just planned a test journey and it seems like it does?Thanks, I really like this site, but it doens't give rough costs for charging enroute.
gives the time to charge and indicative cost lower down
just planned a test journey and it seems like it does?Thanks, I really like this site, but it doens't give rough costs for charging enroute.
Where is this deal from?I've put a deposit on a Peugeot e5008. Throughly depressing but seems like a good car for everyday family life and my kids are excited about it being a 7 seater. For £337 and no deposit and 8k miles a year I think it's a good deal for what it is. I did look at hybrids but I am firmly in the EV camp for daily driving. I really wanted a Smart #5 but wanted a good deal more than anything else.
I see what you mean, some of the chargers give me the total, others give absolutely nothing loljust planned a test journey and it seems like it does?
gives the time to charge and indicative cost lower down
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Eden Motor Group. I found it on leasing.com. I think they have 1 car left.Where is this deal from?
tree hugger!Joined the EV family today with the purchase of a Model3 LR AWD![]()

If possible just use open to all Tesla Supercharger locations, they are the cheapest you'll get if care about costs.Thanks, I really like this site, but it doens't give rough costs for charging enroute.
Just ordered the Jaecoo 5 all inclusive (tax, servicing, MOT, insurance, glass and tyres) at £417 which is 12k miles and 2 drivers.
Has anyone got an app or website for seeing charging costs for journey planning?
Honestly, we have no idea. There is no drive way so we'll have to see what the council can do for kerb side charging. Tescos is down the road so we could use that once a week.Will you regularly using public charging or is it a very niche occurrence and you’ll do 99% of charging at home?
I'd have looked into the council's options for kerbside charging before stumping up for the car, having to rely on public charging soon wears thin.Honestly, we have no idea. There is no drive way so we'll have to see what the council can do for kerb side charging. Tescos is down the road so we could use that once a week.
I can't envisage having an EV without being able to charge at home being anything other than a massive ball ache.Honestly, we have no idea. There is no drive way so we'll have to see what the council can do for kerb side charging. Tescos is down the road so we could use that once a week.
I managed it for about 4 weeks when my previous EV had a broken AC charger so I had to DC charge, it was grim adding 20-30 minutes to my already long office days to sit at a Tesla charger. The only good part was at least there was a cheap open to all Tesla site 30 seconds off my commute.I can't envisage having an EV without being able to charge at home being anything other than a massive ball ache.
You really need to have a plan and an idea of costs.
I can't envisage having an EV without being able to charge at home being anything other than a massive ball ache.
You really need to have a plan and an idea of costs.
I'd have looked into the council's options for kerbside charging before stumping up for the car, having to rely on public charging soon wears thin.
We have looked into them and are awaiting a call back from the council but had to order the car before the March deal expired. We are aware how expensive it can be at public chargers, but needs must. If we are doing long miles, we're going away so would be using public chargers anyway. Locally, we're just pottering around and would get away with charging once a week or even once every 2 weeks.I can't envisage having an EV without being able to charge at home being anything other than a massive ball ache.
You really need to have a plan and an idea of costs.
This was one of the bigger points for us as well, although we're not high mileage drivers and at 8p/kwh makes it disgustingly cheaper than an oil burner, as elequently put.I could live without a home charger but it's because I don't do much mileage. I don't understand anyone doing higher mileage buying an EV without home charging.
Regardless of costs the convience of not having to go to a petrol station was one of the key features of ownership for me.
I often would find from the other half that the petrol car needed fuel really late at night. I would have to go fill it or have the hassle in the morning. That said I mostly stopped commuting by car.
We only live 10 mins from our local Tescos store, we will just use them for top ups until we get something setup at home for charging. 30-45 mins for a top up while shopping once a week or so isn't too bad.My mum is without a home charger at the moment, and it’s a real pain in the backside for her.
Having to find an extra 30+ mins in her day to charge the car, not to mention the mega cost of it
So while I am a huge EV advocate for those that can charge at home, I don’t see any value in having one if you can’t. It just feels like an expensive faff.
For me, in principle, it wouldn’t be too bad. There are chargers at my gym so I could charge it while there, but you have to pay an idle fee as well :/
We only live 10 mins from our local Tescos store, we will just use them for top ups until we get something setup at home for charging. 30-45 mins for a top up while shopping once a week or so isn't too bad.