to driving conditions so basically it hasn’t noticeably degraded at all, I don’t expect the battery to suddenly go awol anytime soon, the BMS on modern EVs are the best around and I won’t bring up the old one about Japanese Prius Taxis still running after 200K miles or more on the original battery I am absolutely sure somebody would want to buy our i3 in a few years time when it might be worth maybe £15K or so and still has within 80-90% of original battery life left, hard to tell as the trade in values keep going up! Your just bringing up the same old stories about battery life and doom sayer’s predictions, these aren’t mobile phones with “plug in and hope” charging design. Regards David Lovely i6 has now gone, but not me...... Please let me know if anything in my post offends you, as I may wish to offend you again...... |
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4th Aug 2022 11:03 am |
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3landertwo Member Since: 27 May 2020 Location: UK Posts: 1130 |
by "well heeled" you mean 'Footballer's Husbands' ......... just trying to be topical. |
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4th Aug 2022 3:00 pm |
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Dartman the one Member Since: 04 Apr 2013 Location: Seville, Spain Posts: 1689 |
The worst problem for an EV is a shorted cell, the fire hazard has largely been overcome by each cell isolated by fuses, but what the cost is for replacing individual cells is or if even it can be done, I don't know my PC is slightly to the right of Genghis
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4th Aug 2022 3:10 pm |
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Sidthecat Member Since: 10 Sep 2017 Location: Sarf-East London-sur-Mer Posts: 1635 |
If we’re being topical, wouldn’t that then be an RV or JV? |
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4th Aug 2022 5:12 pm |
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Nodge68 Member Since: 15 Jul 2020 Location: Newquay Posts: 2082 |
This battery suddenly dying story is such BS.
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5th Aug 2022 5:47 pm |
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Andy131 Member Since: 09 Dec 2009 Location: Manchester Posts: 2187 |
Sadly a "battery" isn't a single unit, but a collection of cells. The whole is only as good as the weakest link, so if they were all in series, one dead cell = dead battery. Manufacturers are wise to this so that for example a Nissan Leaf 40kW battery has 320 individual cells, but they are arranged in banks, so an individual cell just corrupts a module taking out 7 other cells.
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6th Aug 2022 10:02 am |
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3landertwo Member Since: 27 May 2020 Location: UK Posts: 1130 |
Mazda offer an 8yrs warranty on their Panasonic battery pack. As used in the MX-30, only 'ALL' EV vehicle they make, which has an Hitachi motor. |
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6th Aug 2022 12:13 pm |
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AT1963 Member Since: 23 Nov 2021 Location: Leicester Posts: 252 |
So what is the answer?:
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6th Aug 2022 4:26 pm |
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Sidthecat Member Since: 10 Sep 2017 Location: Sarf-East London-sur-Mer Posts: 1635 |
All well and good, but you still need somewhere convenient to charge an EV - not everyone has that facility at home or locally. That’s the major drawback for me, assuming I was in the financial position to buy one |
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6th Aug 2022 6:58 pm |
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AT1963 Member Since: 23 Nov 2021 Location: Leicester Posts: 252 |
Of course...(didn't think of this)...cost of charging installation if able to install where you are.
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7th Aug 2022 10:47 am |
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Andy131 Member Since: 09 Dec 2009 Location: Manchester Posts: 2187 |
Just a thought, you know how the Inland Revenue likes it's pound of flesh, I wonder if being able to charge your vehicle at work could be a taxable perk - irrespective of you having an EV.
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7th Aug 2022 11:53 am |
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BossBob Member Since: 30 Sep 2010 Location: Bristol Posts: 1402 |
Not if you can then use it later. I wouldn’t install solar panels without some kind of energy storage device. Selling your excess generation to the grid is now the equivalent of throwing money away! |
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7th Aug 2022 1:20 pm |
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3landertwo Member Since: 27 May 2020 Location: UK Posts: 1130 |
"....... energy storage device ........ "
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7th Aug 2022 4:19 pm |
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Nodge68 Member Since: 15 Jul 2020 Location: Newquay Posts: 2082 |
Not at all. You use the electricity your panels generate in the daytime for washing, drying, dishwasher, heating hot water. I save over £100 per month on my electricity, simply because I've got solar panels installed, and the more the electricity prices climb, the more I save. Yes storing the electricity makes more sense, but as batteries are expensive, the payback period is longer than the payback period of the panels alone, which currently is under 6 years Hyundai Ioniq 5 Ultimate. The family car. 2009 Rimini Red SE TD4. Gone. 2006 Tonga Green i6 HSE. Gone. Audi A5 convertible, my daily driver. 1972 Hillman Avenger GT, the project. |
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7th Aug 2022 9:41 pm |
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