that begs the querstion of how important regen paddles are -
I've never driven an EV and maybe I'm missing something completely obvious but why can't all that be done automatically via the brake pedal?
So basically no regen so the car can 'coast' but when braking the braking effort is translated to X amount of regen right up to the point where the physical brakes have to join in. From what I've read about the amount of regen available in one pedal driving it sounds like by just driving normally there would be enough retardation through regen alone to do the bulk of the effort.
I've never driven an EV and maybe I'm missing something completely obvious but why can't all that be done automatically via the brake pedal?
So basically no regen so the car can 'coast' but when braking the braking effort is translated to X amount of regen right up to the point where the physical brakes have to join in. From what I've read about the amount of regen available in one pedal driving it sounds like by just driving normally there would be enough retardation through regen alone to do the bulk of the effort.
Because it's a lot easier, and way more intuitive to press down on one pedal for 'go faster', and let off for 'slow down'. Driving an ICE or BEV where I have to actually brake now feels weird and primitive.
Not sure… it’s quite nice to be able to coast actually. The paddles are a good idea because you can turn it on and off as needed. On our Passat GTE I find myself going between D and B modes quite regularlyOne pedal driving is the future. Its great on cars which will come to a complete stop. Some manufacturers (Merc looking at you), even on the highest recup setting will never come to a complete stop so you have to use the brake.
Not sure… it’s quite nice to be able to coast actually. The paddles are a good idea because you can turn it on and off as needed. On our Passat GTE I find myself going between D and B modes quite regularly
But pressing the brake pedal lightly uses the same regen as lift off so there’s no saving thereIt's obviously personal preference, but not how I feel - in 'coast' you need to move your foot and depress a pedal to change speed. In one-pedal, your foot is always on or slightly off the accelerator, just at the level you need for the speed you are doing.
In any event, I would think people would relish the opportunity to save money by not using the brakes!
It's down to personal preference but as an EV owner who has tried both methods, I much prefer the coasting method with regen paddles than the one pedal driving. Though I tend to do more motorway driving than town driving where coasting is more beneficial. As for one pedal driving saving the brakes, EVs setup with brake pedal = regen until you really need it already don't use the brakes 99% of the time.
Trying to get my wife out of the Zoe and into something with better range so I can sell the Passat.
Trying to get my wife out of the Zoe and into something with better range so I can sell the Passat. Thoughts so far:
XC40 Recharge she loved it (I did too) but it's a ridiculous price
Tesla M3 LR felt too big when she drove it and hated it instantly
Q4 etron after the Tesla she sat in it and went 'nah' too big so we didn't even test drive lol
ID3 might be onto a winner here - but the range is on the edge of being sufficient for the only car in the family but it does have fast charging. She enjoyed driving it after we put all the settings in comfort/eco
Kona electric she like this as it's sufficiently small, we are test driving it tomorrow. Has much better real world range than the ID3 but is a lot more 'old school' inside I guess
The e-Niro is a weird one... the prices are a bit stronger and the kit you get for the price isn't quite as good as the Kona plus using the same drivetrain the range is slightly worse - plus the additional size is actually a minus for usIt’s worth testing the Nero if the Kona checks out ok.
I’d buy a used one tough as they are a bit dated and Kia/Hyundai are in the process of launching their full EV platform.
it's not particularly big but the one we test drove had white leather and I think it was really in her peripheral vision and making it feel really wide but now her mind is set even though I said we could get it in the black interior.This should help.
My missus is scared of my M3P's size (lol!), so is looking at ID3. You could get the 77kWh version (the Tour)?
Looked at the 2008 but I don't think it has the range. Nice interior though, I do think Peugeot are smashing it in terms of designI was thinking straight away the Kona. It's smaller than a 2008. Should be good for 250 miles.