• sugartits@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    14
    arrow-down
    6
    ·
    10 months ago

    A second hand Renault Zoe can be had for about £5k. MG4 for about £25k if you insist on getting new. I appreciate these may not be options where you live but the prices are coming down if you’re willing to look beyond the traditional brands.

    What these articles fail to mention is that it’s the “legacy” brands like Ford that are struggling. Brands like BYD and Tesla are doing just fine and are struggling to keep up with demand in some cases.

    Also, you charge at home.

    The infrastructure where you live doesn’t matter. The infrastructure where you’re going to or on the route might matter if it’s far away enough.

    I live in a town with a smaller population than yours. We have 2 chargers at 50kw, which is pretty slow by modern standards.

    So far I’ve used it once when testing that the car was working okay when I first got it. That’s it. Never used it since. Because I charge at home.

    Nearest super charger is around 50 miles away. Which is fine. Because I’ll always leave with 100% charge.

    I’ve never waited for charging. Probably because I own a Tesla and have access to their super charging network which was about 50% the reason I got that over the Ioniq 5 or Nissan Aryia. I look forward to the competition getting better and my recommendation being beyond “get a Tesla if you’re worried about charging”.

    And yes, I have done long trips (at least by UK standards) and I have needed to charge before I got home. But the car’s range is bigger than my bladder’s/stomach’s range so frankly I would have stopped anyway and the car took care of adding charging stops for me.

    I have seen people queuing at non Tesla chargers and can only assume it’s a frustrating experience. In the UK new chargers are being opened at an impressive rate (up ~40% on last year, IIRC) so hopefully that issue won’t be so bad in the future.

    It’s not there yet, but the problems are getting solved and the prices are coming down. If you can charge at home then it’s probably a good option. If you can’t, that’s another matter.

    In the same way you don’t care about MTU settings to get the best out of your Internet these days, you won’t care about the issues with charging and prices soon. It will suddenly get better and nobody will even notice or care anymore.

    • Thetimefarm@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      9
      arrow-down
      2
      ·
      10 months ago

      I don’t think the vast emptiness that is the US translates well to the UK. By area, New Mexico is almost the exact same size as the british isles, and it’s only the 5th largest state. I’ve done 400+ miles in a single day of driving many times. The furthest I’ve driven in a day was close to 800 miles.

      • sugartits@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        3
        arrow-down
        1
        ·
        10 months ago

        As long as there is a way of charging every 200 or so miles, you’re probably fine… If you’re in Tesla or once the network is opened up enough. Otherwise you’re probably stuck or at least having a shit experience

        This video is worth a watch. Robert does the same trip in a Polestar 2 and a Tesla. The experience was very different between the two: https://youtu.be/92w5doU68D8

        Tweet from the same guy who highlights your concern: https://twitter.com/AgingWheels/status/1722858752569651540 … Unless you’re in a Tesla: https://twitter.com/AgingWheels/status/1723001588388704427

        If you’re genuinely interested there are plenty of apps which show the chargers and you can see how it works for your routes.

        Sadly Tesla is simply head and shoulders above the competition at the moment. So if you just don’t like Teslas then it’s probably best to wait for a bit and see how it plays out. Although they are gradually opening the network to non Tesla cars.