LOLYangwang
LOLYangwang
We took delivery of our brand new VW ID.3 Pro this afternoon. It isn't the most exciting car on the planet by a long stretch but the economics of it are just too hard to argue with.
We really like ours. A few annoyances, particularly those capacitive buttons, and the tech is mostly great but occasionally gets it wrong in an irritating way but overall: really nice car. I think it's pretty fun too - obviously it's no sports car but for a regular family car kind of thing, it handles pretty nicely, it's get a bit of pep, and I actually really like that it's rear wheel drive.
What is the penalty for going over the mileage allowance because for me to spend £250 a month in fuel in my slightly less economical Leon I'd have to do be doing over 21k a year.We took delivery of our brand new VW ID.3 Pro this afternoon. It isn't the most exciting car on the planet by a long stretch but the economics of it are just too hard to argue with. Mrs DRZ has a 1.0TSI Golf and she does about 50 miles a day commuting to/from work. All in all she spends around £250 a month on fuel, £180/yr VED and about £600/yr to insure as she's a relatively new driver. This ID.3 is costing £273 a month on a 3+23 lease deal (10k pa), which is £7100, plus insurance is quite a bit less at a shade under £300 a year so even at £20/month in electricity (which is massively more than we think it'll be!) we're at pretty much break even before we get into servicing etc - and of course we will sell the Golf. She might stray over the mileage limit but even then we're still massively quids in overall.
Even if we compare the depreciation of buying our exact Golf and using those numbers and all of our running costs, this ID.3 deal is still extremely competitive to the point of it basically being a no-brainer.
if they do that - the Audi bev warranty I posted yesterday in the other thread - if they are replacing packs near 100K they only have to provide a minimum refurb of 75% of original capacityfingers crossed they do something you are happy with....... an entire new battery pack would be v nice on a car with 95k miles on the clock.
Unless you are buying a Tesla or a Polestar, the list prices are just wildly inaccurate now.i think I saw some video about ID3 in stock ex-demo or extremely low mileage ones for just over 24k. That’s pretty good value tbh
Sorry, whats that telling me? you agree or not?My last charging session took exactly 7 hours and added 28% so 24 hours of charging should charge the battery from 0-95% or thereabouts.
Ours is the mid-2024 refresh version so has the 12.9" screen and other little enhancements over the earlier cars. I wonder how much of a difference that really makes? I don't think we'd notice or care but its good to know VW have been listening to their customers and moving things forward...
Its a falling market, new prices are dropping, pushing used prices down. New prices coming down can only be a good thing in the long term.Literally madness to buy a new electric car, ive lost about £5k on my used one in less than 6 months
I know some power is lost when charging especially using granny charger but my calculations show that I’m adding about 2.2kwh to the battery per hour so it’s not that bad.Sorry, whats that telling me? you agree or not?
I used 79kWh to take a model Y from 6% to 100% from memory.
Same, I think it looks awesome in the dark blue. I can't charge at home but I don't do many miles so I could potentially deal with only using public chargers. We have an EV-only salary sacrifice scheme at work which includes everything so when the R5 is available I may run the numbers and see what comes out the other side.Not fancied full Electric, however I do like the new Renault 5.
I know some power is lost when charging especially using granny charger but my calculations show that I’m adding about 2.2kwh to the battery per hour so it’s not that bad.
Exactly.!Power = volts x amps so 240 x 10 so 2400 watts or 2.4kw, 2.2 with losses is about right!
It's likely only to be madness if you plan on selling it a short period after you buy it. The longer you keep it the less of an impact the depreciation will have. People have become obsessed with having new/different cars every 2-3 years and the oversupply (prior to covid) made that a possibility. Ironically as cars got more reliable people swapped them more often. My next car will be an EV but I'll keep it for at least five years to minimise the deprecation.Literally madness to buy a new electric car, ive lost about £5k on my used one in less than 6 months
What is the penalty for going over the mileage allowance because for me to spend £250 a month in fuel in my slightly less economical Leon I'd have to do be doing over 21k a year.
Agree. Best Ev I’ve driven for fun and just doing everything well (at a sensible price) is my cupra born which is a bit tweaked from the id3. 58kwh is about 1.8 ton too so lighter than the bigger battery version and it does handle nicely.We really like ours. A few annoyances, particularly those capacitive buttons, and the tech is mostly great but occasionally gets it wrong in an irritating way but overall: really nice car. I think it's pretty fun too - obviously it's no sports car but for a regular family car kind of thing, it handles pretty nicely, it's get a bit of pep, and I actually really like that it's rear wheel drive.