Electric Vehicle as 3rd Car?
Discussion
The reason most people don't do it is "third car". Quite a few places struggle to park 2, let alone 3. You'll need to insure it, MOT it, and it will undoubtedly need some fixing. It all dents the maths a bit.
I'm slightly struggling with the £400 on diesel a month and 17 to 20K a year. Even in my hardly economical 2.4 Alfa, £400 of diesel would get me at least 2500 miles....
I'm slightly struggling with the £400 on diesel a month and 17 to 20K a year. Even in my hardly economical 2.4 Alfa, £400 of diesel would get me at least 2500 miles....
When I had my weekend toy, the dead money of a third insurance policy was quite annoying.
Road tax ditto. I know EVs don't suffer from the latter, obviously.
It's quite hard to justify another car as a money saver, all considered.
Short range = little fuel burned in the other car anyway.
Plus, getting annoyed that you should have driven the other car instead on some days... First world problems, I know.
Road tax ditto. I know EVs don't suffer from the latter, obviously.
It's quite hard to justify another car as a money saver, all considered.
Short range = little fuel burned in the other car anyway.
Plus, getting annoyed that you should have driven the other car instead on some days... First world problems, I know.
ShireSquirrel said:
Haha, yep, I might consider the electric bike. Would certainly make the school run more interesting 
@Rxe: I know the diesel spend seems high, and I really can't figure it out myself. Having said that, this http://www.fleetnews.co.uk/costs/fuel-cost-calcula... produces a figure quite close to my calculations, using 26mpg.
But you are right, the insurance, tax and repairs would make a difference. Its helped by electric being £0 tax, and Nissan including 2 years free servicing for a used leaf. And the balance of a 5yr warranty. If I do keep the other two cars, one will go on a classic insurance policy for £250 a year. The way I see it, for the Leaf, I will just have to provide tyres and brake pads for the next 3+ years.
@Phunk: Why do you think Leaf prices are rising? There are quite a few articles on sites like the telegraph and guardian moaning about depreciation of electric cars. I am in effect buying a car that's less than two years old for 26% of its original value. The depreciation curve looks quite steep when you look at it that way.
What's the point at looking at the TAX rates when you buy a car that costs 20-30k? Extra 30pounds a year for few years is seriously going to change someones decision?
@Rxe: I know the diesel spend seems high, and I really can't figure it out myself. Having said that, this http://www.fleetnews.co.uk/costs/fuel-cost-calcula... produces a figure quite close to my calculations, using 26mpg.
But you are right, the insurance, tax and repairs would make a difference. Its helped by electric being £0 tax, and Nissan including 2 years free servicing for a used leaf. And the balance of a 5yr warranty. If I do keep the other two cars, one will go on a classic insurance policy for £250 a year. The way I see it, for the Leaf, I will just have to provide tyres and brake pads for the next 3+ years.
@Phunk: Why do you think Leaf prices are rising? There are quite a few articles on sites like the telegraph and guardian moaning about depreciation of electric cars. I am in effect buying a car that's less than two years old for 26% of its original value. The depreciation curve looks quite steep when you look at it that way.
well I actually know there are a lot of people who think like this...haha.
£0 Tax vs £50/year tax is the least of your worries when buying a new car...maybe it's crucial if you are looking to buy a 15year old banger for £300 ..
ShireSquirrel said:
The way I see it, for the Leaf, I will just have to provide tyres and brake pads for the next 3+ years.
I wouldn't be too sure about buying brake pads. Regen braking and the way these cars are usually driven (thinking ahead to avoid braking) means very little brake pad wear.My Leaf is on 33k miles (I've had it from new) and the main dealer reports 10% wear on the front pads and 5% wear on the back. That's on the first set of pads.
ShireSquirrel said:
@Phunk: Why do you think Leaf prices are rising? There are quite a few articles on sites like the telegraph and guardian moaning about depreciation of electric cars. I am in effect buying a car that's less than two years old for 26% of its original value. The depreciation curve looks quite steep when you look at it that way.
The telegraph and guardian are talking utter rubbish. Can you see any two year old Leafs for £5k?I was looking to buy one about 12-18 months ago and they were £5500 for a 12 plate. Now those are around £7000
Makes sense OP.
My Leaf is on 45k miles (Leased new Jan 16) and is still on original pads and just needed tyres changed.
No problems at all apart from a software update.
Dealer has been superb.
If you do short journeys your charge cost will be a lot less than £2.30 a day.
You will be charging from 50-60% charge each day or sometimes not at all.
My Leaf is on 45k miles (Leased new Jan 16) and is still on original pads and just needed tyres changed.
No problems at all apart from a software update.
Dealer has been superb.
If you do short journeys your charge cost will be a lot less than £2.30 a day.
You will be charging from 50-60% charge each day or sometimes not at all.
Phunk said:
The telegraph and guardian are talking utter rubbish. Can you see any two year old Leafs for £5k?
I was looking to buy one about 12-18 months ago and they were £5500 for a 12 plate. Now those are around £7000
To be fair there are some very cheap cars out there - the ones with battery leases. They are originally bought on PCP because they are cheaper than the battery owned versions. Once they crop up on the 2nd hand market nobody wants them. Look at used zoe & fluence prices (achieved prices mind). I was looking to buy one about 12-18 months ago and they were £5500 for a 12 plate. Now those are around £7000
I know Nissan allows you to buy out the battery lease now, but I'm not sure if they still sell them new with battery lease (FLEX in nissan terminology).
For the benefit of anyone who isnt familiar with the models, all 1st gen leafs are battery owned (so pre 2013, usually beige seats, no eco button on the steering wheel and parking brake release in the centre console between the seats). 2nd gen leafs (dark grey seats, eco button, parking brake release by pressing the foot pedal again) might or might not be battery owned.
Nissan went through a process of getting the battery lease onto the V5 - loads of people got replacement V5 docs with FLEX in the model name - how complete that process was though...
TooLateForAName said:
Phunk said:
The telegraph and guardian are talking utter rubbish. Can you see any two year old Leafs for £5k?
I was looking to buy one about 12-18 months ago and they were £5500 for a 12 plate. Now those are around £7000
For the benefit of anyone who isnt familiar with the models, all 1st gen leafs are battery owned (so pre 2013, usually beige seats, no eco button on the steering wheel and parking brake release in the centre console between the seats). 2nd gen leafs (dark grey seats, eco button, parking brake release by pressing the foot pedal again) might or might not be battery owned. I was looking to buy one about 12-18 months ago and they were £5500 for a 12 plate. Now those are around £7000
Nissan went through a process of getting the battery lease onto the V5 - loads of people got replacement V5 docs with FLEX in the model name - how complete that process was though...
I've got a Gen 2 which is now on 33k miles and its been a great second car. I don't drive it slowly and my running costs are 2p a mile (charging on economy 7) or 4p a mile if I charge in the day (which I don't really ever do).
Its common for these cars to be reaching 170k+ miles with only the wiper blades and tyres being changed, I don't know of many petrol/diesel cars that can manage that
rxe said:
The reason most people don't do it is "third car". Quite a few places struggle to park 2, let alone 3. You'll need to insure it, MOT it, and it will undoubtedly need some fixing. It all dents the maths a bit.
I'm slightly struggling with the £400 on diesel a month and 17 to 20K a year. Even in my hardly economical 2.4 Alfa, £400 of diesel would get me at least 2500 miles....
Agree. As they say, the cheapest car to run, is the one you already have.I'm slightly struggling with the £400 on diesel a month and 17 to 20K a year. Even in my hardly economical 2.4 Alfa, £400 of diesel would get me at least 2500 miles....
GreatGranny said:
Makes sense OP.
My Leaf is on 45k miles (Leased new Jan 16) and is still on original pads and just needed tyres changed.
No problems at all apart from a software update.
Dealer has been superb.
If you do short journeys your charge cost will be a lot less than £2.30 a day.
You will be charging from 50-60% charge each day or sometimes not at all.
Thanks for the insight! At what mileage did you have to change the tyres? From what I understand, they are special and can be marginally more expensive than tyres for a similar sized car?My Leaf is on 45k miles (Leased new Jan 16) and is still on original pads and just needed tyres changed.
No problems at all apart from a software update.
Dealer has been superb.
If you do short journeys your charge cost will be a lot less than £2.30 a day.
You will be charging from 50-60% charge each day or sometimes not at all.
ShireSquirrel said:
Thanks for the insight! At what mileage did you have to change the tyres? From what I understand, they are special and can be marginally more expensive than tyres for a similar sized car?
I know you're not asking me but the fronts on mine lasted around 20k miles, the rears 26k. Price of replacements was about fifty five quid each fitted. I went with ditchfinders as I drive the Leaf very gently.Gassing Station | Car Buying | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff