EV for a very hilly, very small island?

EV for a very hilly, very small island?

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iDrive

Original Poster:

416 posts

113 months

Friday 10th July 2015
quotequote all
Hi

I have the prospect of working on StHelena - an island in the middle of the South Atlantic, with lots of hills, a 30mph speed limit and good access to UK 240V power supply

Would an EV be a realistic proposition? Would the hills kill the car?

I'm thinking Twizzy, perhaps 2nd hand?

I'd appreciate your views!

budfox

1,510 posts

129 months

Saturday 11th July 2015
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iDrive said:
Hi

I have the prospect of working on StHelena - an island in the middle of the South Atlantic, with lots of hills, a 30mph speed limit and good access to UK 240V power supply

Would an EV be a realistic proposition? Would the hills kill the car?

I'm thinking Twizzy, perhaps 2nd hand?

I'd appreciate your views!
They'll reduce the range for sure. Ideally you'd have a vehicle with regen braking to recover a good chunk of the power when going downhill.

Butter Face

30,298 posts

160 months

Saturday 11th July 2015
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You'll struggle with a Twizy, purely because you have to lease the battery so taking one out of the country is a no-no (unless you can buy one there?)

Anything with regen braking will be fine, most EV's will be fine TBH but it is a small island isn't it? Surely an electric scooter or something will be sufficient?

blueacid

438 posts

141 months

Monday 13th July 2015
quotequote all
iDrive said:
Hi

I have the prospect of working on StHelena - an island in the middle of the South Atlantic, with lots of hills, a 30mph speed limit and good access to UK 240V power supply

Would an EV be a realistic proposition? Would the hills kill the car?

I'm thinking Twizzy, perhaps 2nd hand?

I'd appreciate your views!
St Helena is 10 miles by 5 miles. I'd imagine that even with hills, you won't find yourself with crushing range-anxiety. An electric car would seem to be a wise choice!

Dr_Rick

1,592 posts

248 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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Having worked for an engineering consultant who was commissioned to look at the St. Helena water system, and the logistics of a site visit you need to think beyond the basic car.

Who on the island will be able to maintain the car?
Who is going to install the charging equipment?
What are you going to do about spares?
Bear in mind that right now (there's one planned) there's no airport and the only way onto the island is by fishing boat or the RMS St Helena (postal ship). Even then, the RMS St Helena doesn't dock at the dock, but anchors offshore and 'things' are offloaded to a barge and transferred to the dock.
Oh yes, and you'd have to ship it from Cape Town.

GreatGranny

9,128 posts

226 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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Moped?

SydneyBridge

8,587 posts

158 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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sounds perfect for a BMW i8, as it has a small petrol engine as well - assuming you can get it there..

or an i3 with the range extender

dmitry

341 posts

162 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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The idea of moving to a place as remote as St Helena got me so interested that I started reading about living there - and found this bit of advice in the process:

"Cars are expensive on St. Helena (which is why we have so many Classic Cars in daily use). If you can, bring one, but be very selective. Forget the Lamborghini - the roads aren’t up to it and in any case the speed limit is only 30MPH, so it would be a waste. Bring something immensely reliable with a long service interval and a good turning circle (the corners can be tight), and preferably not something too dependent on modern technology, which almost certainly cannot be maintained here. Indeed, why not bring a Classic Car? Bring as many spare parts as you can."
( source)

Bobley

699 posts

149 months

Tuesday 14th July 2015
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On a driving route with constant hills an IC engine is pretty efficient. On the ups the engine will be operating at highish load and low to mid speed (which puts you on the sweet spot), then on the descents you're in fuel cut off so although you're not recuperating you're not burning anything either. A small, light simple hatchback with good ride and handling is all you need.

I'd use a Peugeot 205 DTurbo or maybe a 106 1.5 D.

Saying all that, as much as I live breathe eco (house is kitted out to the max, I ride to work and I design PHEVS, and RExs) I'd love a nice nice 106 S1 Rallye!! I remember on our honeymoon in Madeira (hilly as owt just like SH) we saw loads of S2 106 Rallyes (we already had an S1 at home and ordered an S2 when we got back). You wont need much more than the odd bushing or CV boot.

blueacid

438 posts

141 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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dmitry said:
The idea of moving to a place as remote as St Helena got me so interested that I started reading about living there - and found this bit of advice in the process:

"Cars are expensive on St. Helena (which is why we have so many Classic Cars in daily use). If you can, bring one, but be very selective. Forget the Lamborghini - the roads aren’t up to it and in any case the speed limit is only 30MPH, so it would be a waste. Bring something immensely reliable with a long service interval and a good turning circle (the corners can be tight), and preferably not something too dependent on modern technology, which almost certainly cannot be maintained here. Indeed, why not bring a Classic Car? Bring as many spare parts as you can."
( source)
Perhaps then the answer is the cheapest electic moped or scooter you can find - bring two and then you've got a spare biggrin

dmitry

341 posts

162 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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blueacid said:
Perhaps then the answer is the cheapest electic moped or scooter you can find - bring two and then you've got a spare biggrin
Having read a bit more about StH it may indeed be a solution if you're so inclined to drive an EV. I've seen a mention of a new A4 which spent a year waiting for some and then some other parts. Just hope that said moped doesn't have some "known issue" and you end up with two mopeds with the same problem. biggrin

AnotherClarkey

3,596 posts

189 months

Wednesday 15th July 2015
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I would go for something bulletproof - a milkfloat would do nicely.

Jonny_

4,128 posts

207 months

Sunday 2nd August 2015
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Probably just about any EV or plug-in hybrid would do the trick...

Leaf
Prius plug-in
Outlander PHEV (maybe excessively sized if you're considering a Twizy, though!)
Ampera/Volt
i-MIEV/Ion/C-Zero
G-Wiz...? Just don't crash it. wobble