It depends on what you compare it to. My 370bhp Golf R cost me 28p per mile (24 mpg, £1.50 a litre).
True. My Yeti gets about 40 mpg, 50 mpg on long motorway trips.
It depends on what you compare it to. My 370bhp Golf R cost me 28p per mile (24 mpg, £1.50 a litre).
Judging by this video, even with the current high price of fuel, EVs are really only economic if you charge them at home or overnight.
TLDW: electricity prices at charging points are high, there are too few charging points, and it takes too long to charge.
And in a previous video he highlighted how he needed a plethora of apps - one for each of the various charging networks.
True. My Yeti gets about 40 mpg, 50 mpg on long motorway trips.
is there not much solar power? i'd have thought that would be an obvious choice for houses that get that much Sun.
Less than 2.5 ppm is pretty impressive!All negated by the Tesla Supercharger Network. So yeah, if that's what you need, that's where Tesla comes into their own. That said I've used plenty of non-Tesla chargers and never really had any issues, and lots have been free or flat rate etc.
I've saved over £1,000 in fuel costs after 8,000 miles compared to my previous car (diesel, 15p per mile/~35mpg).
Less than 2.5 ppm is pretty impressive!
A model 3 does between 3 and 5 miles per kWh, Octopus Go was 5p per kWh for several hours in the night. I think it's now changing to 7.5p. I guess most people not on octopus go are still around 16p, all set to go up as the cap ends and ppl need new contracts this year.
Less than 2.5 ppm is pretty impressive!
A model 3 does between 3 and 5 miles per kWh, Octopus Go was 5p per kWh for several hours in the night. I think it's now changing to 7.5p. I guess most people not on octopus go are still around 16p, all set to go up as the cap ends and ppl need new contracts this year.
My little 28kwh Ioniq luckily maximises the energy use as it'll do 4-5 miles per kwh all day long even in winter and will charge up to full in that 4 hour GO window pretty much from empty!