Home > Off Topic > UK to forward ban on new diesel & petrol cars to 2030 |
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Siftah Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Barcelona Posts: 344 |
EV's are definitely the future, one of the reasons I bought the RR was because I felt like now's the last era when owning a car like this won't be seen as being anti-social.
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16th Nov 2020 8:11pm |
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supershuttle Member Since: 20 Mar 2011 Location: Lancashire Posts: 3778 |
Another thing that needs fixing is towing options, I would have an EV now (I can charge at home) but I prefer a bike rack that fits to a towball - I'm sure it will be sorted but there are precious few pure EV options with towing capability at the moment. There are a few type approved Hybrid options but I thought all new cars had to be pure EV by a certain date or has that changed as well. Geoff |
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16th Nov 2020 8:33pm |
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AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
Tesla Model X has towing capability and long distance with passengers no problem. Alko are working on trailer / caravan chassis that are self powered which would present very little additional load to the towing vehicle. BMW i3 Electric Car
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17th Nov 2020 7:01am |
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Bl4ckD0g Member Since: 16 Feb 2020 Location: 127.0.0.1 Posts: 1322 |
Same reason here as for some others; I went for a 5.0SC as in my opinion it is like what Mad Max said - The Last of the V8. So I am enjoying it, and going a bit crazy with it as there is no doubt in my mind that my next will be either full or partial electric. And to top it off, the 5.0SC is low emission zone exempt for London, so great result in the mean time |
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17th Nov 2020 7:13am |
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dennij Member Since: 23 Feb 2019 Location: Up North Posts: 450 |
Well EV wouldn't work for me, my current house is too old to allow the fast charge option (main fuse isn't rated high enough), my place of work currently has no EV charging points but 2 are scheduled to be installed some time next year. I notice there are polite signs on some of the charging points asking that you remove your vehicle once charged to allow others to use it, however, in reality people don't seem to do this, they just go back to their car once they have finished whatever they were doing. There have already been issues in California where the EV take up has been high and there are still not enough charging points leading to queues of cars waiting for a charger to become free and then the usual arguments that ensue once they do. EV to me is an ideal city centre car as you are unlikely to need to charge it on a daily basis so could use it as you would an IC powered car. Self charging hybrids to me seem the next sensible option but I read that these are to be phased out too. What isn't advertised is that a standard EV vehicle has a carbon output of 50g per km, a study looked into the CO cost of the production and this was the calculation. If you consider that the raw materials have to be dug out of the ground then transported to a number of sites around the world to be turned into the end product, it's easy to see how this figure came about. Sadly, whatever we do, there is no such thing as carbon neutral so to advertise anything as such is just misleading. 2011 TDV8 Vogue SE |
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17th Nov 2020 7:38am |
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Mr Tee Member Since: 13 Dec 2010 Location: Near Wackyjim Posts: 2637 |
No to be too contraversial, but the PM's partner is a lefty green, she may be pushing this agenda , and he just wants to keep getting his hole. |
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17th Nov 2020 8:26am |
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Siftah Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Barcelona Posts: 344 |
Electric motors have *way* more torque than even big V8's, plus you get full torque across the entire rev range, they're going to make for amazing 4wd vehicles. Imagine having masses of torque, independantly controllable at each wheel from 0rpm upwards, it's going to be like nothing you've ever experienced when it comes to off-road or towing capability. The problem with towing will be there'll be so much torque you'll be pulling the chassis off the trailer if you're not super careful with the throttle. Hydrogen fuel cells don't look promising, electric is just so much more convenient for most people - you can charge them at home, no more petrol stations! |
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17th Nov 2020 8:35am |
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ur20v Member Since: 19 Feb 2019 Location: None Posts: 634 |
I am luck, I live in the south of Spain with lots of land facing south- I am building a solar system to power my home and workshop, with the idea to get a EV once range has got to 300 miles average (not max range on a Sunny down hill day driving like miss daisy at 50 miles an hour lol)
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17th Nov 2020 8:54am |
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AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
Supermarkets, offices, factories, car parks, filling stations, restaurants etc etc will all have charging points, many do already. BMW i3 Electric Car
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17th Nov 2020 9:28am |
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ur20v Member Since: 19 Feb 2019 Location: None Posts: 634 |
I agree but it will be a few and capacity will be met quickly then what? Power distribution has been designed and installed for normal house hold and business use, one person or business exceeding this may be manageable but 100’s, the problem just gets bigger with scale, each time the numbers go up the further upstream the problems reach, from the consumer unit in your house or business, to the cable supply, then the low voltage local transformers, on to the high voltage transformers and transmission lines.
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17th Nov 2020 10:41am |
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Siftah Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Barcelona Posts: 344 |
The video at the start of the thread has a guy from the national grid who is saying this isn't the case. The reality is that most of those cars won't need 60kwH's plus of electricity as 80% of them won't move each day. The other 20% will only do a few miles and need a little charging. There's plenty of capacity in the grid to cope with that, in fact, the reality is that the more EV's plugged into the grid the more resilient the grid becomes as we can leverage all of those cars as local storage and balance usage out. It actually will allow us to much more easily make use of unpredictable sources of power such as solar and wind. If you think about your own situation in Spain, you can leverage solar during the day to charge your EV, then if needed, pull energy from it's battery at night to power the TV and lights, no need to rely on the grid overnight, saving you even more money. Obviously, you need to still have the car charged in the morning, but you can see how having a big chunk of batteries at your disposal is going to be handy, even if it's just an addition to another battery bank installed in the home. There's some very cool ways to use these technologies, but it's going to take a shift in our mindsets to see it as an opportunity and how to best utilise it all |
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17th Nov 2020 10:56am |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
The biggest hurdle for EV's will be charging points because they will not be available tor many at home.
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17th Nov 2020 11:03am |
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ur20v Member Since: 19 Feb 2019 Location: None Posts: 634 |
First I have seen experts from the power suppliers and national grid saying the exact opposite of this guy... I regularly watch the BBC’s parliament channel and a month or so ago of there was a meeting aired of a cross party panels interviewing national grid and power generation company experts on this exact issue... and they were discussing at length the issues with the existing infrastructure and new power supply mix not being able to coupe with a small increase let alone full implementation!? So believe what you like their I guess. There are other videos on YouTube or in the news on this that backs the negative tone I mention. There is some merit in what you mention but you have forgotten that most people work very simple hours so the capacity demand around 17:30-20:00 when everyone has just plugged in their EV’s will cause a massive surge in demand right when everyone has hit the kettle and oven for tea, made even worse in the UK as it’s dark by 5pm for much of the year. Lastly your though on using the EV batteries as some sort of Tesla’s battery power station to smooth demand like they have in South Australia and now being built in Germany doesn’t unfortunately work, EV batteries are DC and the chargers convert the AC mains supply into DC to charge, this means back feeding the grid is impossible, also would be illegal... even if technically possible (some sort of inverter) you wouldn’t be allowed to do this it as it would mean the grid could never be shut down in an emergency or for service work. |
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17th Nov 2020 2:03pm |
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Bl4ckD0g Member Since: 16 Feb 2020 Location: 127.0.0.1 Posts: 1322 |
I haven’t seen that particular parliament session; but I’ve worked long enough in central government to realise that when ever a participant says something can’t be done during the sessions that they mean they will need funding. Whenever policy gets discussed they all come out of the woodwork with their begging bowls.
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17th Nov 2020 2:37pm |
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