Talk to me about electric cars

Talk to me about electric cars

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Tyre Smoke

Original Poster:

23,018 posts

262 months

Saturday 9th November 2019
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I'm seriously considering my next taxi will be a BEV. However, I'm confused by the jargon and a bit concerned about the range.

It must have room for five adults including the driver, have four doors and be less than five years old. Ideally not massively expensive to purchase, so no new Tesla X.

Nissan Leaf seems to tick the boxes, but what realistically can I expect range wise and how long does it take to charge from empty? I'm comfortable plugging it in overnight, but what if it needs a top up during the day? My fossil fuel taxis do about 300 miles a day, but I suspect that is a bridge too far for battery cars at this moment in time.

What am I missing? Or are BEV not quite there yet for me?

SimpleSimonSays

81 posts

100 months

Saturday 9th November 2019
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I suppose it will depend on what the breakdown of your daily journeys is, how much is motorway mileage (uses a lot more battery), how long you wait between appointments (time to top up), whether there’s a rapid charger nearby, whether you could fit a charger at your base, how many other cars you have in the taxi fleet etc.

Nissan Leaf 30kWh - roughly 100 miles around town and commuting.

Nissan Leaf 40kWh - roughly 130 miles around town and commuting.

On a rapid charger (50kW) you’ll add around 30 miles of range for every 10 minutes charging.

On a fast charger (6.6kW) you’ll add around 4 miles of range for every 10 minutes charging.

There’s a taxi company in Cornwall (C&C) who have been using Nissan Leafs for a while now - I don’t know exactly how they manage the day to day charging, but I’ve got one of their old cars with 150000 miles on it, and it’s still going (well, it needed a new battery, but after that sort of mileage and being rapid charged multiple times every day, it’s not surprising).

BEV is great but it requires a bit more planning if you want to do more miles than a single charge in a day can hold, especially when it’s business related. I’m happy to sit about for 20 minutes while the car charges enough to get where I’m going, but I work for a company who make the charging equipment, so they’re also happy for me to sit about if it’s work related, and for personal use I need to stop for a pee anyway!

Tyre Smoke

Original Poster:

23,018 posts

262 months

Saturday 9th November 2019
quotequote all
Hmm. Charging wouldn't be a problem between jobs, as I'm office based and just go out to cover when we are busy.

However, a lot of mileage is done on the M5, A361, A38. By no means all the mileage but perhaps 50%.

So charging is not done by plugging in to the mains then? I need a specialist charger?

SimpleSimonSays

81 posts

100 months

Saturday 9th November 2019
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Yes and no. There are different types of charger:

“Granny” Charger - a 13 amp plug on one end and a plug for the car on the other. Very slow, about 16 hours to charge the battery completely. One of these comes with the car.

“Fast” Charger - a box on the wall connected to your (normally single phase) mains that you plug the car into Draws up to 32A. This is normally what you’d have at home. Cost about £500.

“Rapid” Charger - installed and maintained by a variety of third parties in seemingly random locations. Biggest companies are Ecotricity (motorway), Polar and Instavolt. This is where it gets messy, each company has its own bespoke app and payment mechanism, contactless isn’t widely adopted yet. This bit is why BEV is harder work than ICE for longer distances at the moment, you need to plan and allow for chargers not working, being in use etc.

You can get an app called Zap Map which shows all the different chargers, so you should be able to work out if there are rapid chargers near to where you’re located and whether this will therefore work when you’re out and about (if you need to, depends on the distance you’re covering).

The Zap map website has loads of useful information, as does the SpeakEV forum.

You could get a rapid charger installed at the office, but they’re expensive - I don’t have an accurate price, but £30k wouldn’t be too far out for a 50kW job.

What sort of distance do you need to do before either returning to base or being able to stop for half an hour without inconveniencing customers?

Tyre Smoke

Original Poster:

23,018 posts

262 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Typically I would do a max of an hour's driving, perhaps two. But that would virtually flatten a full charge I think.

Dave Hedgehog

14,587 posts

205 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Starting budget will dictate a lot

Dave Hedgehog

14,587 posts

205 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Tyre Smoke said:
Typically I would do a max of an hour's driving, perhaps two. But that would virtually flatten a full charge I think.
Depends on the car, I get about 14 hours of commuting in London on one charge in my M3

SimpleSimonSays

81 posts

100 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Dave Hedgehog said:
Tyre Smoke said:
Typically I would do a max of an hour's driving, perhaps two. But that would virtually flatten a full charge I think.
Depends on the car, I get about 14 hours of commuting in London on one charge in my M3
Depends on the speed too!

If that’s two hours at 70mph with a customer and you couldn’t stop, it’s probably a bit much for a Leaf within a sensible budget.

If it’s an hour with a customer at 70mph and you can then charge for 20 minutes and then drive back again, that’s do-able.

If it’s two hours of trundling around town, no problem, and you can then charge back at base.

Notreallymeeither

324 posts

71 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Have you considered a Tesla Model 3?

That said, if using a Tesla for commercial use i.e. a taxi then I think the Tesla terms and conditions do not allow you to use their super charger network.

I could well be wrong about this, but worth checking before you commit to a Tesla.

Edited by Notreallymeeither on Sunday 10th November 19:09

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

255 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Notreallymeeither said:
Have you considered a Tesla Model 3?

That said, if using a Tesla for commercial use i.e. a taxi then I think the Tesla terms and conditions do not allow you to use their super charger network.

I could well be wrong about this, but worth checking before you commit to a Tesla.
https://www.tesla.com/en_NZ/about/legal?#supercharger-fair-use

Yep not allowed, you get spotted and reported and they could block you, but plenty other CCS chargers around.

jjwilde

1,904 posts

97 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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Check out this Taxi drivers youtube channel, he gets about 320miles of range in London, lasts him all day.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8F2JWz_IR4eO1b4P...

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

255 months

Sunday 10th November 2019
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City driving in an efficient ev is really low power usage, Ive averaged 100wh/km in the 3 no problems

anonymous-user

55 months

Monday 11th November 2019
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A Kia eNiro or even a Hyundai Kona might be a better fit if you need to do 300 miles a day.

The problem is getting one, but you may be able to get an ex-demo or something.

Ollie1991EV

3 posts

54 months

Thursday 14th November 2019
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But on the drive in and out of London are there any (queue-free) Charging Points? I would be travelling up from Brighton and I never seem to see any.

Lt. Coulomb

202 posts

55 months

Thursday 14th November 2019
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Ollie1991EV said:
But on the drive in and out of London are there any (queue-free) Charging Points? I would be travelling up from Brighton and I never seem to see any.
http://abetterrouteplanner.com/

anonymous-user

55 months

Friday 15th November 2019
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Ollie1991EV said:
But on the drive in and out of London are there any (queue-free) Charging Points? I would be travelling up from Brighton and I never seem to see any.
London to Brighton and back with a 250+ mile range EV doesn't need en-route charging.

SWoll

18,622 posts

259 months

Friday 15th November 2019
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kuro68k said:
Ollie1991EV said:
But on the drive in and out of London are there any (queue-free) Charging Points? I would be travelling up from Brighton and I never seem to see any.
London to Brighton and back with a 250+ mile range EV doesn't need en-route charging.
Not many of those about though and even for the ones that will do 250+ in perfect conditions you'll still definitely need to charge in the dead of winter to do that trip

ZesPak

24,440 posts

197 months

Friday 15th November 2019
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The Model 3 is actually a seriously good buy, and the SuC network is great.

Have you looked at the Huyndai Kona EV? Will be a bit more cramped for cargo, but better height to get in/out.

granada203028

1,485 posts

198 months

Friday 15th November 2019
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SimpleSimonSays said:
I suppose it will depend on what the breakdown of your daily journeys is, how much is motorway mileage (uses a lot more battery), how long you wait between appointments (time to top up), whether there’s a rapid charger nearby, whether you could fit a charger at your base, how many other cars you have in the taxi fleet etc.

Nissan Leaf 30kWh - roughly 100 miles around town and commuting.

Nissan Leaf 40kWh - roughly 130 miles around town and commuting.

On a rapid charger (50kW) you’ll add around 30 miles of range for every 10 minutes charging.

On a fast charger (6.6kW) you’ll add around 4 miles of range for every 10 minutes charging.

There’s a taxi company in Cornwall (C&C) who have been using Nissan Leafs for a while now - I don’t know exactly how they manage the day to day charging, but I’ve got one of their old cars with 150000 miles on it, and it’s still going (well, it needed a new battery, but after that sort of mileage and being rapid charged multiple times every day, it’s not surprising).

BEV is great but it requires a bit more planning if you want to do more miles than a single charge in a day can hold, especially when it’s business related. I’m happy to sit about for 20 minutes while the car charges enough to get where I’m going, but I work for a company who make the charging equipment, so they’re also happy for me to sit about if it’s work related, and for personal use I need to stop for a pee anyway!
Do you know at what millage the battery was changed and how many capacity bars it had left. Also did they get a new or 2nd hand battery, I've seen a few on eBay.

SimpleSimonSays

81 posts

100 months

Friday 15th November 2019
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granada203028 said:
Do you know at what millage the battery was changed and how many capacity bars it had left. Also did they get a new or 2nd hand battery, I've seen a few on eBay.
Around 150k, was showing at 9 bars but the battery was completely shot, only 23 miles range and discharge wasn’t linear, so we suspect one or more cells had died.

It was a second hand pack from eBay, and it’s reliably returning 100+ miles in summer now.