Home > General (L405) > 2018 PHEV |
|
|
Emperor Mong Member Since: 07 Jul 2010 Location: London Posts: 1435 |
What's the range with full battery plus full petrol tank? |
||
29th Sep 2018 2:49pm |
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
Dash will suggest up to 30, will do a real 25... |
||
30th Sep 2018 6:26pm |
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
Re-read the question... will have a look at next fill but has a rolling 42 mpg |
||
30th Sep 2018 6:32pm |
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
The concern of breaking down again is passing with every daily commute. I hope I’ve not hexed it with that statement!! Really starting to enjoy driving this now with 3.5k miles done. Performance and economy is beyond expectation. Boring I know but 55mpg over 45 miles!!! 25 of which at m40 speed. Still finding new stuff within the infotainment and tonight sorted my mobile data connection issues, dodgy SIM card connection in the slot. Like that fact that the nav remembers your daily commute, don’t like the fact it doesn’t optimise the phev as it does if you select same route as a new journey! Results in more screens to swipe unnecessarily. Minor gripes I know. |
||
2nd Oct 2018 7:42pm |
|
AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
But is that 55 mpg without using any battery power? BMW i3 Electric Car
|
||
2nd Oct 2018 8:14pm |
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
Oh yes binned that off for a flux capacitor!! |
||
2nd Oct 2018 9:10pm |
|
AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
So the 55 mpg is all in your head rather than a realistic figure I.e. pointless quote? BMW i3 Electric Car
|
||
3rd Oct 2018 3:09am |
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
Thanks for your trolling input!! Anybody with half a brain would realise that yes 55 mpg was achieved with a full battery at the start of the journey given the context of the thread. Not sure what your point is here. |
||
3rd Oct 2018 9:10am |
|
AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
Its not a trolling input and theres no need for the personal insults.
|
||
3rd Oct 2018 9:58am |
|
Red Merle Member Since: 19 Sep 2016 Location: Cornwall Posts: 2158 |
Interesting that. I remember having a Vauxhall Ampera for a fortnight. The official mpg figure was 236mpg. Charging it every night, I managed to get an average fuel consumption figure of around 40mpg - less than the equivalent turbo diesel.
|
||
3rd Oct 2018 10:05am |
|
AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
They had had stop claiming 150 mpg with qualifying it and even their range came under scrutiny. BMW i3 Electric Car
|
||
3rd Oct 2018 10:08am |
|
AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
The thing is with a hybrid, the only time it's an advantage is in stop start traffic, only then can it recoup some of the energy in stopping. At ALL other times it's a distinct disadvantage, extra weight being the killer, usually being lumped to a petrol engine too is the second nail in the coffin, lastly the price. BMW i3 Electric Car
|
||
3rd Oct 2018 10:29am |
|
ilard Member Since: 21 Oct 2012 Location: London Posts: 708 |
Quoting 55 mpg (I assumed battery full, obviously) is not meaningless to me. It’s another interesting data point on what to expect for shorter journeys from home. So thanks for this update, Gt3gooner.
|
||
3rd Oct 2018 8:16pm |
|
Emperor Mong Member Since: 07 Jul 2010 Location: London Posts: 1435 |
Hybrids gain energy in any deceleration. For many people's usage patterns, they will give huge MPG figures. If you start off with an empty battery, then, yes, they won't be great. But that is a stupid way to drive a PHEV. Also, the weight quoted for the PHEV Rangie is the same as the diesel one (2509kg vs 2504kg). So no weight disadvantage. Our Outlander only does short journeys now. It eventually turns off the electric power after a few months as the petrol in the tank is at risk of 'going off' as the fuel becomes too old. It uses almost no fuel. Additionally, hybrids are better to drive than start/stop enabled cars around town as the electric motor gives the initial drive - no hesitation while the engine fires up. Different strokes though - they clearly are not something that appeals to you. Which is fine. |
||
3rd Oct 2018 11:04pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis