Smug

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sjwb

Original Poster:

550 posts

209 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
As per the title, I was expecting to be sat in city traffic with a supercilious smug look on my face.
Well, I have just bought a BMW i3! My reasons for such a purchase are varied, not the least of which is having experience of i3s on holiday and loving every minute of them.

My smugness lasted but a short while to be replaced by ‘range anxiety’, can’t stop looking at the battery condition. Funny isn’t it, one fear to be replaced by another? My other fear was driving old German cars which have preponderance for failure in one form or another. This isn’t to guarantee that the i3 will be fault free, but the chances of success are loaded in its favour against a 16 year old Benz.

I wonder if many people have read the owner’s manual. I have, out of morbid curiosity and come to the conclusion that of the 5% of owners that read manuals only 2% will understand or come to terms with the complexity and feature of the car. This, from one who wrote automotive service / instruction manuals for a living.

I haven’t yet launched into third party charging; home fast charger installation, or long journeys but so far love the car bar the fore aft pitching on poor road surfaces.

TheDeuce

21,912 posts

67 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
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Just get the 7kw charger installed at home and then forget about range - unless you frequently push the range of the i3?

I should be more than capable of city driving without any anxiety so long as you can charge it comfortably overnight ahead of very busy days of driving around.

For me the home charger is vital for EV ownership. The granny charger does indeed keep the car topped up fast enough to cope with most peoples mileage... But the fact is that if you find out last minute you need to do a longer trip the next day, the 7kw fast charger will charge any EV to 100% overnight, the granny charger won't.

anonymous-user

55 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
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I've no idea how you are getting close to the limits of the i3's range in a city?

For me, i'd get to the point where i'd happily murder the slow, ponderous, poorly indicating and random driving city motorist well before i run out of range!

That's actualy one of the problems with the modern EV around town, it immediately renders most other ICE motorists as effectively dawdlers as they take ages to crank up their dino juice engines and struggle to even find an appropriate gear and get the clutch in and engaged........

Mr E

21,713 posts

260 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
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You don’t have range anxiety.
I have a 24Kw leaf that’s 6 years old. It’s currently by-2 degrees and my motorway commute will commence at 7:15 tomorrow morning.

Edited by Mr E on Tuesday 21st December 22:38

TheDeuce

21,912 posts

67 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
That's actualy one of the problems with the modern EV around town, it immediately renders most other ICE motorists as effectively dawdlers as they take ages to crank up their dino juice engines and struggle to even find an appropriate gear and get the clutch in and engaged........
Yes!

My god, the age it takes any ICE to resume forward motion after a pause is argument enough for the electric motor imo.

The only downside of EV in that regard is that I instantly pass the lights as they return to amber, and every now and again find myself about to t-bone an ICE driver that thought they could just 'slip through' in time, crossing my path at a junction.

Manual ICE cars with stop/start are the worst as they have to spring back in to life and then pick up the revs and lower the clutch. That never used to be much of a big deal, but these days... I've potentially travelled 20 metres by the time they've got underway. I always wonder what they think in that moment, the fact they've been left for dead by someone that drove away perfectly smoothly and well within the speed limit biggrin

sjwb

Original Poster:

550 posts

209 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Apologies, my post has a touch of irony in it. I’m not anxious as such, but I am always conscious of any failure mode. The price of being an engineer!
I agree absolutely with the driving dynamics in the city and managed to upset an R32 driver today, sorry.
There was a post recently wherein Max Torque wrote much about the i3 and his purchase of the S model. Max, you’ve cost me a lot of money smile
Thanks to all for your replies.


off_again

12,362 posts

235 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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The benefits, if there are any, of a small battery in the i3 is that it charges fast on an L2 or higher charger. So as advised above, charge at home and if you need a top up, just use a convenient public charger and you should be good to go. Used Electrify America the other week and only got a pretty low kWh rate, but only took 30 mins to charge to full from 50%! None of this waiting around malarkey.

caseys

307 posts

169 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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Great car. I miss the Capability of always getter more than 40kw from a 50kw charger no matter what SoC under 90%

LordGrover

33,552 posts

213 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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I was all ready to be smug this morning as I heard neighbours scraping ice from their windscreens.
My i3 was scheduled for departure so defrosted and toasty warm at 07.15.

Bugger.

I installed a new app (ev.energy) to play with yesterday to monitor charging, but I'd set it to 'smart charge' which clashed with the in-car setting - preconditioning paused. irked

Had to wait five minutes while it did its thing. In the house, with a coffee.
Smugness restored. smile

CheesecakeRunner

3,866 posts

92 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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I don’t feel smug driving mine, but I do feel pleased I’m able to provide employment for young artisanal miners in developing nations.

Zumbruk

7,848 posts

261 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
quotequote all
TheDeuce said:
Max_Torque said:
That's actualy one of the problems with the modern EV around town, it immediately renders most other ICE motorists as effectively dawdlers as they take ages to crank up their dino juice engines and struggle to even find an appropriate gear and get the clutch in and engaged........
Yes!

My god, the age it takes any ICE to resume forward motion after a pause is argument enough for the electric motor imo.
Nothing to do with ICE; it's because the dimbulb drivers are only watching the car in front for signs of motion before preparing to move off themselves. If they watched 2 or 3 cars in front, it wouldn't be a problem. If they all watched the traffic lights, the whole queue could move off at one go as the lights went went green.

DonkeyApple

55,579 posts

170 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
quotequote all
sjwb said:
As per the title, I was expecting to be sat in city traffic with a supercilious smug look on my face.
Well, I have just bought a BMW i3! My reasons for such a purchase are varied, not the least of which is having experience of i3s on holiday and loving every minute of them.

My smugness lasted but a short while to be replaced by ‘range anxiety’, can’t stop looking at the battery condition. Funny isn’t it, one fear to be replaced by another? My other fear was driving old German cars which have preponderance for failure in one form or another. This isn’t to guarantee that the i3 will be fault free, but the chances of success are loaded in its favour against a 16 year old Benz.

I wonder if many people have read the owner’s manual. I have, out of morbid curiosity and come to the conclusion that of the 5% of owners that read manuals only 2% will understand or come to terms with the complexity and feature of the car. This, from one who wrote automotive service / instruction manuals for a living.

I haven’t yet launched into third party charging; home fast charger installation, or long journeys but so far love the car bar the fore aft pitching on poor road surfaces.
I have to admit that one of the great appeals of the i3 for me is that no manual is required. It struck me as a rare modern car that was idiot proof and had no desire to talk to me, be my friend or passive aggressively try and tell me what I did and didn't want to be doing like that Harry Enfield character.

It was joyous to jump into a car made in 2021, pull a lever to instantly get the seat right, Stanna the door mirrors into position and drive off. It didn't ask to make love to my phone, didn't set maze puzzles to find the heating, didn't panic grab the steering wheel on the apex of a corner, never once asked if I'd meant to bury the throttle. It just didn't feel like it was owned and being controlled by someone else or wanted to be my carer. It was all a bit of a revelation. To then be fun to slap down small roads was the icing on the cake.

It's easy to see why these ugly ducklings are fast becoming the cheap runabout of choice for genuine car and driving enthusiasts.

When it comes to range, my view on an EV is that I want nothing to do with having to plug in away from home if possible so the max range of the car would need to simply be double the max range of the journey I'd by using it for. I don't think I'd pay money to acquire hassle or stress by having an EV whose range ever gave me cause for concern.

JonnyVTEC

3,008 posts

176 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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Zumbruk said:
Nothing to do with ICE; it's because the dimbulb drivers are only watching the car in front for signs of motion before preparing to move off themselves. If they watched 2 or 3 cars in front, it wouldn't be a problem. If they all watched the traffic lights, the whole queue could move off at one go as the lights went went green.
Nah, I’m even aware of my own driving it’s just ready and goes, to match that in an ICE you need to be staring at the opposite traffic light to anticipate the light change etc. can be matched but requires effort.

I’m convinced EVs will help reduce congestion, ie 15 cars get through a light on green rather than 12. Etc etc.

Edited by JonnyVTEC on Wednesday 22 December 16:24

DonkeyApple

55,579 posts

170 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
quotequote all
JonnyVTEC said:
Nah, I’m even aware of my own driving it’s just ready and goes, to match that in an ICE you need to be staring at the opposite traffic light to anticipate the light change etc. can be matched by requires effort.

I’m convinced EVs will help reduce congestion, ie 15 cars get through a light on green rather than 12. Etc etc.
I think they'll increase congestion because what you see in London is people who would never have used their petrol car for a short journey suddenly using their EV because it's easy, cheap and guiltless. It's already happening in London so very likely to be seen everywhere else. The EV drops many of the social inhibitors people felt when it came to knowingly using a car for a walkable task or simply not bothering as it was non essential.

It's going to be the weird bit of data that gets picked up on in a few years time.

Zumbruk

7,848 posts

261 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
quotequote all
JonnyVTEC said:
Zumbruk said:
Nothing to do with ICE; it's because the dimbulb drivers are only watching the car in front for signs of motion before preparing to move off themselves. If they watched 2 or 3 cars in front, it wouldn't be a problem. If they all watched the traffic lights, the whole queue could move off at one go as the lights went went green.
Nah, I’m even aware of my own driving it’s just ready and goes, to match that in an ICE you need to be staring at the opposite traffic light to anticipate the light change etc. can be matched by requires effort.

I’m convinced EVs will help reduce congestion, ie 15 cars get through a light on green rather than 12. Etc etc.
I'd like to think you'll be right; but experience teaches me you won't. They all need charging with "Driving without due care", not electricity.

iDrive

416 posts

114 months

Sunday 26th December 2021
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I'm not sure I feel smug, but I've recently bought an i3S with Rex and am still very much in the Honeymoon Period - Great performance, minimal running costs, engaging to drive and well-spec'd with tech and comfort.


MrC986

3,511 posts

192 months

Sunday 26th December 2021
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I had an I3S for 17 months & 11k miles....the range anxiety went fairly quickly for me as I put a 7kw charger in at home. Preconditioning a fully charged battery makes a big difference IMO on longer journeys although I normally do 4 stops a day with work so the winter does see the range hit slightly. I quickly got use to the one pedal driving mode which I found really relaxing. I also found on some of my longer urban commuting saw the range go back up as I travelled through town.

Being able to heat (or cool) the car before getting in it does feel a luxury. Also, if you've a large local Tescos with charging points, being able to shop & charge (it was free when I had my car) at 7kw was an added bonus. I probably only charged away from home 6-7 times in my period of ownership & that was just a case of a quick booster charge so I didn't have to drive at hypermile speeds.

By the way, I had the the extra heat pump on mine but whoever bought it from the dealer it ended up at never knew it had one as WBAC didn't ask for the full spec.

iDrive

416 posts

114 months

Monday 27th December 2021
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MrC986 said:
I had an I3S for 17 months & 11k miles....the range anxiety went fairly quickly for me as I put a 7kw charger in at home. Preconditioning a fully charged battery makes a big difference IMO on longer journeys although I normally do 4 stops a day with work so the winter does see the range hit slightly. I quickly got use to the one pedal driving mode which I found really relaxing. I also found on some of my longer urban commuting saw the range go back up as I travelled through town.

Being able to heat (or cool) the car before getting in it does feel a luxury. Also, if you've a large local Tescos with charging points, being able to shop & charge (it was free when I had my car) at 7kw was an added bonus. I probably only charged away from home 6-7 times in my period of ownership & that was just a case of a quick booster charge so I didn't have to drive at hypermile speeds.

By the way, I had the the extra heat pump on mine but whoever bought it from the dealer it ended up at never knew it had one as WBAC didn't ask for the full spec.
How can you tell whether an i3/i3S has a Headache Pump? I don't think I came across a used one with it advertised in the Spec?


Diderot

7,362 posts

193 months

Monday 27th December 2021
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iDrive said:
MrC986 said:
I had an I3S for 17 months & 11k miles....the range anxiety went fairly quickly for me as I put a 7kw charger in at home. Preconditioning a fully charged battery makes a big difference IMO on longer journeys although I normally do 4 stops a day with work so the winter does see the range hit slightly. I quickly got use to the one pedal driving mode which I found really relaxing. I also found on some of my longer urban commuting saw the range go back up as I travelled through town.

Being able to heat (or cool) the car before getting in it does feel a luxury. Also, if you've a large local Tescos with charging points, being able to shop & charge (it was free when I had my car) at 7kw was an added bonus. I probably only charged away from home 6-7 times in my period of ownership & that was just a case of a quick booster charge so I didn't have to drive at hypermile speeds.

By the way, I had the the extra heat pump on mine but whoever bought it from the dealer it ended up at never knew it had one as WBAC didn't ask for the full spec.
How can you tell whether an i3/i3S has a Headache Pump? I don't think I came across a used one with it advertised in the Spec?
Not surprising wink.

Rockets7

378 posts

131 months

Monday 27th December 2021
quotequote all
JonnyVTEC said:
Nah, I’m even aware of my own driving it’s just ready and goes, to match that in an ICE you need to be staring at the opposite traffic light to anticipate the light change etc. can be matched but requires effort.



Edited by JonnyVTEC on Wednesday 22 December 16:24
Not sure how you’ve drawn this conclusion. My 250d slk sits in ‘D’ with auto hold on. Simply squeeze the gas and it’s away?