This is how government gets people interested and the ball rolling, just like they did with solar panels.Tax fiddle. No tax on the fuel to incentivise. Don’t change the goal posts
This is how government gets people interested and the ball rolling, just like they did with solar panels.Tax fiddle. No tax on the fuel to incentivise. Don’t change the goal posts
what has that got to do with the reliability/repairability of the battery?You only bought a second hand one because it was cheap after someone else took the hit on a new one.
The reason modern EVs now exist is exactly because ICE cars are not a panacea.
It would be needed if the battery became defective or damaged, not the Nio option of replacement of a discharged battery for a charged one, that isn't needed. The ease of replacement is what is needed if required.
it does make me laugh tho how the goal posts move . a few years back people were arguing EVs were a poor choice because there were no affordable 2nd hand cars.
now apparently they are a poor choice because they have lost too much value from new?.
The only reason they exist is because the government said we have to have them and it's cheap tax for businesses.
For most people buying new they are pretty much white goods now.
Can't you see that is the same goal post?
The cars are excessively priced new, which leads to huge depreciation on the used market.
I mean for me personal, being an EV is a much nicer experience and I am a personal owner/buyer/user with no incentives from the UK gov, and am busy shopping for my next personal EV again with no incentives. As for appliances, a twin tub was an appliance but would i go back to one after having a 10.5Kg washer that can be remote started, and then dry things as well, er nope.![]()
Nowhere, just saying as we all know how manufacturers like to make it difficult ro repair or replace things.AFAIK they are easy to replace. Most just bolt on. Where did you get the impression they are not.
Nowhere, just saying as we all know how manufacturers like to make it difficult ro repair or replace things.
Same difference in my mind.That's more about the whole right to repair.
What’s fuel duty right now?There's 20% vat on public charging and 5% on home electricity, so there is revenue generated.
Thought I should add I’m on the tax dodge train of EV via salary sacrifice, helped by 2% BIK and no VEDGo on then. People are selling a product that’s driven by tax savings right now. Good luck selling it without such benefits.
What do you drive ? And via what mechanism.
Paid cash, dealer was doing pre reg with a 5k discount.Go on then. People are selling a product that’s driven by tax savings right now. Good luck selling it without such benefits.
What do you drive ? And via what mechanism.
some are, but equally there are more reasonably priced EVs as well even new. perhaps because of the people on this forum tend to be more interested we look at the taycans abd what not, but the MG cars (ignoring the cyberster) are fair and the ID3 is roughly on a par with a high end golf, the small volvo and then there is the new Citroen which seems affordable , I suspect other cars on that platform will also be ok.Can't you see that is the same goal post?
The cars are excessively priced new, which leads to huge depreciation on the used market.
But they don't make them easily swappable, they build the whole car around it and even make it structural in some. So the cost of replacing it is basically disassembling and rebuilding an entire car.
Whereas a whole engines can still be swapped in a couple of day by someone who knows what they are doing. You can also find used engines dirt cheap for most cars.